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Episode 174:
Ben Jonson's erliest play. Here we have the bricklayer’s son trying to make his way in the theatre and with the court. Until James came to the throne, he was pretty unsuccessful in the latter and as far as we can tell more of less from the off his life writing for the public theatre was controversial. I recounted the events surrounding Johnson and Nashe’s play ‘The Isle of Dogs’ as part of Jonson’s life story and ‘The Case Is Altered’ probably pre-dates those events. What we can be sure of is that by 1597, the most likely date for ‘The Case Is Altered’ Jonson was working for Pembroke’s Men and that they probably performed the play in May or June that year.
The complications of the printing history of the play
The origins of the title
Jonson borrows from Plautus to create a romantic comedy
The satire of Anthony Munday
A brief summary of both strands of the plot
The structural issues with the play and purely comic scenes
The theory of the Humors
The character of Count Ferneze
The character of Jacques the miser
The concealment of the gold
The slight characters of the three female roles
Support the podcast at:
www.thehistoryofeuropeantheatre.com
www.patreon.com/thoetp
www.ko-fi.com/thoetp
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.9
3636 ratings
Episode 174:
Ben Jonson's erliest play. Here we have the bricklayer’s son trying to make his way in the theatre and with the court. Until James came to the throne, he was pretty unsuccessful in the latter and as far as we can tell more of less from the off his life writing for the public theatre was controversial. I recounted the events surrounding Johnson and Nashe’s play ‘The Isle of Dogs’ as part of Jonson’s life story and ‘The Case Is Altered’ probably pre-dates those events. What we can be sure of is that by 1597, the most likely date for ‘The Case Is Altered’ Jonson was working for Pembroke’s Men and that they probably performed the play in May or June that year.
The complications of the printing history of the play
The origins of the title
Jonson borrows from Plautus to create a romantic comedy
The satire of Anthony Munday
A brief summary of both strands of the plot
The structural issues with the play and purely comic scenes
The theory of the Humors
The character of Count Ferneze
The character of Jacques the miser
The concealment of the gold
The slight characters of the three female roles
Support the podcast at:
www.thehistoryofeuropeantheatre.com
www.patreon.com/thoetp
www.ko-fi.com/thoetp
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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