Stock Pieces: British Repertory Theatre, 17601830
English
By (author): Susan Valladares
What do we gain from watching a familiar play for the nth time? This was a crucial question for Romantic-period theatre managers, who, to deliver varied programmes, relied on a repertoire of stock entertainments performed in alternation with the latest plays. Repertory theatre was not new to the Romantic period, but it took on additional purchase at a time when the playhouse was not simply a site for entertainment but a government-controlled cultural institution and business subject to sometimes extreme financial, political, and ideological pressures. Through an innovative selection of case studies drawn from deep archival research, Stock Pieces juxtaposes canonical with otherwise forgotten entertainments; unites the periods professional and amateur dramatic cultures; and spans British metropolitan, provincial and imperial geographies. The picture that emerges is fresh and compelling. Stock Pieces sheds light on the mechanics of stock piece status; the Romantic afterlives of the near contemporaries of Shakespeare, whose repertoire status he came to undermine; how various agents (ranging from pantomime arrangers to enslaved performers in Jamaica) contested received aesthetic and cultural values; and the extent to which investments in the abolitionist cause were remediated by the repertoires revival and reenactment of the spectral violence of the slave trade.
Stock Pieces gives powerful testimony of how the Romantic-period dramatic repertoire could be mobilised to signify social and political practices that operated outside the theatrical institution, crossed national borders, and dared to effect real change.
See moreWill deliver when available. Publication date 28 Dec 2024