Censoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space

How might attention to the mechanisms of stage licensing help us to think specifically about the politics and aesthetics of on- and off-stage space in eighteenth-century drama? This essay addresses this question by looking at John St. John’s The Island of St. Marguerite, a musical afterpiece first s...

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Main Author: Taylor, DF
Other Authors: O'Shaughnessy, D
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2023
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author Taylor, DF
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Taylor, DF
author_sort Taylor, DF
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description How might attention to the mechanisms of stage licensing help us to think specifically about the politics and aesthetics of on- and off-stage space in eighteenth-century drama? This essay addresses this question by looking at John St. John’s The Island of St. Marguerite, a musical afterpiece first staged at Drury Lane in November 1789. Using a spectacular retelling of the ‘Man in the Iron Mask’ story to mount a barely coded staging of the storming of the Bastille, this play was the first attempt by one of London’s royal playhouses to respond directly to the early events of the French Revolution. But the two Larpent manuscripts for Island show just how much had to be expunged and changed before the examiner of plays would license it. In particular, this essay argues, the cuts and annotations of the examiner (and possibly also John Philip Kemble, Drury Lane’s acting managing) disclose an institutional discomfort with the off-stage spaces – besieged walls, subterranean prison cells, sites of execution – that the audience are never taken to and yet must picture for themselves if what is actually unfolding before them is to make sense. Attention to these manuscripts thus takes us towards a deeper understanding of the play of visibility, of the texture of sensory and extra-sensory experience, in the Georgian theatre.
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spelling oxford-uuid:b16cf16f-a2bb-4bdc-884c-4f4e6e2c22122024-02-05T09:12:55ZCensoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical spaceBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:b16cf16f-a2bb-4bdc-884c-4f4e6e2c2212EnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press2023Taylor, DFO'Shaughnessy, DHow might attention to the mechanisms of stage licensing help us to think specifically about the politics and aesthetics of on- and off-stage space in eighteenth-century drama? This essay addresses this question by looking at John St. John’s The Island of St. Marguerite, a musical afterpiece first staged at Drury Lane in November 1789. Using a spectacular retelling of the ‘Man in the Iron Mask’ story to mount a barely coded staging of the storming of the Bastille, this play was the first attempt by one of London’s royal playhouses to respond directly to the early events of the French Revolution. But the two Larpent manuscripts for Island show just how much had to be expunged and changed before the examiner of plays would license it. In particular, this essay argues, the cuts and annotations of the examiner (and possibly also John Philip Kemble, Drury Lane’s acting managing) disclose an institutional discomfort with the off-stage spaces – besieged walls, subterranean prison cells, sites of execution – that the audience are never taken to and yet must picture for themselves if what is actually unfolding before them is to make sense. Attention to these manuscripts thus takes us towards a deeper understanding of the play of visibility, of the texture of sensory and extra-sensory experience, in the Georgian theatre.
spellingShingle Taylor, DF
Censoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space
title Censoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space
title_full Censoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space
title_fullStr Censoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space
title_full_unstemmed Censoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space
title_short Censoring the unseen: revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space
title_sort censoring the unseen revolution and the aesthetics of theatrical space
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