About: King Philip (play)   Sponge Permalink

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The play was scheduled to be performed in October, 1598, two weeks after news of Philip's death reached England and a month to the day of Philip's death. It was not performed; Lord Westmorland's Men instead performed the English nationalistic play Boudicca. Shakespeare eventually convinced Queen Elizabeth to give the Queen's Men permission to perform King Philip after Robert Cecil convinced her that the play in fact contained a number of clever, subtle parodies designed to ridicule Philip, parodies to which only a native English speaker would be sensitive. That, however, was not Shakespeare's own reason for wanting the play to be presented; an artist and craftsman first and foremost, beyond any political considerations, Shakespeare had worked hard on this as on his other plays, and hated t

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  • King Philip (play)
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  • The play was scheduled to be performed in October, 1598, two weeks after news of Philip's death reached England and a month to the day of Philip's death. It was not performed; Lord Westmorland's Men instead performed the English nationalistic play Boudicca. Shakespeare eventually convinced Queen Elizabeth to give the Queen's Men permission to perform King Philip after Robert Cecil convinced her that the play in fact contained a number of clever, subtle parodies designed to ridicule Philip, parodies to which only a native English speaker would be sensitive. That, however, was not Shakespeare's own reason for wanting the play to be presented; an artist and craftsman first and foremost, beyond any political considerations, Shakespeare had worked hard on this as on his other plays, and hated t
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  • The play was scheduled to be performed in October, 1598, two weeks after news of Philip's death reached England and a month to the day of Philip's death. It was not performed; Lord Westmorland's Men instead performed the English nationalistic play Boudicca. Shakespeare eventually convinced Queen Elizabeth to give the Queen's Men permission to perform King Philip after Robert Cecil convinced her that the play in fact contained a number of clever, subtle parodies designed to ridicule Philip, parodies to which only a native English speaker would be sensitive. That, however, was not Shakespeare's own reason for wanting the play to be presented; an artist and craftsman first and foremost, beyond any political considerations, Shakespeare had worked hard on this as on his other plays, and hated the idea of his work being wasted and the play consigned to oblivion.
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