Guided Tours Timelines Collections Activities Ecards
Early Theatre in BritainEarly Theatre in Britain
The Rise of Secular Drama
Elizabethan TheatreElizabethan Theatre 
The Court MasqueThe Court Masque
The Closure of the TheatresThe Closure of the Theatres
Restoration DramaRestoration Drama 
The George Inn, Southwark
Discover MoreZoomSave

The George Inn, Southwark

Entertainment at Court

All religious drama in England was suppressed as a result of the Reformation. In the 1530s the court of Henry VIII was opulent and extravagant. Henry saw entertainment as a vital way to impress his courtiers and foreign kings. The Court employed jesters and musicians for entertainment and small companies of actors took on the livery of an aristocratic patron.

Henry’s daughter Elizabeth I was also fond of being entertained, and under her rule, companies of performers moved from one residence to another to announce the arrival of the Royal Court. Licences were issued to companies, allowing them to rehearse and perform in public, providing they had the approval and patronage of a nobleman. At first companies performed in enclosed inn yards. There was a bare stage and no scenery.

Red Bull Playhouse
Discover MoreZoomSave

Red Bull Playhouse

The First Playhouses

By the 1570s purpose-built playhouses started appearing in London as secular drama began to predominate. In 1576 Britain’s first playhouse ‘The Theatre’ was built by Leicester’s Men in Finsbury Fields. This was outside the city walls as the City of London was hostile to public performances.

Panorama of London in 1616
Discover MoreZoomSave

Panorama of London in 1616

Over the next 16 years 17 new theatres were constructed. Most of these theatres were circular, surrounding an open courtyard where members of the audience would stand around the three sides of the thrust stage. The courtyard was surrounded by galleries roofed with a thatched or tiled roof where you could sit if you could afford to pay more. These open air theatres were known as ‘public theatres’, but there were also indoor theatres such as the Blackfriars which were known as ‘private’. These were also public but cost more, and attracted a snootier audience to watch.

Performances were in daylight usually starting at 3pm, and were crowded and noisy. Admission prices ranged from a penny to stand in the yard by the stage to up to sixpence for the most expensive seats in the galleries.

     

Protestant Reformation

Close

The religious revolution that took place in the Western church in the 16th century, when groups of European Christians, disillusioned with the established Roman Catholic church, broke away and formed what is now known as the Protestant church.

Livery

Close

A livery was a suit of clothes, or even a single piece of clothing or a badge, that an employer provided for his servants. Liveried servants could be immediately recognised as belonging to a particular household.

Secular

Close

Secular means worldly, as opposed to religious. Secular plays were plays not confined to religious or biblical themes as the mystery and miracle plays had been.