Question 1
Question
In a costume list from the 1550s held by the Folger Shakespeare Library, what synonym does the writer use for the theatrical figure of "Venus"?
Question 2
Question
In 1591, what day of the week (in addition to Sundays) did Queen Elizabeth's Privy Council seek to prevent all dramatic playing, in order to keep it free for the cruel "sport" of bearbaiting?
Answer
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Mondays
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Wednesdays
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Thursdays
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Saturdays
Question 3
Question
Visits to the Curtain playhouse might well have rubbed shoulders with the likes of the Venetian Ambassador, Antonio Foscarini. But why did he insist on standing in the "pit" or "middle, among the rabble of porters and carters"?
Answer
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Because he was "hard of hearing"
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Because he was "extremely fond" of the play being shown and "desired an intimate relationship with the stage"
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So he could make a "rapid exit if he liked not the play"
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Because it was simply "his prerogative"
Question 4
Question
Fencing was one of Elizabethan London's most popular entertainment forms. But what were the three "stages" of prize fighting for fencers seeking to gain full membership of the Society of Defence?
Answer
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Scholar's, Provost's, Master's
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Beaver's, Cub's, Scout's
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Bachelor's, Councillor's, Knight's
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Guard's, Yeoman's, Lord's
Question 5
Question
The town of New Romney in Kent ensured all dog owners were registered. The surviving lists give us a census of "pet" ownership in the town, during a period when many dogs would have been used for violent games like bearbaiting. How did the mayor of the town, John Cheeseman, describe his dog in 1579?
Question 6
Question
A number of European families and individuals lived in the area around the Curtain and Theatre playhouses. One such family were the Marquinos, of whom Francisco was a schoolteacher who taught 24 "stranger" or international scholars. What was his wife's Shakespeare-related name?
Answer
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Beatrice
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Lavinia
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Bottom
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Mistress Page
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Celia
Question 7
Question
Thomas Dekker's tongue-in-cheek advice to Elizabethan hipsters (or "gallants") includes some tips on what to do when arriving in a playhouse before the play starts. What does he suggest these London trendoids should do?
Answer
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Drink as many cups of sack as you can get in the playhouse yard but claim to be the Prologue character to avoid paying
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Play cards in front of the stage and work together to con unsuspecting gamblers
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Loudly proclaim that you've seen the play already and tell everybody near you the ending
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Walk around in brightly coloured clothes swooshing your cape to draw attention to your latest fashion-defining outfit
Question 8
Question
Why did Richard Madox leave a play at the Theatre in 1582?
Answer
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The prologue was "without voice"
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The costumes were "tedious"
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He got conned playing cards
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The weather was too "unfavourable"
Question 9
Question
Playhouses were not unique to London. Margaret Thomas, later Woolfe, was a successful manager of an inn who married Nicholas Woolfe and together ran a playhouse in Bristol in the 1600s and 1610s. But why did she complain about him after his death?
Answer
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Because he was so tight he would not even buy her a new dress
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Because he was bad with money and frequently spent all their takings on drink
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Because he fathered too many illegitimate children
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Because he insisted on performing in the playhouse despite being a terrible singer and having no skill on the viol
Question 10
Question
John Lyly was a hugely successful and pioneering playwright. He briefly had a managerial role in which playhouse in the 1580s?
Answer
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First Blackfriars
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Second Blackfriars
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The Theatre
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The Curtain
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Whitefriars