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File:Ticket to Shakespeare's Jubilee.jpg

Ticket for the Shakespeare Jubilee in the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C.

About Shakespeare

William Shakespeare
Shakespeare's life
Religion • Sexuality
Bibliography
Collaborations • Attribution
Criticism
Reputation • Influence
World Bibliography
Folger Shakespeare Library
Books on Shakespeare

Poems

Shakespeare's Sonnets
Shakespearean sonnet
Petrach vs. Shakespeare
"A Lover's Complaint"
"Venus and Adonis"
"The Rape of Lucrece"
"The Phoenix and the Turtle"

Chronology • Early texts
First Folio • Second Folio
False Folio • Style

The Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Merry Wives of Windsor
Measure for Measure
The Comedy of Errors
Much Ado About Nothing
Love's Labour's Lost
A Midsummer Night's Dream
The Merchant of Venice
As You Like It
The Taming of the Shrew
All's Well That Ends Well
Twelfth Night

Histories

King John • Richard II
Henry IV, Part 1 • Part 2
Henry V • Henry VI, Part 1
Henry VI, Part 2 • Part 3
Richard III • Henry VIII

Tragedies

Troilus and Cressida
Coriolanus • Titus Andronicus
Romeo and Juliet''
Timon of Athens
Julius Caesar
Macbeth • Hamlet
King Lear • Othello
Anthony and Cleopatra

Romances

Pericles, Prince of Tyre
Cymbeline • The Winter's Tale
The Tempest
The Two Noble Kinsmen

Rowe • Pope • Theobald
Johnson • Steevens • Malone
Chalmers

Contemporaries

Elizabeth I • James I
Richard Barnfield
Beaumont and Fletcher
Geo. Chapman • Henry Chettle
Robert Davenport
Tho. Dekker • Michael Drayton
Thomas Freeman • John Ford Tho. Heywood • Hugh Holland
Ben Jonson • Thomas Kyd
John Lyly • Richard Linche
Gervase Markham
Christopher Marlowe
John Marston • Tho. Middleton
Anthony Munday • Tho. Nashe
George Peele • William Percy
Walter Raleigh • William Rowley
Cyril Tourneur • John Webster
Geo. Whetstone • Mary Wroth
Elizabethan miscellanies

In performance

Shakespeare's Globe
Royal Shakespeare Theatre
Stratford Shakespeare Festival
Theatre companies
Film and TV adaptations
BBC Television Shakespeare

Miscellaneous

Shakespeare Apocrypha
Authorship question • History
Jubilee • Bardolatry
Shakespeare's Birthplace
Stratford-upon-Avon
Shakespeare garden

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The Shakespeare Jubilee a landmark event staged in Stratford-upon-Avon between 6 and 8 September 1769.[1]

Background[]

The jubilee was organised by the actor and theatre manager David Garrick to celebrate the Jubilee of the birth of William Shakespeare. It had a major impact on the rising tide of bardolatry that led to Shakespeare's becoming established as the English national poet. Thomas Arne composed the song Soft Flowing Avon for the Jubilee.

Stratford was at the time a town with around 2,200 inhabitants.[2] Garrick, Britain's most famous Shakespearean actor and most influential theatre owner-manager, had the idea for the Jubilee when he was approached by the town's leaders who wanted him to fund a statue of Shakespeare to stand in the Town Hall. Garrick planned a major celebration with major figures from London's cultural, political and economic world attending.

He oversaw the construction of a large rotunda, based on that in Ranelagh Gardens in London, which could hold 1,000 spectators.[3] "It is difficult to exaggerate how much space in the papers in the weeks and months beforehand was devoted to discussion of the Jubilee, announcing details of the program, advertising various accoutrements, reporting progress, speculating about its form, and attacking it."[4]

Program[]

The Jubilee opened on 6 September with the firing of 30 cannons and the ringing of church bells.[5] Various events were held to commemorate Shakespeare's life. It drew in many people from fashionable society, or who were involved in the London theatre. There were 700people at the dinner on the 1st day.[6]

On the 2nd day bad weather began to disrupt the proceedings and flooded parts of the Rotunda when the banks of the River Avon broke. The highlights of the 2nd day were the unveiling of the new statue at the Town Hall and a masquerade held in the evening.[7] Another notable event from the second day of the Jubilee was a speech by Garrick thanking the Shakespeare Ladies Club for making Shakespeare popular again and for their contribution to the memorial statue of Shakespeare in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey.[8][9]

The 3rd day was to have seen a grand Shakespeare Pageant but the heavy rain forced this to be cancelled. Garrick later staged the Pageant in the Drury Lane Theatre with the music of Charles Dibdin where it was a success, running for 90 performances.[10]

It was the 1st jubilee celebration of the life of Shakespeare, although it was held more than 5 years after the bicentenary of his birth in April 1564.[2] In spite of the impact it had on the rising popularity of Shakespeare and his works, none of his plays were performed during the Jubilee.[11]

Recognition[]

In popular culture[]

A recording of Dibdin's The Jubilee, also including Queen Mab (which was performed on the 1st day of Garrick's festival) and Datchet Mead, was released in 2019 featuring singer Simon Butteriss and keyboardist Stephen Higgins.[12]

References[]

Bibliography[]

  • Cunningham, Vanessa (2008), Shakespeare and Garrick, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 
  • Deelman, Christian (1964), The Great Shakespeare Jubilee, London: Joseph 
  • Dobson, Michael (1992), The Making of the National Poet: Shakespeare, Adaptation and Authorship, 1660–1769, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ISBN 0198183232 
  • Pierce, Patricia (2005), The Great Shakespeare Fraud: The Strange, True Story of William-Henry Ireland, Sutton Publishing 
  • Stochholm, Johanne (1964), Garrick's Folly: The Shakespeare Jubilee of 1769 at Stratford and Drury Lane, New York: Barnes & Noble Inc. 
  • Tankard, Paul, ed. (2014), "The Stratford Jubilee", Facts and Inventions: Selections from the Journalism of James Boswell. (New Haven: Yale University Press): pp. 17–34, ISBN 978-0-300-14126-9 

External links[]

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