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Exploring Shakespeare
Hamlet, Macbeth and A Midsummer Night's Dream
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Home | Hamlet: Languages and themes | Elizabethan context

Languages and themes

Line delivery
The text
The director's cut
Elizabethan context
Hamlet - a thriller
Revenge Tragedy
Death and delay
Madness

A perspective on history

Who's this? Sian Thomas plays Gertrude.

Did you know? Hamlet is usually dated 1601; two years later Elizabeth I would die leaving no heir to the throne. The issue of succession (who would inherit the throne) was at the front of people’s minds, but to write a play about this was a dangerous political act. The Catholics were keen that the throne should pass to a Catholic monarch but when Elizabeth I died in 1603 the Protestant James I succeeded. In 1605 the disheartened Catholics attempted to assassinate James I with the Gunpowder plot.

The play King Lear also starts with the problem of succession. Tackling this subject can still be dangerous. When Michael Boyd was training in Russia one of his fellow directors was not allowed to direct King Lear as the Russian President, Leonid Brezhnev, was ill and the play was considered too political.

Elizabethan context

A perspective on history
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