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Crash Course Theater
The English Renaissance and NOT Shakespeare
Season 1
Episode 13
The Renaissance came to England late, thanks to a Hundred Years War that ran long and a civil war to decide who would be the royal family. BUT after that, there was a flowering of humanism, science, and culture. Theater was a big part of it. Today, we're talking about the London theater scene and the playwrights that set the stage...ahem...for the main man of English Theater, William Shakespeare.
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10:40
Spain was having kind of a moment in the 16th and 17th centuries.

12:54
In the 1600s, English theater had to go into hiding, from PURITANS. Enter: WOMEN.

11:50
Thanks, Shakespeare! Let's talk about Ben Jonson, revenge tragedies, and court masques.

10:46
Let's take a look at Shakespeare's comedies, romances, problem plays and heroines.

11:29
Shakespeare's tragedies had some jokes, and they changed the way tragedies were written.

10:52
How a young Shakespeare stormed into London's theater – and wrote some pretty good plays.

10:43
Painting, music, architecture, and plays with fart jokes were all thriving from 1300-1500.

12:20
Noh, and its counterpart Kyogen are some of the most revered theater forms in Japan.

11:10
After European churches changed their minds on theater, drama became an outdoor activity.

11:01
Meet Hrotsvitha: a cool, 10th century nun/playwright who influenced a new era of theater.

11:59
As Christianity rose in the west, theater declined. But it returned – via Catholic Mass!

12:02
Thanks to Bharata Muni, we can tell you quite a bit about Ancient Sanskrit theater.