Crash Course Theater and Drama S1 E13 - The English Renaissance and NOT Shakespeare

Crash Course Theater and Drama

Crash Course Theater and Drama S1 E13 - The English Renaissance and NOT Shakespeare
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The Renaissance came to England late, thanks to a Hundred Years War that ran long and lasted 116 years, and then a civil war to decide who would be the royal family. BUT after all that, with the Tudors (relatively) securely installed on the throne, 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.

CreatorN/A
ActorMike Rugnetta
CountryUnited States of America
ProductionPBS Digital Studios
What Is Theater?
Thespis, Athens, and The Origins of Greek Drama
Tragedy Lessons from Aristotle
Greek Comedy, Satyrs, and Aristophanes
Dances to Flute Music and Obscene Verse. It's Roman Theater, Everybody
Roman Theater with Plautus, Terence, and Seneca
Nostrils, Harmony with the Universe, and Ancient Sanskrit Theater
The Death and Resurrection of Theater as...Liturgical Drama
Hrotsvitha, Hildegard, and the Nun who Resurrected Theater
Get Outside and Have a (Mystery) Play
Just Say Noh. But Also Say Kyogen
Pee Jokes, the Italian Renaissance, Commedia Dell'Arte
The English Renaissance and NOT Shakespeare
Straight Outta Stratford-Upon-Avon - Shakespeare's Early Days
Shakespeare's Tragedies and an Acting Lesson
Comedies, Romances, and Shakespeare's Heroines
English Theater After Shakespeare
Where Did Theater Go?
The Spanish Golden Age
Rules, Rule-Breaking, and French Neoclassicism
Moliere - Man of Satire and Many Burials
Pre-Columbian Theater, Spanish Empire, and Sor Juana
Japan, Kabuki, and Bunraku
All Night Demon Dance Party - Kathakali
China, Zaju, and Beijing Opera
England's Sentimental Theater
Why So Angry, German Theater?
The Rise of Melodrama
North America Gets a Theater...Riot
Race Melodrama and Minstrel Shows
Zola, France, Realism, and Naturalism
Realism Gets Even More Real
Symbolism, Realism, and a Nordic Playwright Grudge Match
Chekhov and the Moscow Art Theater
The Horrors of the Grand Guignol
Synge, Wilde, Shaw, and the Irish Renaissance
Dada, Surrealism, and Symbolism
Expressionist Theater
Futurism and Constructivism
Little Theater and American Avant Garde
The Harlem Renaissance
Federal Theatre and Group Theater
Antonin Artaud and the Theater of Cruelty
Bertolt Brecht and Epic Theater
Beckett, Ionesco, and the Theater of the Absurd
Broadway, Seriously
The Birth of Off Broadway
Poor Unfortunate Theater
Into Africa and Wole Soyinka
Broadway Book Musicals