Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Statue to honour city’s famous ‘bad boy’ playwright

Marlowe figure to be erected in high street

- By Joe Wright jwright@thekmgroup.co.uk

A statue to commemorat­e Canterbury playwright Christophe­r Marlowe could be installed in the city centre.

Plans have been submitted to erect the figure beside the St George’s Clocktower at the top end of the high street.

It will be made out of woven strips of recycled iron.

Those behind the proposals hope the city can celebrate its dramatist in the way in which Stratford recognises Shakespear­e.

They say such recognitio­n of Marlowe is long overdue, and that the statue will be “immensely robust, low maintenanc­e and graffiti and vandal proof”.

They also believe it will become a landmark that can be used as a “social meeting or even trysting point”.

If given the go-ahead by the city council, the statue will replace an electronic noticeboar­d which stands on the corner of the pavement, near to Caffe Nero.

The structure is to be created by Steven Portchmout­h, the sculptor behind the iron bull in Tannery Field.

The Marlowe statue would be of similar ilk, and have a ‘rusting’ bronze aesthetic.

Proposals have been mastermind­ed by the Canterbury Christophe­r Marlowe Statue Committee, and are planned to coincide with the council’s £1.2 million vision to renovate the “tired” high street.

Designs show Marlowe holding up the masks of Tragedy and Comedy, while also grasping a dagger as he fears an approach from his left - conveying his life as both a playwright and a government agent.

The iron statue will stand on a plinth which allows for seating around the base, and Marlowe’s famous poem ‘Come Live With Me and Be My Love’ is to be engraved around the bottom.

Planning documents state: “The sculptor’s interpreta­tion captures and conveys Marlowe’s volatile personalit­y, as a dramatist, a controvers­ialist and the tense secret agent.

“The sculpture will be of a semi-abstract figure, with allusions to 16th century apparel.”

The proposals have gained the support of resident David Reekie, who said: “Christophe­r Marlowe is one of our greatest historical figures - our ‘brilliant bad boy’ and a literary genius.

“Younger people find him fascinatin­g and are captivated by his life and violent, mysterious death. He richly deserves this contempora­ry and energetic sculpture so close to the place

‘Christophe­r Marlowe is one of our greatest historical figures our ‘brilliant bad boy’ and a literary genius’

of his birth.”

Marlowe was born in 1564, and his family are thought to have owned a house in St George’s Lane, where the city’s Fenwick department store now stands.

He was baptised at St George’s Church, where the clocktower now remains.

It means if the statue plans are rubber-stamped, the famous playwright will take up residence just metres from both his birthplace and where he was baptised.

Marlowe, who died from a dagger to the forehead at the age of just 29, is thought to have heavily influenced Shakespear­e’s later work.

His dramas, such as The Jew of Malta, Doctor Faustus, and the Massacre at Paris, are still performed around the world today.

Pre-planning approval for the statue was agreed in 2018, and now full planning permission is sought.

 ?? ?? Christophe­r Marlowe could be honoured with a statue next to the St George’s Clocktower
Christophe­r Marlowe could be honoured with a statue next to the St George’s Clocktower
 ?? ?? A drawing depicting the proposed statue
A drawing depicting the proposed statue

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