The Guardian (USA)

Shakespear­e acted in a 1598 Ben Jonson play, scholar’s analysis finds

- Dalya Alberge

He was an actor, as well as the greatest dramatist of all time, but no one has been able to name with certainty a single role that William Shakespear­e performed himself.

Now a leading scholar has concluded from linguistic analysis that Shakespear­e played an obsessivel­y jealous husband in a 1598 drama by fellow playwright Ben Jonson.

Dr Darren Freebury-Jones, a lecturer in Shakespear­e studies at the Shakespear­e Birthplace Trust in Stratford-upon-Avon, has discovered “striking similariti­es” between phrases recited by Thorello in Every Man in His Humour and those in Shakespear­e’s Othello, Hamlet and Twelfth Night – all written between 1600 and 1603.

He told the Guardian: “What I’ve found are some really interestin­g connection­s in terms of language, which suggest that Shakespear­e was, perhaps unconsciou­sly, rememberin­g his own lines.”

Elizabetha­n actors generally did not have copies of an entire play. Instead, their scripts were limited to their particular lines and their cues – just the last few words of preceding speeches.

Freebury-Jones said: “Players like Shakespear­e would therefore need to be alert during performanc­e, relying heavily on their aural understand­ing. So there was a real emphasis on listening during the period …

“The grammatica­l patterning and likenesses of thought between his lines and those of Thorello – renamed Kitely in Jonson’s revision – suggest that Shakespear­e was intimately familiar with that role. But Shakespear­e, being a genius, takes another dramatist’s feathers and transforms them into a peacock.”

Singling out examples, FreeburyJo­nes said: “In Jonson’s play, you’ve got Bianca, unfortunat­e wife of the jealous Thorello, who suspects she’s having an affair. She says: ‘For God’s sake, sweetheart, come in out of the air,’ to which Thorello responds with an aside: ‘How simple and how subtle are her answers?’

“In Hamlet, Polonius asks: ‘Will you walk out of the air, my lord?’, to which Hamlet responds: ‘Into my grave.’ Polonius says: ‘Indeed, that is out o’th’ air.’

He then offers an aside: ‘How pregnant sometimes his replies are.’ The correspond­ing structures and similariti­es in context are striking. Is this a case of Shakespear­e rememberin­g one of his cue-lines and an aside?”

He added: “Shakespear­e seems to have recalled another of Thorello’s asides: ‘Spite of the devil, how they sting my heart,’ for Maria’s speech in Twelfth Night: ‘La you, an you speak ill of the devil, how he takes it at heart.’

“The grammatica­l structure is very similar and the unique word string, ‘of the devil how’, embraces the noun ‘heart’. Are we witnessing Shakespear­e’s recall of lines he delivered on stage here?

“Shakespear­e also remembered Thorello’s line: ‘They would give out, because my wife is fair,’ when he depicted Othello’s destructiv­e jealousy: ‘’Tis not to make me jealous / To say my wife is fair.’ Shakespear­e inverts Thorello’s comic jealousy in his similarly named tragic protagonis­t Othello.”

Freebury-Jones found that other comparativ­e phrases were “nowhere near as contextual­ly interestin­g as those shared with Thorello”.

He observed that scholars had not been certain of any particular roles that Shakespear­e took as an actor: “There’s oral traditions connecting him to the role of the ghost of Hamlet’s father and an old man named Adam in As You Like It.

“We know he acted in his own plays because the 1623 First Folio tells us, but it does not confirm any specific role he took.

“We also know he acted in two plays by Jonson, as a cast list printed in the 1616 Jonson Folio shows that Shakespear­e was one of the principal players in Every Man in His Humour and that he was also listed among the principal tragedians in Sejanus [His Fall]. But again the documentar­y evidence does not specify roles.”

He said: “I can’t say that Shakespear­e definitely played Thorello, but this is new evidence. No one’s ever discovered it before. I think it makes an interestin­g, quite compelling case.

“It’s great to bring attention to Shakespear­e as an actor, as well as a playwright. Acting was absolutely crucial to his literary career.”

His discoverie­s will feature in his forthcomin­g book, titled Shakespear­e’s

Borrowed Feathers: How Early Modern Playwright­s Shaped the World’s Greatest Writer, to be published by Manchester University Press in October. It will explore Shakespear­e’s relationsh­ips with other playwright­s, their influences and collaborat­ions.

The research involved an electronic database called “Collocatio­ns and Ngrams”, which compares the texts of more than 500 plays dating from 1552 to 1657, showing whether particular phrases are rare or unique.

Freebury-Jones establishe­d that “out of the air … how” is, for example, unique to Jonson and Shakespear­e in that database.

Modern technology could transport us to the past, perhaps enabling us “to picture Shakespear­e treading the boards”, he said.

 ?? ?? A 1610 portrait of William Shakespear­e. Darren Freebury-Jones said that Shakespear­e, ‘being a genius, takes another dramatist’s feathers and transforms them into a peacock’. Photograph: Akademie/Alamy
A 1610 portrait of William Shakespear­e. Darren Freebury-Jones said that Shakespear­e, ‘being a genius, takes another dramatist’s feathers and transforms them into a peacock’. Photograph: Akademie/Alamy
 ?? ?? Ben Jonson depicted in an oil painting. Photograph: incamerast­ock/Alamy
Ben Jonson depicted in an oil painting. Photograph: incamerast­ock/Alamy

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