4.7 • 837 Ratings
🗓️ 30 March 2021
⏱️ 37 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Turns out when it comes to scholars who work on the plays of Shakespeare's era, |
| 0:04.0 | not only don't they know, they sometimes don't know they don't know. |
| 0:12.0 | From the Folcher Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited. |
| 0:18.0 | I'm Michael Whitmore, the Folgers director. |
| 0:20.0 | We have texts of only one-sixth of the plays written during the Great Age of Elizabethan Theatre. |
| 0:27.6 | One-sixth. |
| 0:29.6 | For the other 3,000 or so plays that were performed in those years, there's almost nothing. |
| 0:35.6 | Sometimes just a little evidence. Descriptions of performances, |
| 0:40.3 | lists of titles, receipts, diaries, letters, or fragments of parts. That raises the question, |
| 0:47.3 | how do you make sense of a Swiss cheese history when you have more holes than cheese. |
| 0:54.8 | One tool to try and fill in some of those holes is the Lost Plays Database, an open access |
| 1:00.9 | forum for information about Lost Plays from England that were originally written and performed |
| 1:06.4 | between 1570 and 1642. |
| 1:09.9 | The database started in Australia and in 2018 found a new home here at |
| 1:15.1 | the Fulcher. Pulling all of this information together into one place has offered up some remarkable |
| 1:20.9 | discoveries, and some of them are beginning to upend long-established scholarly ideas about Shakespeare, his theater, and his times. |
| 1:30.3 | One of the founders of the Lost Plays database is David McKinnis, an associate professor at the University of Melbourne in Australia. |
| 1:38.3 | David has now placed some of his best discoveries and the new theories they spawned in a book. It's called |
| 1:46.0 | Shakespeare and Lost Plays. David woke up very early in the morning to join us from his home |
| 1:52.4 | in Melbourne for this podcast that we're calling praising what is lost. David McKinnis is interviewed |
| 1:59.4 | by Barbara Bogave. You know, a simple question to start. |
| 2:03.6 | If plays are lost, how do you know about them? |
... |
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