Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Professional Players in the Guild Hall, Stratford-upon-Avon, 1568–1597
- Reconstructing The Rose: Development of the Playhouse Building between 1587 and 1592
- The Rose and its Stages
- Philip Henslowe and the Elizabethan Court
- From Revels to Revelation: Shakespeare and the Mask
- Bride-ing the Shrew: Costumes that Matter
- ‘When Men and Women are Alone’: Framing the Taming in India
- The Crown and the Pillow: Royal Properties in Henry IV
- Humanity at Stake: Man and Animal in Shakespeare’s Theatre
- Popular Shakespeare in Japan
- ‘Philosophy in a Gorilla Suit’: Do Shakespearians Perform or Just Perform-a-tive?
- Sudokothellophobia: Writing Hypertextually, Performatively
- Living Monuments: The Spatial Politics of Shakespeare’s Rome on the Contemporary Stage
- ‘In Windsor Forest and at the Boar’s Head’: The ‘Falstaff Plays’ and English Music in the Early Twentieth Century
- Michael Bogdanov in Conversation
- The Mouse and the Urn: Re-Visions of Shakespeare from Voltaire to Ducis
- ‘I covet your skull’: Death and Desire in Hamlet
- Martin Droeshout Redivivus: Reassessing the Folio Engraving of Shakespeare
- Canonizing Shakespeare: The Passionate Pilgrim, England’s Helicon and the Question of Authenticity
- Rereading Shakespeare: The Example of Richard Brathwait
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2006: January 2006
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles January–December 2005
- he Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare in Performance
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies
- Index
‘In Windsor Forest and at the Boar’s Head’: The ‘Falstaff Plays’ and English Music in the Early Twentieth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2007
- Frontmatter
- Professional Players in the Guild Hall, Stratford-upon-Avon, 1568–1597
- Reconstructing The Rose: Development of the Playhouse Building between 1587 and 1592
- The Rose and its Stages
- Philip Henslowe and the Elizabethan Court
- From Revels to Revelation: Shakespeare and the Mask
- Bride-ing the Shrew: Costumes that Matter
- ‘When Men and Women are Alone’: Framing the Taming in India
- The Crown and the Pillow: Royal Properties in Henry IV
- Humanity at Stake: Man and Animal in Shakespeare’s Theatre
- Popular Shakespeare in Japan
- ‘Philosophy in a Gorilla Suit’: Do Shakespearians Perform or Just Perform-a-tive?
- Sudokothellophobia: Writing Hypertextually, Performatively
- Living Monuments: The Spatial Politics of Shakespeare’s Rome on the Contemporary Stage
- ‘In Windsor Forest and at the Boar’s Head’: The ‘Falstaff Plays’ and English Music in the Early Twentieth Century
- Michael Bogdanov in Conversation
- The Mouse and the Urn: Re-Visions of Shakespeare from Voltaire to Ducis
- ‘I covet your skull’: Death and Desire in Hamlet
- Martin Droeshout Redivivus: Reassessing the Folio Engraving of Shakespeare
- Canonizing Shakespeare: The Passionate Pilgrim, England’s Helicon and the Question of Authenticity
- Rereading Shakespeare: The Example of Richard Brathwait
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2006: January 2006
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles January–December 2005
- he Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare in Performance
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies
- Index
Summary
Let the sky rain potatoes, let it thunder to the tune of “Greensleeves”
Merry Wives 5.5.18–19The history of Shakespeare’s work in musical adaptation is one in which composition and performance is driven not simply by its Shakespearian source but one in which the music has proved central to, indeed constitutive of, our understanding, interpretation and subsequent stagings of Shakespeare. In a recent edition of The Merry Wives of Windsor, Giorgio Melchiori observed that the position of this particular play in the canon, not least as a ’Falstaff play‚, one that can be placed alongside the two parts of Henry IV in this regard, is largely a product of the sustained attention of operatic adaptors and in particular of the phenomenal success in the late nineteenth century of Giuseppe Verdi’s Falstaff (1893).
Despite its recent rightful reclamation by critics who have argued persuasively on behalf of the local detail and specificity of the play’s representations of domesticity and female agency, few scholars would argue that The Merry Wives of Windsor is central in the performative or literary-critical canon of Shakespeare. Yet a history of opera and musicals would tell a very different story. There were ten major operatic versions between 1761 and 1929, ranging from eighteenth-century French and German adaptations – Les Deux Amies, ou le Vieux Garçon, with music by Louis August Papavoine, now lost, performed in Paris in 1761; Herne le Chasseurset by P. A. D. Philidor in 1773; and two musical settings of Die Lustigen Weiber von Windsor, a German libretto by Georg Christian Romer, by Peter Ritter in 1794 and Karl Ditter von Dittersdorf in 1796 – to Antonio Salieri’s opera buffa or comic opera for the Austro-Hungarian imperial court at Vienna in 1799, Falstaff, o le tre burle, which created a soprano role for the character of Anne Ford, to Otto Nicolai’s Die Lustigen Weiber von Windsor (1849).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 184 - 195Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007