DISCOVERING SOUTHWARK

Well, John Constable is another one who is quite guarded about his ‘Shakespeare’, but does interesting stuff, so for anyone wanting to explore Southwark, grimace at the Shard, or listen to stories…

SOUTHWARK MYSTERIES GUIDED WALKS
Discover the most historic part of London with writer and performer John Constable, author of The Southwark Mysteries and Secret Bankside – Walks In The Outlaw Borough. Meet: Tabard Street Piazza, SE1 1JA. Between St George the Martyr Church and John Harvard Library. Nearest tube: Borough. Please arrive 15 minutes before departure time. Tickets: £10 / £7 concessions including booking fee. Pre-booking advised.
More info and online booking: http://www.southwarkmysteries.co.uk/guided-walks

SHAKESPEARE’S BANKSIDE – Sun 29 July: 11am. Mon 6 August: 11am and 6.30pm
London’s oldest pleasure-quarter and the birth of English theatre. Taverns, bear-pits, theatres and stews – licensed by the Bishop of Winchester. This walk conjures up an unforgettable gallery of Elizabethan characters!

DICKENS WALK – Wed 1 August: 6.30pm. Tue 7 August: 11am and 6.30pm. Wed 8 August: 6.30pm
Celebrating the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens’ birth, this walk explores his childhood encounter with the Victorian underworld, visiting places which cast a shadow over his entire life and inspired scenes in his novels from ‘Little Dorrit’ to ‘Oliver Twist’.

ROMAN LONDON REVISITED – Thu 2 August: 6.30pm. Wed 8 August: 11am
Recent excavations near London Bridge have uncovered the sites of Roman baths, a market-arcade, temples and a cemetery with the bones of a female gladiator. This walk uncovers 2,000 years of settlement around Borough and Bankside.

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FREE KINDLE DOWNLOAD TOMORROW, JULY 19th

The US Edition of Fire Bringer, with slight variations, is available for free download tomorrow. Please spread the word to anyone you think might enjoy it. To get a copy Click here

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EDMUND SHAKESPEARE AND ALAN NELSON

The Edmund Shakespeare Blog

William Ray described Alan Nelson as a somewhat rude Shakespeare critic, or words to that effect. That impression also emerged in a spat that took place between him and Katherine Duncan Jones on the Net, or his Socrates site. I first contacted the Berkeley University theatre historian about a novel I had started on Edmund Shakespeare, when a teacher in a Clapham pub told me about the tomb stone in the centre of Southwark Cathedral. It must be said, a late eighteenth or early nineteenth century addition to the sculptured dead there. Professor Nelson was working on listing the names in the Southwark Cathedral Token Books with a colleague, Professor Ingram, and certainly deserves the credit for naming the place Edmund Shakespeare turns up in Southwark, The Vine, at a little lecture to his students at The Globe Theatre. I hope I would have eventually uncovered it alone, but along with the difficulty of deciphering names and Elizabethan writing, you have to let a period into your blood, before you wake up to who and what, and interesting connections, that can suddenly vanish again, like wood smoke.

I was rather less impressed with a desire to ‘protect moral copyright’ in that work, since Edmund’s presence in the Token Books was already up on the net, and there is no copyright, moral or otherwise, in fact. To be fair, Alan Nelson quickly announced that at a first talk to the friends of Southwark Cathedral and how the name just might have been a forgery of John Payne Collier’s. He does not think so, though I am less certain about the name attached to The Vine, than Edmund’s certain burial record in Southwark Cathedral in 1607. I was also less impressed when I invited him to lunch in London, to discuss the whole subject, even perhaps seeking support from Berkley University, but never even got an answer.

As James Shapiro, doing 1608 for Faber and Faber, was not exactly hugely supportive of an Edmund Shakespeare project, although he said it was important. Well, our American cousins are as capable of being as protective of ‘new’ information about Shakespeare as anyone, not least because of waspish voices everywhere, in an increasingly competitive publishing world, and that there is gold in them there Shakespeare hills, or academic kudos. Except here, because frustration means we are giving work done for free! I hope it is of interest and value.

I also hope the scholars can be a little more open to work from those who are not the supposed ‘authorities’. I think writers’ and players’ instincts are very real authorities, but you must also have respect for what is actually said in the records. Alan Nelson made that point about the record of Will Kemp’s death, and the relaying of mistakes into the ‘mainstream’, picked up as ‘truth’. Go back to the source then, but do not get too fustion either about the nature of historical imagination and insight needed, nor the certain reliability of records or indeed scholarship. Much American interest in Southwark now, with Sam Wanamaker’s Globe, does seem to come straight out of the American search for its own roots, from an age of New World Discoveries, but I for one am rather dubious about the supposed name of John Harvard highlighted by an arrow in the Southwark burial records. Perhaps I am going blind!

As I have said though, I think the direct link of The Vine, in a group of Southwark buildings in the Token Books called Hunt’s Rents, to John Le Hunte, and The Brotherhood of Our Lady of Assumption, is a new and extremely important window into the vitally under studied area. As far as I know, no one else has revealed that but a scholar will have to tell me if I am wrong. Following the records of St Margaret’s Church there, which became one of the Compter Prisons, it is wonderful to find records of ‘pleyers‘ in the church, a hundred and fifty years before the new permanent Theatres. It ties that playing tradition to everyday and church life, to the great festivals and to the mystery plays, that were effectively banned under the Reformation. So theatre became essentially secular and political, in an intense and dangerous London environment. But as Ackroyd says, a Roman gladiator’s trident has been found in Southwark, and there was a very long tradition of ‘entertainments’ there.

So the dirge being sung for Henry VIII, at his death, by priests in St Saviours, now the Cathedral, was interrupted by the rowdy sound of players in the Southwark streets. Ah, time and history stop for no man, as was written over London Bridge. That band of ‘low life’ scum that William Ray tries to refer to then, or a great tradition of player troupes in England, that Shakespeare joined and fed from, however much he and Hamlet may have redirected the vision of theatre, or not, as the case may be. But it is of course Hamlet, and Hamlet’s reaction to the players’, with their vital reports, their window into truth, the play being the thing to catch the conscience of the king, and everyone else, that is one of the most obvious signs of Will Shakespeare’s living engagement with the playhouses. As that ‘magestical roof, fretted with golden fire’, gives a new resonance to an actor’s consciousness, standing physically on stage, referring to the props and artifice of the wooden O. The echo chambers to his art and his metaphysics. But it works throughout the plays, as Shakespeare engages in a dialogue about his own art, and what is truth and what show. What ‘History’ is too.

If you try and read my handwriting, in my large notebook, out of six months work at the London Metropolitan Archive, you might think mine an example of sloppy, mispelt Elizabethan writing, before spelling codified, like so much else! I have not got that with me, but it will come out in time. The picture you can begin to build up of Southwark, what was there, who living there, and how that assists Shakespeare scholarship, is one that should be shared, and shared by people on each other’s ‘side’, not trying to be the harbingers of the only truth around. Shakespeare scholarship does stand on the cusp of recorded ‘history’, perhaps a new consciousness of English or British history, suddenly being dramatised so powerfully by Shakespeare, not least because it was the beginning of parish records themselves.

DCD

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EDWARD DEVERE, WILL SHAKESPEARE AND THE IMPORTANCE OF EDMUND SHAKESPEARE

NEW THE EDMUND SHAKESPEARE BLOG

You can read some of the arguments about a Stratford vs supposed Oxford camp, around Shakespeare authorship, mostly in the comments under the post EDMUND SHAKESPEARE, THE EARL OF OXFORD, FALSTAFF AND THE HOLLOW CROWN, in William Ray’s and our notes. First little Phoenix Ark should declare an edge of ‘prejudice’ and that is all instincts here are towards Rowe, Aubrey and the ensuing Shakespeare tradition, of Stratford Will Shakespeare. Not as blind followers of any tradition though, and not without interest in other authorship ‘theories’. Then we would say that there is not a significant Oxford camp, in a theory dreamt up in the troubled 1920s and that any onus towards proving anything lies most assuredly there.

But if anyone starts to trumpet the research they do, Phoenix Ark want to suggest the value, even the singular importance of the Edmund Shakespeare story, in Southwark, to the debate. If a link can be made, and it has not been yet, between a London Hunt family, that owned The Vine in Southwark, where 27 year old Edmund Shakespeare was staying in 1607, (in the tenement rooms of one Edward Woodroofe, and perhaps his wife, probably at least, from the Southwark Cathedral Token Books) and the Stratford Hunts, it is at least suggestive. We tracked The Vine back to The Brotherhood of Our Lady of Assumption, linked to St Margaret’s Church, and founded under Henry VI, in the name of John Le Hunte, Peter Averne and others. But in a highly interconnected world, perhaps Shakespeare’s player brother, young and ultimately tragic Edmund, came to London to stay with people already known in Stratford. That has yet to be proved.

Southwark though, and especially St Olave’s Church, no longer there, but the spire of which is mentioned more than any other in Shakespeare’s plays (Ackroyd), also has strong Wessex ties. But there too, among many players and writers, is another actor in the Shakespeare family. Indeed the tradition of acting families was to emerge out of the Shoreditch, Southwark, and London circles. The significance of brothers in the plays is its own field of study, though echoes in fiction do not absolutely prove historical fact. But beyond any authorship debate, what is wonderful too are the vivid bits of evidence about lives and deaths in Southwark, so evocative of extraordinary times and a world that still raises marvellous passions.

FOR FURTHER EVIDENCE AND WORK SEE SHAKESPEARE’S BROTHER IN THE PUBLISHER’S PAGES, ABOVE

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WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, PRINCE CHARLES AND EDWARD DEVERE

There is one small element of the William Ray’s trumpeting of the theory about Edward Devere that Phoenix Ark will support, and that is you must not make too many ‘establishment’ assumptions about Shakespeare for granted. It is why we found something of the ‘Shakespeare Land’ RSC tradition, at times, or the entire industry that has built up, something of a block to rediscovering the playwright and the plays. Not to mention why the Barbican Centre, one former RSC home, may have great concert halls but is the ugliest building in Europe. As, in contrast, the BBC and The Hollow Crown are so superbly recapturing Will and the plays. It is why too much worthiness towards the ‘bard’, in school, or anywhere else, can vitally separate students from the living word, which you must inhabit, perhaps like a player, to get to the wonder and genius of.

In fact, even the ‘establishment’ theory, with so much more evidence than others, often has thin links and tiny facts too, built into entire worlds. That is certainly not to go against the William of Stratford ‘theory’, but it is to leave imaginative space to understand the real man and the time again. Someone we believe even more astonishing, if you really put it all in context. But if there is the world of airy fancy, or the new American approach of near virtual ‘recreation’, there is that third place, part fact, part fiction. It is perhaps expressed in Peter Ackroyd’s instinctive understanding of writers and the mystery of identity, and above all about the metaphorical nature of an explosive language, and a vital, organic historical moment. Shakespeare reforges the language, as if it was his non-royal but divine right. But of course Shakespeare was not THE Shakespeare he has become, however lauded in his time. He was rediscovered, even ‘reinvented’, mythologized and institutionalised too, with almost every private or public political agenda attached to his name and works, over the years. But then his work encompasses so much. His greatest rediscovery was under the early Victorians, even if they ‘Bawdlerised’ the agonies of King Lear.

One notable critic of course was Dr Johnson though, who has very interesting links, talked about in Shakespeare’s Brother (if it ever gets published) to the Thrale family. Ralph Thrale, direct from the Bishops of Winchester, bought up the land on which those theatres stood, and where Edmund Shakespeare lived for a time, turning it into the largest brewery in Europe, the Anchor Brewery. So while the players and playwrights, and their and Will’s words, were going through the guts or ears of Londoners, the future in Southwark was headed towards that all driving force, money, thanks to Londoner’s drinking guts, and the land ownership of taverns by the City, especially with the entry of the Barclay’s and Courage families. Hey ho.

It was very interesting when Anonymous came out though that Prince Charles put his name to the Stratford Camp, with his face on the website. Then he is a patron of the Birthplace Trust. We have often been admirers here, to adopt just a token of Royal crawling, or graceful respect, especially for work such as the Princes’ Trust, and even thought of sending him the ‘royal’ spirited Fire Bringer, when it first came out. It is about Scottish deer, after all. We have no idea if he’s any kind of scholar or not on the subject of Shakespeare, but it is also interesting that The Prince of Wales, divinely righted or not, does not support the Edward Devere theory either. Incidentally, along with Dr Johnson, one of the many visitors to the Anchor Brewery where The Globe and The Vine had stood, was another Prince of Wales.

PA Press

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SAYING HELLO TO CHRISTIAN MIHAI

Just a quick hello to a Phoenix reader, Christian, in Romania, to thank him for support, and to say we will blog some more travel writing about a five week trip there in 1990, that came to be the background for THE SIGHT.

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PA PRESS RELEASE – FIRE BRINGER FREE DOWNLOAD!

Phoenix Ark are delighted to announce, as a little pre Olympian celebration, and with the coming publication of The Terror Time Spies, that the US Edition of Fire Bringer, will be available for free Kindle download this Thursday, July 19th.

The US Editions of both Fire Bringer and The Sight have slight variations to the UK editions, partly out of the editorial requests of Abram’s Susan Van Metre, then at Penguin US, a creative working relationship that shattered in a battle in New York. Please spread the word to anyone who might enjoy a copy, but for your free download this Thursday Click here

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HENRY V, SIMON RUSSELL BEALE, DEVERE AND SHAKESPEARE TRIUMPHS

Carole Heath joins the praise for Simon Russell Beale and we’re also thrilling with mighty expectation over Tom Hiddleston’s coming Henry V on the BBC. You can read our little running argument though about the ‘Oxford theory’ with knowledgable William Ray in the comments below, which will be linked in time. You can also read some research into Edmund Shakespeare and London’s Southwark above, although we confess to being more the creative writers, than the blinking scholars. With all due respect to blinking scholars, or ones coughing in ink.

Carole also mentions the soaring poetry of Henry V. To us and James Shapiro it was written at that critical moment in Shakespeare’s life and career, so wonderfully described in Shapiro’s 1599, when The Globe Theatre went up in Southwark and a troupe that stayed together for 20 years, among acting ffelowes that remembered each other with mourning rings in their wills, broke from the likes of more lowly entertainment and money-minded Phillipe Henslowe, driven on as the lease ran out in The Theatre. Though everyone could do with a decent amount of money, not least Phoenix Ark press! Henry V is about forging a language of national identity, a Royal propaganda too and also a consciousness of Self and Kingship. It begins in the absolutely brutal dismissal of Falstaff in Henry IV Part II, so devastating with Hiddleston and Russell Beale, only because you had come to love Falstaff’s flawed humanity, although precursored in the play within the play, the trying on of roles, in the Boar’s Head game. “Banish honest Jack and banish all the world.” “I do, I will.”

Carole also mentions the famous St Crispins’ Day speech of Henry V, that made the Laurence Olivier movie, facing the Nazis in World War II, so seminal, with its flags fluttering over that wooden theatre, as they were always raised to announce performances. As England had faced the Spanish Armada, but also the ‘invisible Armadas’ of renewed threat, or the rumour of it, in 1599. That rallying cry so limply quoted by young Rees Mogg in Parliament last year, as the UK goes on about being anti European, “imitate the actions of the tiger, stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood, disguise fair nature with hard favoured rage.” Shakespeare’s jewel of genius and insight though is not just about power and rhetoric, but a King who had the common touch and so was loved, but loved as a hero made myth, in that ‘little touch of harry in the night.’ The soaring power of the poetic chorus, as ‘fire answers fire’ in the flaming crucible of his own imagination.

The feast of Crispin Crispianus came out of that pre-Reformation tradition of Saints and though historically accurate that Agincourt was on the eve of that Saints Day, removed under Vatican II, it is an interesting footnote to the work on Edmund Shakespeare here, that Will Shakespeare makes so much of it. The legend is about two brothers, twins, who were the patron saints of shoemakers. The speech of course gives Henry the common touch, to connect with the ordinary soldiery, but to stir those hearts to the noble fight, despite all the ironies of life and death that surrounded it. Peter Ackroyd makes much of how Southwark was so involved in the stink trades‘ there though, on the edge of the Thames, like shoemaking and leather working. It was also a district of many Haberdashers, like William Smythe, who left us a list of London Lord Mayors, and ran an extraordinary local poor support system that was probably more like a local sweatshop. The Southwark people he gave poor aid to wore cloaks with his initials stitched in, WS (no, not William Shakespeare) but then everyone was aspiring to rule the roost. Some of the work of local nobility there, like Lord Montague, who owned the palace in front of Southwark Cathedral running to the Thames, strikes much of today’s charity political dinner syndrome, or ladies who lunch and launch.

Southwark, a very tough London district, including taverns, theatres and brothels, also gave the largest number of recruits to Elizabethan and Caroline wars. So again comes a speech talking straight out of a London area it was forged in, certainly performed in, and one which would have found direct relevance and appreciation among a local audience. That unknown Brotherhood of Our Lady of Assumption we mention in the Edmund Shakespeare work above (unedited), which had owned the tavern/brewhouse where Edmund was staying in the year of his death, 1607, The Vine, was founded under Henry VI by wardens of St Margaret’s Church in Southwark, including one John Le Hunte. The site of St Margaret’s is now the old town hall on Borough High Street, but with very Catholic leanings, as the area was such a fault line for London Reformation battles, it was thrown down in Henry’s dissolutions and turned into a local prison. The Puritans would later do that to the Bishop of Winchester’s palace too. Reading the records of St Margaret’s Church, where ‘pleyers‘ are mentioned a hundred and fifty years before Shakespeare, as we are aware also crucial new evidence, performing on St Margaret’s and St Lucy’s Days, suddenly stop, around 1545. Then all you have are six latin depositions of the wardens. They were the Henretian inquests, that also threw down local St Thomas’s ‘hosptial’ as a ‘bawdy house’. But the area was an area of tanners, leatherworkers and shoemakers, as well as Thames watermen. Southwark Cathedral, then St Saviours, formerly the monastic buildings of St Mary’s Ovaries, which took over jurisdiction for St Margaret’s parishoners, was also directly linked to the guild of leatherworkers. One prominent warden, Thomas Cure, who founded a local school in Southwark, was Elizabeth I’s saddler. Some of the material on record should be copied out to make a Shakespeare Southwark collection.

All good leather to chew on, in wondering who these real people were, in the forging of immortal art. Who they certainly were not, although he may have had talent, may have loved literature and theatre and may have been a patron, was Edward devere, 17th Earl of Oxford. Shakespeare lived and worked in Southwark, in a ‘Domus et Aliorium’, perhaps right next to The Globe, or part of a building complex that had tenements attached, like most taverns, as did his failed youngest brother Edmund. As did Philippe Henslowe and Edward Alleyn, and so many of the names associated with the London theatres, as writers and players. Also carpenters, prompters and the rest. That is the thrill of building up a true portrait of 16th and early 17th Century Southwark and Bankside, that we will try to blog in time. Look at the records of Southwark Cathedral, in burial and death registers, and you can literally feel the globe being built, with the baptism of joiners children, or the arrival of ‘men in bookes’.

Although, to take William Ray’s side on the ‘authority’ of establishment theorising, it is astonishing in today’s disastrous publishing climate, and what passes for culture, that we have not found backing for the work and story from major publishers. You, the reading public, will have to tell us then if there is interest in the work, by coming here and voting with your leather clad feet! We’d enjoy it if you do, there is really fascinating and unknown stuff, that wakes a world 400 years old. Indeed, if you don’t, you may find yourself accursed you were not here!

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SUNSPOTS AND THE MAYAN END!

We hate to bore on about the Mayan End of the World, this year, and perhaps we look too hard, or know too much, but AOL have just announced massive new Sunspot activity, heading for Earth. CME’s they are called, Coronal Mass Ejections. So perhaps one of the predictions in the thriller The Godhead Game, about a Polar Flip in the Earth’s magnetic field, is coming true. It would be an awful way to piggy back publicity, trumpeting the end of everything, but actually the themes in The Godhead Game, set just slightly in the future, if there is one, in 2014, are about the serious issues that face us all. They are also about the sense split between science and other kinds of belief or faith today. Don’t panic, but to read it now Click here.

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SIMON RUSSELL BEALE AND NO HOLLOW TRIUMPH

Henry IV part II, last night, in the BBC’s Shakespeare series The Hollow Crown, was wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. Set in the contemporary clothes it was meant to be, with that very gritty sense of real people, and real history, it brought everything alive. The acting was superb across the board, but despite Jeremy Irons, and Tom Hiddleston’s great and sensitive Henry V, the very unhollow crown went to Simon Russell Beale as Falstaff.

The cleverness, maturity and scope of that performance, never tumbling into just the comic caricature, was extraordinary and marks him out as one of the greats. Just to pick up a little argument here, apparently he does not think Shakespeare was the Earl of Oxford, Francis Bacon, or anyone else except complex Will Shakespeare, but perhaps leading actors like Derek Jacobi, Mark Rylance and Simon Russell Beale should argue it out for us, from the actors viewpoint.

But something else that TV production proved, in its perfect handling of settings, people and the text, was that Shakespeare inhabited that kind of environment in London, out of comparatively recent history, that had not changed a great deal. But forget the Olympics, this Shakespeare fest, both plays and the commentaries, is proving a jewel in a country’s sometimes tarnished cultural crown.

Phoenix Ark

ps with a respect for not mouthing other’s opinions we added an ‘apparently’ Simon Russell Beale does not think Shakespeare was Oxford

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