
Keywords:
Theatrical historicism, William Shakespeare, Richard II, Edmund Kean, Napoleon, 19th-century theatre
Abstract:
This article examines Edmund Kean’s 1815 production of William Shakespeare's Richard II at Drury Lane as a case study in the playful dynamics of nineteenth-century theatrical historicism. It argues that the textual adaptation by Richard Wroughton combined documentary realism with emotional and interpretive freedom, allowing audiences to ‘play’ with the past while reflecting on contemporary political anxieties in the wake of the Napoleonic Wars. At a time when the figure of Napoleon circulated in British culture as both tyrannical usurper and charismatic, heroic liberator, the production invited similarly dual readings of kingship and legitimacy. Through close attention to staging, textual alteration, reception, and the wider culture of performance and spectacle, the article demonstrates how theatre functions as a performative mode of historical interpretation in which sovereignty, identity, and power are continually rehearsed, contested, and emotionally re-experienced on stage.
About the author
Fernanda Korovsky Moura (Leiden University)
Dr. Fernanda Korovsky Moura completed her PhD at Leiden University, the Netherlands, in 2023. Her thesis, entitled Farewell King! Staging the Middle Ages in Nineteenth-Century London Performances of Shakespeare's Richard II, explores how three productions of the play (by Edmund Kean, William Charles Macready, and Charles Kean) recreate the Middle Ages, elucidating the complexities of negotiating several layers of past in art. Moura is working on a book proposal to share her research findings. She is currently a postdoctoral researcher at Leiden University.
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