1st Edition

Embracing Disruption Clowning, Improvisation, and the Unscripted in Early Shakespearean Performance

By Stephen Wisker Copyright 2026
136 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

136 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This volume celebrates the centrality of clowning in Shakespeare’s conception of theatre and explores how he purposefully invited the clown’s anarchic energy into the heart of his dramaturgy. Clowning was a potent but divisive force in the theater of Shakespeare’s time, challenging the emerging tyranny of decorum and the developing notion of the authorial voice. As such, the figure of the clown... Read more

Acknowledgements


Introduction: Thriving Beyond Authorial Control
Chapter 1: The Man Who Could ‘Please All’ Dick Tarlton’s World and Playground
Chapter 2: ‘Enter Will Kemp’ Revivifying the Clown Peter in Romeo and Juliet
Chapter 3: ‘A Good Wit Will Make Use of Anything’ Kemp’s Playful Clowning in Serious History
Chapter 4: Clown Prince Hamlet - Exposing the Fictions of Decorum.
Chapter 5: “The Worst Returns to Laughter,” Transformation through Collaboration, Robert Armin as Lear’s Fool


Index

Biography

Stephen Wisker is an Assistant Professor of Theatre in The School of Media, Arts, and Culture at Wesleyan College.

''Embracing Disruption brilliantly fuses historical reconstruction and clown practice to demonstrate how Shakespeare preserved and exploited the disruptive nature of the clown in the face of growing constraints on clowning and improvisation. An essential text for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in Shakespeare.''

Professor Robert Knopf, Professor Emeritus, Department of Theatre nad Dance, University at Buffalo