Note on Texts and Spelling
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The “Playhouse” Canon
Chapter 1: Archetypes
Chapter 2: Multipurpose Spaces
Chapter 3: Crowd Capacities
Chapter 4: Community Hubs
Chapter 5: Businesses
Coda: Archives and Afterlives
Index
Biography
Callan Davies researches the cultural, literary, and theatrical history of early modern England. He has taught at universities across the UK and at Shakespeare's Globe, and he is part of the project teams Before Shakespeare and Middling Culture. His work includes studies of Elizabethan playhouses, rhetoric, practice-as-research and a monograph with Routledge, Strangeness in Jacobean Drama.
''We thought we knew the answer to Davies’ title question, but it turns out that playhouses were much more various, multiple, and collaborative venues than traditionally allowed. Based on new archival work and a refreshing critical intelligence, Davies’ exciting and readable book is a theatre-history gamechanger.'' Emma Smith, Hertford College, Oxford
''In What is a Playhouse? England at Play, 1520–1620, Callan Davies brilliantly explores and expands our understanding of what an early modern playhouse was in London and beyond, resulting in a book which is a much-needed addition to the field of theatre study.'' Heather Knight MCIfA, FSA, archaeologist who led the excavations of Curtain, Theatre and Boar’s Head playhouses.
''What was a playhouse and how was it used in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries? Davies’ detailed study capitalises on recent archaeological discoveries and offers new archival research to revisit and reassess what we think we know about early modern playing venues, a concept which was more elastic and varied than traditional narratives have conditioned us to believe. Rigorous yet engaging, What is a Playhouse? is a welcome corrective to Globe-centric conceptions of playing spaces, accentuating a plurality and diversity of venues that ‘housed’ play in all its forms.'' David McInnis, University of Melbourne
''Callan Davies' new book, What is a Playhouse? England at Play, 1520–1620, offers a fresh and stimulating perspective for anyone interested in the history of theatre and popular entertainment. His decentring of older London-centred narratives of a male-dominated theatre world opens up a more generous view of the multipurpose functions of playhouses and a well-researched view of the wide range of indoor and outdoor spaces used and supported by diverse participants -- men, women, children and animals -- in the Shakespearean era and earlier. An important reassessment of the pervasive influence and meaning of play in early modern England.'' Sally-Beth MacLean, Professor; Director of Research/General Editor, Records of Early English Drama (REED)
''This book will be warmly welcomed by anyone interested in the spatial turn within early modern studies, placemaking, and literary geography. Davies insists with other recent scholars that playhouses must be studied not only in terms of the materials and structures they were built out of and next to but also within
their wider material environments....Davies’s eye-opening answers to the question ‘What is a playhouse?’ will hopefully inspire future scholars to explore different venues and recreational activities across provincial England.''Early Theatre 27.1 (2024), 143–5 https://doi.org/10.12745/et.27.1.5788; Christopher Highley, The Ohio State University
‘'Hamlet captures one way in which Renaissance theater, according to Callan Davies’s What is a Playhouse? England at Play, 1520–1620, encompassed and necessitated other forms of expertise and relied on an audience’s ability to ‘read’ other play forms” (83). Davies substantially rethinks the early modern playhouse and offers a new critical vocabulary with which to describe its “family” of architectural features (2). He focuses on all the elements that early modern contemporaries could have identified as part of a playhouse rather than on what was not, such as the long contested “discovery space.” The book often aligns playhouse development with broader cultural trends, making these venues seem more a part of a shared mental furniture than I had previously appreciated. The book’s treatment of women is particularly admirable, as early English theater history has tended to be deeply entwined with figures like Philip Henslowe who can so easily serve as surrogates for characters in the play of English playhouse development. As findings from the last four decades of playhouse archaeological discoveries make their way into the study of early modern drama, this primer to early modern entertainment is positioned to only become more crucial over time.'' Elizabeth E. Tavares, Shakespeare Bulletin, Volume 40, Johns Hopkins University Press
The book was listed as one of the books of the year 2023 in History Today
(https://www.historytoday.com/archive/review/best-new-history-books-2023)
''Moving from page to the stage, Callan Davies’ refreshing book What Is a Playhouse? England at Play 1520-1620 (Routledge) re-examines an economy of fun. If the First Folio put the plays firmly in the study, Davies examines them in the context of the entertainments of their time, including gambling, sport, drinking and bear-baiting.''






