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23 - His collaborator Thomas Middleton

from Part III - Colleagues and Patrons

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2015

Emma Smith
Affiliation:
Hertford College, Oxford
Paul Edmondson
Affiliation:
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Stanley Wells
Affiliation:
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
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Summary

There's no case yet for the RSC's notepaper to be altered to read The Royal Shakespeare and Middleton and Others Company, but there must now be an argument for posters and programmes for future productions of Macbeth, Measure for Measure, Timon of Athens and now All's Well That End's Well carrying a joint credit to Shakespeare and Middleton.

Mark Lawson, ‘Let's face it: Shakespeare had help’, The Guardian 1 May 2012

By the middle of the first decade of the seventeenth century, Middleton and Shakespeare must have known each other, and each other's work, pretty well. The extent and nature of that artistic relationship is, however, currently being rapidly rewritten. Scholars now agree that they collaborated on Timon of Athens, and a consensus is almost emerging that the texts of Macbeth and Measure for Measure in the 1623 Folio represent Middleton adaptations of Shakespeare plays. But – the recent suggestion of All's Well That Ends Well is a case in point – there's probably more to come (Maguire and Smith 2012a). Two contemporary critical strands converge to make it highly likely that further Middletonian collaboration or adaptation will be discovered in the Shakespeare canon: the new embrace of the collaborative energies of early modern theatre; and a quantifiable and increasingly robust understanding of the textual markers of Middleton's authorship. Currently, only the writing partnership with John Fletcher at the end of Shakespeare's career is known to have lasted beyond a single play, but Middleton may yet emerge as a more significant collaborator. In addition, Middleton's own plays show him to be a creative and responsive early reader and reviser of the older playwright's work.

Thomas Middleton was born in 1580 in Ironmonger Lane in St Lawrence parish in the city of London, just off the commercial thoroughfare of Cheapside that would be such a potent setting for many of his city plays. His father William was a wealthy bricklayer granted a coat of arms in 1568 and a crest showing a chained marmoset or ape. His mother Anne remarried in 1586 shortly after William's death.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Shakespeare Circle
An Alternative Biography
, pp. 297 - 304
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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References

Eccles, Mark 1957. ‘Thomas Middleton a Poett’, Studies in Philology 54: 516–36Google Scholar
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Jackson, MacDonald P. 1979. Studies in Attribution: Middleton and Shakespeare. Salzburg. Institut Fur Anglistik und Amerikanistik, Universität SalzburgGoogle Scholar
Jackson, MacDonald P. 2007. ‘Early Modern Authorship: Canons and Chronologies’ in Taylor, Gary and Lavagnino, John (eds.), Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture: A Companion to The Collected Works. Oxford. Clarendon Press, 80–97Google Scholar
Jowett, John (ed.) 2004. Timon of Athens. Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
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Lake, David J. 1975. The Canon of Thomas Middleton's Plays. Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Maguire, Laurie and Smith, Emma 2012a. ‘Many Hands – A New Shakespeare Collaboration?’, Times Literary Supplement 19 April 2012
Maguire, Laurie and Smith, Emma 2012b. ‘“Time's comic sparks”: the dramaturgy of A Mad World, My Masters and Timon of Athens’ in Taylor, Gary and Henley, Trish Thomas (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Thomas Middleton. Oxford University Press, pp. 181–96Google Scholar
Taylor, Gary 2004. ‘Middleton, Thomas (bap. 1580, d. 1627)’, in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2008, www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/18682, accessed 1 Sept. 2014Google Scholar
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Vickers, Brian 2010. ‘Disintegrated: Did Middleton adapt Macbeth?’, Times Literary Supplement 20 May

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