Darren Freebury-Jones
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A player’s hide
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This chapter argues that Shakespeare’s ability to weave elements of other dramatists’ plays into his own works was attributable in large part to the rhetorical training he received at school and as an actor who performed in other men’s plays as well as his own. The chapter offers a detailed survey of the theatre of the time, the ways in which Shakespeare was conscious of the strengths, limitations, and dimensions of the stage, and the various playing companies working during the period to fulfil a commercial operation, entertaining audiences by writing in and conflating a variety of genres to make money. The chapter looks at the different ways in which company managers, actors, and playwrights worked together, including different forms of collaboration, such as co-authorship, revision, and adaptation, all ways in which Shakespeare worked with other playwrights.

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Shakespeare’s borrowed feathers

How early modern playwrights shaped the world’s greatest writer

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