Darren Freebury-Jones
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Thomas Middleton
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This chapter offers an account of the ways in which Shakespeare collaborated with Thomas Middleton on Timon of Athens, how these writers of different tempers produced a play quite unlike anything they wrote alone. The chapter surveys the evidence for Middleton’s adaptations of Macbeth, Measure for Measure, and All’s Well that Ends Well. Middleton’s stylistic feathers possibly found their way into Shakespeare’s First Folio. However, the chapter argues that the recent attribution of the famous ‘fly scene’ in Titus Andronicus to Middleton is unconvincing and offers a radical new hypothesis on why that scene is absent from early editions of the tragedy, building on the theory that Shakespeare and George Peele worked together directly. On the other hand, the chapter uses cutting-edge digital technology to confirm that Middleton was responsible for writing The Revenger’s Tragedy.

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Shakespeare’s borrowed feathers

How early modern playwrights shaped the world’s greatest writer

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