The Swan Theatre 1595. The Swan Theater It was built by Francis Langley between 1594 and 1596(during the 1 st half of William Shakespeare’s career). Intended.

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The Swan Theatre 1595

The Swan Theater It was built by Francis Langley between 1594 and 1596(during the 1 st half of William Shakespeare’s career). Intended to compete the Rose Located :- –on the west end of the Bank side district of Southwark, –across the River Thames from the City of London –at the northeast corner of the Paris Garden estate that Francis Langley had purchased in May 1589 –east of the manor house –150 yards south of the Paris Garden stairs at the river's edge

The Swan Theatre Location

A drawing in the library of Utrecht University, Netherlands. Fol. 131v- 132v of MS 842, a notebook compiled by Arnoldus Buchellius - Arendt van Buchell ( ), contains a drawing bearing the inscription of his friend, Ex obseruationibus Londinensibus Iohannis De Witt -Canon Johannes De Witt in 1956 If the Lord Chamberlain's Men acted Twelfth Night’s at the Swan in the summer of 1596—which is possible, though far from certain—they would be the actors shown in the Swan sketch

The descriptions of the Swan from Johannes De Witt, a Dutchman who visited London around 1596(translated from Latin); finest and biggest of the London theatres of its day a capacity for 3000 spectators was built of flint stones stacked on top of each other its wooden supporting columns were so cleverly painted that "they would deceive the most acute observer into thinking that they were marble," giving the Swan a "Roman" appearance Open-air amphitheatre playhouse, virtually round in shape, has a stage projecting to the yard surmounted by a stage cover supported on 2 pillars

The Swan Theatre was the fourth in the series of large public playhouses of London, after James Burbage's The Theatre (1576) and Curtain (1577), and Philip Henslowe's Rose (1587–88). Named after the “Swans” swimming along the River Thames where it is located The Swan was used for plays until 1620, was still standing in 1632, and may have survived until c.1637

In 1597 the Swan housed the acting company Pembroke's Men, who staged the infamous play The Isle of Dogs, by Thomas Nashe and Ben Jonson, the content of which gave offense for unknown reasons was highly critical of the government and which landed the dramatists in jaiiland the Swan was closed in that year Francis Langley, already in trouble with the Privy Council over matters unrelated to theater, may have exacerbated his danger by allowing his company to stage the play after a royal order that all playing stop and all theaters be demolished This order may have been directed at Langley alone; the other companies, the Lord Chamberlain's Men and the Admiral's Men, had been authorized to return to the stage by October The Swan had a revival of theatrical activity between 1611 and 1615 after it was opened again on 1602

Along with The Isle of Dogs, the most famous play to premiere there was Thomas Middleton's A Chaste Maid in Cheapside, performed by the newly-merged Lady Elizabeth's Men in 1613 The Swan Theater offered other popular entertainments, such as swashbuckling competitions and bear-baiting The facility of The Swan Theatre grew decrepit over the next two decades. In Nicholas Goodman's 1632 pamphlet Holland's Leaguer, the theatre is described as "now fallen into decay, and, like a dying swan, hangs her head and sings her own dirge." Historical sources do not mention the Swan after that date

The New Swan Theatre –A reconstructed Shakespearean theatre in Stratford, Greater London, United Kingdom

Front Text: "The Swan 1595“ Reverse Text: "Shakespeare's Globe (The Swan 1595). Reproduced from a stamp designed by C Walter Hodges and issued by Royal Mail on 8 August 1995“ Publisher: Royal Mail Stamp Card Series; PHQ 172(a) 8.95; 1995 ~The End~