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The cliche'd idea is that the role of women was to stay around the house, cooking and cleaning, to cook and clean in the house, raise children and feed her family; they did not go to school, and men were considered the superior sex. The men had the choice of who they married; the women had little or no choice. In Shakespeare's time, women were not treated humanely but more like sex objects. Men were seen as the superior sex of which had complete control over women and could marry who ever they wanted. The women had no say in who they married to. Basically the two genders were not treated equally. Also women could not go to school. Instead, they had to stay at home to cook and clean. Men could also bet on the behavior of their wives to see which is the 'tamest' (if you believe the play The Taming of the Shrew to be an accurate reflection of reality). Obviously a lot has changed since Shakespearian times and men and women are now treated more equally and have the same rights as each other.

The reality was much more complex. Clearly it does not apply to nuns, or prostitutes, or widows or to the most important woman in the country, Queen Elizabeth, who neither cooked nor cleaned, was incredibly well-educated, constantly rebutted suggestions that she should marry this or that person, and was a terror to all those men around her. Sure, when she spoke at Tilbury, she said "I know that I have the body but of a weak and feeble woman"--that was the cliche--but she continued "but I have the heart and stomach of a king, and of a King of England too."

In other words, formidable women have always found the way to be a force in their world, and to subvert the cliche. It is no surprise that in Shakespeare's plays in which young women are to be forced into arranged marriages (Midsummer Night's Dream and Merry Wives of Windsor), both Hermia and Ann Page escape the arranged marriage and end up with the guy they want. In the play where the man is being forced into an unwanted marriage (All's Well that Ends Well), on the other hand, he not only has to go through with the wedding, but he is roundly criticised for not liking it.

Ann Shakespeare, for example, clearly chose William as a husband, as the match was not one that would have been arranged (and was concluded largely due to the onset of little Susannah). While her husband was off in London establishing a career in the theatre business, she was in Stratford with the three kids for over twenty-five years. During all that time, she ran the house, fed and clothed the kids and herself and did what work she could to supplement the income which must have been irregular, particularly at the start of William's career. She must have been a remarkable woman, and yet there must have been many like her.

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Related Questions

Who could not act in Elizabethan theatre?

Women


Who played female roles in the globe theatre?

Young men whose voice had not yet cracked played the female roles back in the Elizabethan era. They did this because women were not allowed to act.


What was the difference between the Globe Theatre and the Elizabethan theater?

Nothing. The Globe theatre was one of the Elizabethan theatres. Think of "Elizabethan" as a time or type, not an actual theatre with that name.


In Elizabethan theatre were men and women allowed to perform?

No women were not allowed to perform. Men were made to play women parts and dressed up as girls.


Did men only act in the globe theatre?

Yes as in Elizabethan culture it was socially unacceptable for women to be actors in the theatre. So as a consequence female parts were played by males.


What was usually the gender that preformed in Elizabethan theatre?

The male gender performed in Elizabethan theater; acting was considered to be a disreputable profession for women (who were pretty much limited to being either housewives or nuns).


Who was allowed to act on the Globe Theatre stage?

In the Globe Theatre, only male actors were permitted to perform on stage, as women were banned from acting during the Elizabethan era. Young boys, often prepubescent, played female roles since their voices had not yet deepened. This practice reflected the societal norms of the time regarding gender roles and the perception of women in public life. Notable actors, such as William Shakespeare, were part of the acting company that performed at the Globe.


In the globe theatre why did woman's have to cover their faces?

In the Globe Theatre, women were not allowed to perform on stage due to societal norms and restrictions of the time. Therefore, female roles were played by young boys or men. When women did attend the theatre, they often covered their faces to maintain modesty and adhere to the expectations of Elizabethan society, which valued female virtue and decorum. This practice helped to prevent any impropriety and maintain the social order of the era.


What did the Elizabethan theatre look like?

Elizabethan theater involved several theater companies of actors and playwrights. In London the globe theater was in use and Shakespeare was performing his works. There were no female actresses during Elizabethan times, instead young teenage boys would play female roles.


What is Shakespeare's globe theatre a example of?

Reconstruction. The builders tried, in the twentieth century, to replicate using Elizabethan techniques, an Elizabethan theatre. (Shakespeare's Globe Theatre opened in 1997)


What was the cost of standing room at the Globe Theatre in elizabethan time?

It would cost a penny for the standing room at the Globe Theatre in Elizabethan time.


What are the other names of Elizabethan Theater?

Strictly speaking the Elizabethan Theatre was the theatre during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England 1558-1603. The Shakespearean Theatre was the theatre during the career of William Shakespeare, being 1590-1613 more or less. As you see, there was a lot of Elizabethan Theatre before Shakespeare got started and he also did a lot of work after her death, during the period of the Jacobean Theatre. The Elizabethan and Jacobean periods are sometimes called English Renaissance Theatre.