Chester
Plays
Of the Chester Plays (twenty-five parts), five
complete MSS. from the period between 1591 and 1607 have been preserved.
They were doubtless intended for representation on perambulating pageants.
It might seem astonishing that the performance
used to take place at Whitsuntide, not on Corpus Christi day; however,
this is not unexampled; at Norwich, for instance, processional plays were
acted on Whit Sunday, at Lincoln on St. Anne's day (26 July). But, besides
this, the stage arrangement here has several peculiarities of its own.
Dramatic life is not so fully developed as
in other processional plays; the Chester Plays, in fact, remind us of
the medieval German processional plays of Zerbst and Künzelsau, from
which we still may see how the procession gradually assumed a dramatic
character.
As in these, there appears in the Chester Plays
an "expositor," who intervenes between actors and audience;
instead, however, of his place being with the rest of the actors on the
stage vehicle, he accompanies them on horseback. He declares expressly
that he is about to explain to the unlearned among his audience the connection
and the deeper meaning of the performances; he joins moral reflections
to the actions represented; sometimes, he supplies a narrative of events
passed over in the plays.
The contents of several scenes are chiefly instructive
or didactic, such as the offering of bread and wine by Melchizedek, or
the prophecies of Ezekiel, Zechariah, Daniel and St. John concerning the
end of the world.
The traditional humorous figures of Noah's wife,
and of the shepherds on Christmas Eve, are still kept up; but, generally
speaking, the original purpose of these processions, namely, a representation
of the ecclesiastical history of the world in its chief passages, appears
more plainly here than in the York and Wakefield Plays, which, for the
sake of what was theatrically effective, almost entirely neglected the
original instructive element.
It may be further noted that, at Chester, processional
plays were not all acted consecutively on a single day, the performance
being spread over Whit Monday and the two following days of the week.
|
What's in a name. |
MEDIEVAL CHURCH PLAYS |
The Old, the New & the Saints |
Aesthetic Representation and Technic. |
Waylaid |
Mystery Plays in England. |
Coventry’s medieval mystery plays. |
Your in good company |
Chester Plays |
Towneley Mysteries |
Oberammergau passion play |
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