Movable Londons
Performance and the Modern City
Abstract
In September 1666, a fire sparked in a bakery on Pudding Lane grew until it had destroyed four-fifths of central London. The rebuilding efforts that followed not only launched the careers of some of London’s most famous architects, but also transformed Londoners’ relationship to their city by underscoring the ways that people could shape a city’s spaces—and the ways that a city’s spaces could shape its people. Movable Londons looks to the Restoration theater to understand how the dispossessed made London into a modern city after the Great Fire of 1666 and how the introduction of changeable scenery in theaters altered how Londoners conceptualized the city. Fawcett makes a claim for the centrality of unplanned spaces and the role of the Restoration theater in articulating those spaces as the modern city emerged and argues that movable scenery revolutionized London’s public theaters, inviting audiences to observe how the performers—many of them hailing from the same communities as their characters—navigated the stage.
Keywords
scenery, space, spatial practices, urban planning, city, London, theater, backstage labor, movable property, servants, rape law, personal space, Nonconformists, tacticsstrategies, immigrants, Irish immigration to London, Black Londoners, performance, John Dryden, Aphra Behn, John Vanbrugh, George Farquhar, William Wycherley, The Padlock, John GayDOI
10.3998/mpub.14472416ISBN
9780472905218, 9780472905218, 9780472077625, 9780472057627Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2025Imprint
University of Michigan PressClassification
Performing arts
Theatre: technical and background skills
History of architecture


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