Gallathea

Title page of Gallathea.

Gallathea or Galatea is an Elizabethan era stage play, a comedy by John Lyly. The first record of the play's performance was at Greenwich Palace on New Year's Day, 1588 where it was performed before Queen Elizabeth I and her court by the Children of St Paul's , a troupe of boy actors. At this point in his literary career, Lyly had already achieved success with his prose romance Euphues and was a writer in residence at Blackfriars theatre. The play is set in a village on the Lincolnshire shore of the river Humber and in the neighboring woods. It features a host of characters including Greek deities, Nymphs, fairies and some shepherds.

Early History

A play titled Titirus and Galathea was entered into the Stationers' Register on 1 April 1585. Some scholars have speculated that this play, otherwise unknown, may have been an early version of Lyly's work though the point is open to doubt, since what clearly was Lyly's play was entered into the Register on 4 October 1591, along with his Endymion and Midas. Gallathea was acted at the royal palace at Greenwich before Queen Elizabeth I by the Children of Paul's, most likely on 1 January 1588 (new style).[1] Gallathea was first printed in 1592, in a quarto printed by John Charlwood for Joan Broome (the widow of bookseller William Broome, who had published reprints of Lyly's Campaspe and Sapho and Phao in 1591). Gallathea was next printed in Six Court Comedies (1632), the first collected edition of Lyly's works.[2]

Characters

Plot synopsis

The play opens in a small village somewhere in Lincolnshire with the shepherd Tyterus informing his daughter Gallathea of Neptune’s demands. Every five years, the village must sacrifice the fairest virgin to Neptune, or he will drown them all. This demand is payment for the destruction of Neptune's temples many years ago. Upon her selection, the virgin is tied to a tree in the woods where Neptune’s terrifying monster Agar shall appear. Gallathea is one of the fairest maidens in the village and Tyterus believes she will be the chosen sacrifice. To save his daughter, Tyterus decides that she shall adopt male attire and hide in the woods. The shepherd Melebeus also has a beautiful daughter, Phillida and is equally worried she will be this year’s sacrifice. He concocts the same plan as Tyterus and informs Phillida that it is the only way to avoid being sacrificed. Phillida agrees to the plan, even though she is skeptical on whether she can successfully pass as a boy, explaining the disguise “will neither become my bodie nor my minde” (1.3.15). Both girls are instructed to hide in the nearby woods until the day of sacrifice has passed. Meanwhile, Cupid encounters one of Diana's nymphs in the woods. After several flirtatious attempts, she refuses his amorous advances due to her vow of chastity, which infuriates the god. He resolves to cause mischief for the goddess Diana and her chaste, virginal followers.

The audience are also introduced to Raffe, Robin and Dicke, the three Miller’s sons who are shipwrecked in Lincolnshire. This is the beginning of an amusing albeit unusual subplot that continues throughout the play.

Act II begins with Gallathea and Phillida wandering the woods in their male disguises. The two girls struggle with how they should act as boys and have taken the names Tyterus II and Melebeus II respectively. Their speech is remarkably similar, using identical metre and vocabulary. The two meet and are immediately attracted to one another, unaware that the other is female. The confusion is heightened with the arrival of Diana. The play relies on the characters confusion for humour; the audience are the only ones aware that Gallathea and Phillida are both female. There is also a lot of pun based humour: Diana states she is hunting deer which Gallathea confuses as “dear”, worrying that Diana seeks out Phillida and that she must compete with the goddess for Phillida’s affections. By this time, Gallathea and Phillida are completely in love with each other. Both have a soliloquy where they complain and moan how unfortunate it is that they have fallen in love with another.

Cupid informs the audience that he shall disguise himself as a nymph and join Diana’s hunting party. Once he has infiltrated the group, he plans to make the nymphs fall in love with Gallathea and Phillida. Neptune appears on stage, furious that the shepherds have disguised the fairest virgins as boys. He vows revenge and enters the woods. The nymphs Ramia and Eurota fall in love with Gallathea while Telusa falls for Phillida. Diana is furious when the nymphs romantic feelings are revealed. She admonishes them all, declaring that Diana’s Chase will not become Venus’s Court. Cupid’s trickery is discovered and Diana threatens him with her displeasure and punishment unless he undoes the love spells.

By Act IV, the confusions begins to be resolved. Cupid is forced to reverse the spells and the nymphs are free of their infatuation. Gallathea and Phillida become more enamored with each other, although they do come to suspect that the other is actually a girl in disguise. In the meantime, Raffe, Robin and Dicke encounter three different characters: the Mariner, the Alchemist and the Astronomer. Each tradesmen offer the brothers advice. Raffe is the most confident and intelligent of the three and the audience see how he reaches his own conclusions from the advice given to him. The three brothers frequently break out into song, which humorously details their position in life.

Back in the village, Tyterus and Melebeus accuse one another of having a fair daughter, worthy of being sacrificed. However, both deny the existence of their daughters. Tyterus claims he doesn’t have one and Melebeus claims Phillida died in infancy. With neither man admitting to hiding their daughters, the villagers choose another sacrifice. Hebe is brought out as a substitute. She bemoans her tragic fate and her plain visage in the longest speech of the play. However, Neptune’s monster does not appear, thus refusing Hebe as a sacrifice. In a comedic twist, Hebe complains how unfortunate and unlucky she is; in death she would have been remembered as the most beautiful but now she must live with the shame that she is not fair enough for Neptune. The villager Ericthinis delivers the crushing judgement; that it would have been better for everyone if she had been more beautiful.

The confusion is finally resolved in Act V Scene III. Neptune rages about the stage threatening the village, the shepherds, Diana and her followers for conspiring against him. Diana appears and challenges him although she is quickly followed by Venus. Venus is angry that Diana has been keeping Cupid captive. The two engage in a debate over chastity and love. Finally, a truce is brokered; Diana hands Cupid over and Neptune revokes his call for virgin sacrifices. Gallathea and Phillida are revealed to be girls, much to their mutual horror. Venus declares that they cannot be allowed to remain together as female lovers, as it against nature. Instead, she shall turn one into a boy so that they can continue to love one another but in a safe, hetero-normative fashion. Interestingly, Venus does not specify which girl will be turned into a boy. Raffe, Robin and Dicke arrive onstage. They claim to be fortune tellers, that they can tell the assembled audiences of their adventures in the woods. Their experience pays off and they become minstrels who will sing at weddings. The play concludes with an Epilogue which asks that ladies to yield to love, insisting that love is infallible and conquers all things.

Criticism, Analysis and Interpretation

Gallathea is one of the lesser known plays from the Early Modern period but its influences are undeniable. The theme of cross-dressing is repeated throughout the period and carries on into other eras of literature. During the Early Modern period, all female roles were played by young boys. Within Gallathea, we have boys playing girls playing boys which heightens the comedic elements in the text. Shakespeare is clearly influenced by the play and there are many similarities in As You Like It and Twelfth Night. Each of these plays feature boy actors playing a female role who disguises herself as a boy. In Twelfth Night, Viola is shipwrecked and dresses herself as Caesario whereas Rosalind in As You Like It adopts the male persona Ganymede and hides in the forest of Arden. Rosalind falls in love with Orlando in her disguise and Olivia falls in love with Caesario. However, hetero-normative conventions prevail in each text. Even though cross dressing is common in the period, it raises interesting theories regarding female sexuality.[3] The homosexual relationship between Gallathea and Phillida is often regarded as asexual; their attraction is genuine but there are no physical displays of affection. The lack of sexuality disregards same sex attraction and stresses the importance of heterosexual relationships. The creation of these androgynous heroines is safe and does not question the heterosexual status quo.[4]

It is interesting to note how Neptune, Cupid, Diana and Venus are characterized. Each demonstrate human emotions and do not behave in a reserved or austere manner. It is possible that Lyly is aware of the repercussions of having child actors play divine beings. The audience are unlikely to take a child playing a Greek deity very seriously. By creating an amusing and insincere portrayal, Lyly is taking full advantage of the limitations of having child actors play the roles. There is further evidence of the children’s limitations in the style and metre of the play. Gallathea has a conversational tone and pace. There are few long speeches and the language used by Gallathea and Phillida is, at times, almost identical.

The themes of love, marriage and chastity are found throughout the play. Diana and Venus represent the binary opposites of marriage and chastity and each offer valid arguments in support of each. There is an argument that Diana represents Queen Elizabeth I. The figure of a virgin queen is part of Elizabeth's cultivated image during the period and can be seen in other works, perhaps most famously in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queen. A parallel can be drawn between Elizabeth's ladies-in-waiting and Diana's nymphs.[5] Elizabeth wished her ladies-in-waiting to respect chastity and honour virginity, much like she did.

Modern productions

One of the first recorded productions in the 20th Century was directed by Ivan Fuller at Augustana College in Sioux Falls, SD in 1998. The production sparked a 2003 paper "Everything Old is New Again: The Elizabethan and the Contemporary Appeal in Lyly’s Gallathea" which was presented at the Shakespeare Association of America Conference, Victoria, BC.

An experimental performance was staged by Peter Lichtenfels in November 2010 at the University of California, Davis. The show featured a bare set, audience participation, and video projection.[6]

A production directed by Brett Sullivan Santry, was performed by the students of Stuart Hall School of Staunton, Virginia. When he directed the play, he was an MLitt/MFA graduate student in Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature in Performance at Mary Baldwin College. It ran from 2 to 5 February 2007. The production also appeared among the calendar of featured events, during the week-long celebration of Shakespeare's birthday, at the American Shakespeare Center's Blackfriars Playhouse on 17 April 2007.

A staged reading of Gallathea was presented in May 2007 by Primavera Productions at the King's Head Theatre in London. The reading feature Mary Nighy as Phillida and was directed by Tom Littler.

An all-female production of Gallathea was performed by the Uncut Pages Theater Company from 26 to 29 July 2007 as part of Washington D.C.'s Capitol Fringe Festival.

In 2008 Kidbrooke School revived Galatea with an all-boys cast. Performed in The Painted Hall in the Old Royal Naval College, Galatea had not been seen in Greenwich since playwright John Lyly gave his new play to the boys of St Paul’s to perform at court in front of Elizabeth I on New Year’s Day 1588, in Greenwich Palace.

King Edward VI School, Stratford-upon-Avon, Edwards Boys performed the play in the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse on 27 April 2014

Quest Theater Ensemble, Astoria, Queens (2002). Adapted and directed by Tim Browning. Music composed by jazz guitarist Spiros Exaras.

Modern commentators have praised the play's "harmonious variety" and "allegorical dramaturgy."[7]

References

  1. E. K. Chambers, The Elizabethan Stage, 4 Volumes, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1923; Vol. 2, p. 18.
  2. Chambers, Vol. 3, pp. 413, 415.
  3. Wixson, Christopher (Spring 2001). "Cross-Dressing and John Lyly's "Gallathea"". Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900. 41 (2).
  4. Rackin, Phyllis (January 1987). "Androgyny, Mimesis, and the Marriage of the Boy Heroine on the English Renaissance Stage". PMLA. 102 (1).
  5. Pincombe, Mike (2010). John Lyly's Galatea: Politics and Literary Allusion. West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 380–394.
  6. Anastasia Zhuravleva. "Gallathea is in a relationship and it's complicated." The California Aggie. 4 November 2010.
  7. Terence P. Logan and Denzell S. Smith, eds., The Predecessors of Shakespeare: A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama, Lincoln, NE, University of Nebraska Press, 1973; pp. 134-5.

External links

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