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Theatrics and Entertainment in Austens Time

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Title: Theatrics and Entertainment in Austens Time


1
Theatrics and Entertainmentin Austens Time
  • Tiffini Drew
  • Chelsea Lockie
  • Nina Cervana
  • Hunter Molzen

2
Outdoor Activities
3
  • Hunting and Fishing
  • Fishing was considered an appropriate activity
    for genteel women
  • Property requirements for hunting
  • Had to own land worth 100
  • Or, had to lease land worth 150 a year
  • Prey
  • Early in the century
  • Deer
  • Game birds (hunted with guns or hawks)
  • Later
  • Foxes
  • Hares
  • Horses and Dogs were bred specifically for these
    purposes
  • Hunt clubs were founded
  • Riding wear became popularized for all casual
    occasions
  • What Joy Was Mine! Entertainment

4
http//www.ballindalloch-press.com/society/clothin
g.html
http//www.janeausten.co.uk/magazine/page.ihtml?pi
d632step4
5
  • Horse Racing
  • Became an organized and professional sport in the
    18th century
  • The Jockey Club
  • Founded in Newmarket in the early 1750s
  • Wrote rules of racing and sanctioned racecourses
  • Still controls English racing today
  • Only men were jockeys, and they were the primary
    patrons of horse races
  • Gambling was a major part of the races
  • What Joy Was Mine! Entertainment
  • http//www.localhistories.org/18thcent.html
  • http//georgiantimes.homestead.com/files/sport/hor
    se/races.html

6
  • Sports
  • Cricket
  • Popular across class and gender lines
  • The first cricket club founded around 1750 in
    Hambledon
  • Drew huge crowds (20,000 for a match between
    Kent and Hampshire in 1772)
  • People would gamble on matches, innings, and
    even individual balls.
  • In 1751, Prince Frederick (a great patron of
    Cricket) was supposedly hit by a cricket ball and
    killed, which led to his son George III becoming
    king.
  • A formal game of cricket can last anything from
    an afternoon to several days.
  • What Joy Was Mine! Entertainment
  • http//www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/hosking/cricket/e
    xplanation.htm

7
  • The Laws of Cricket
  • Two teams of 11 players
  • Equipment
  • Cricket Ball Cricket Bat Wickets Stumps
  • Bails Protective Gear Shoes Clothing
  • Only the wicket-keeper (who stands behind one of
    the wickets) is allowed to wear a glove
  • Coin toss determines batting order of teams (the
    captain who wins the toss elects to bat or field
    first)
  • To score runs, the striker (the batsman opposite
    of the bowler) hits the ball and then both
    batsmen run to the popping crease of the opposite
    wicket. Multiple runs can be scored if they
    repeat this before the ball is thrown back to the
    wicket.
  • Outs
  • The ball is caught by a fielder after it is hit
    and before it hits the ground
  • A fielder hits a wicket with the ball before the
    batsmen are behind the crease
  • http//www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/hosking/cricket/exp
    lanation.htm

8
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket
http//www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/hosking/cricket/exp
lanation.htm
9
  • More Sports
  • Tennis
  • Golf
  • Lawn Bowling
  • Skittles (a variety of bowling)
  • Shovel-board (shuffleboard)
  • Quoits (related to horseshoe pitching)
  • Ninepins (a variety of bowling)
  • Football

10
Entertainment in Austen
  • Hunting
  • Her brother and sister came back delighted with
    their new acquaintancethey seemed all to know
    each other perfectly, and Captain Wentworth was
    coming the very next morning to shoot with
    Charles. (Persuasion 39)
  • William expressed an inclination to hunt and
    Crawford could mount him without the slightest
    inconvenience to himself (MP 162)
  • When you have killed all your own birds, Mr.
    Bingley, said her mother, I beg you will come
    here, and shoot as many as you please, on Mr.
    Bennets manor. I am sure he will be vastly happy
    to oblige you, and will save all the best covies
    for you. (PP 219)
  • Hunters! repeated Edward But why must you
    have hunters? Everybody does not hunt. (SS 67)

11
Entertainment in Austen
  • Sports
  • Catherine preferred cricket, base ball, riding
    on horseback, and running about the country (NA
    7)

12
Music, Theatre, and Opera
13
Music
  • Harpischord
  • Pianoforte
  • Harp
  • Voice

http//www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_89.4.31
82.jpg
14
Music- Harpsichord Merges to Pianoforte
  • The harpsichord was the most popular keyboard
    instrument used until 1765, but still did not
    decline in production until 1780 (in fact,
    production increased).
  • The pianoforte (Henri Silbermann of Strasbourg)
    started gaining popularity in 1765, but sales
    started booming in the 1770s.
  • Painoforte Perks Hammering action, Dampers the
    instrument in some detailbeing able to give
    greater or lesser emphasis to a note by pressing
    harder or softer on the keys. (Michael J. Cole
    The Pianoforte in the Classical Era)

15
Pianoforte and Jane Austen
  • Accounts of public concerts and private balls as
    well as music programs with hired musicians fill
    her letters. A dedicated amateur herself, Austen
    ordinarily played at the pianoforte at least an
    hour a day before breakfast from the 8-book music
    collection now preserved in her home at Chawton.
    For nieces and nephews she practiced 'country
    dances,' a number of which appear in her
    collections. Austen painstakingly copied and
    bound music that especially interested her. Two
    books are in her own hand - one of piano pieces
    and the other (Book III), of vocal music,
    recorded here in its entirety. Some pieces
    contain her own suggestions for ornamentation.
    Prominent themes are naval affairs, country life,
    drinking songs, love, Turkish and Moorish motifs,
    female character pieces, and the French
    Revolution
  • http//www.jr.com/product/classical/pc/_541596/

16
Austen and Pianoforte Cont.
  • Austens niece, Caroline, describes Austens use
    of the pianoforte.
  • Aunt Jane began her day with music for which I
    conclude she had a natural taste as she thus
    kept it up tho she had no one to teach was
    never induced (as I have heard) to play in
    company and none of her family cared much for
    it. I suppose that she might not trouble them,
    she chose her practising time before breakfast
    when she could have the room to herself She
    practised regularly every morning She played
    very pretty tunes, I thought and I liked to
    stand by her and listen to them but the music
    (for I knew the books well in after years) would
    now be thought disgracefully easy Much that she
    played from was manuscript, copied out by herself
    and so neatly and correctly, that it was as
    easy to read as print. (Austen, Caroline. My
    Aunt Jane, a Memoir - 1867. Jane Austen Society
    1952.)

17
Popular Theatrics
  • Besides engaging in music and elaborate balls,
    plays and attending the theatre were popular
    pastimes.
  • During this time, Gothic literature was extremely
    popular, making Austens work seemingly unpopular
    (at least compared to today).

http//www.vampire.info/sites/Vampire5.jpg
18
The Opera
  • Todays Opera/Theatre
  • Seated quietly, dark room, easily annoyed by
    conversations during the performance (or
    texting).

19
Opera
  • 18th Century Opera
  • The audience would socialize during the majority
    of the opera.
  • Their attitudes toward the opera can be
    typically event oriented.
  • Less barriers between audience and Performance,
    acceptable to yell out.
  • Seeing and being seen.
  • (Hall-Witt, Jennifer Fashionable Acts Opera and
    Elite Culture in London, 1780-1880)

20
Opera
  • Composers rarely revised their own operas to
    better showcase the talents of a new cast of
    singers, and they often reused music from earlier
    compositions in later works. Such practices
    resulted in high production rates Piccinni wrote
    some 134 opers, for instance- and fed the demand
    for novelty.
  • -Jennifer Hall-Witt

21
Opera and Social Rank
  • When attending the opera, it was very important
    who was sitting in whos box.
  • Ladies, dress up!
  • Great opportunity to make conversation.
  • Some would decide on which opera they were going
    to by who they could find out was attending.
  • Climb social latter.

22
Popular Composers/Operas
  • Mozart (1756-1791)
  • Ferdinando Paër (1771-1839)
  • Giovanni Paisiello (1740-1816)
  • Joseph Haydn Father of Symphony (1732-1809)
  • Gioachino Rossini (1792-1868)

23
Its not over until
24
Indoor Pastimes
25
Indoor Past Times
  • Draw
  • Paint
  • Talk
  • Tell stories
  • Embroider
  • Play music (pianofortes and spinets)
  • Write in diaries (poetry, autobiographies)
  • Read

26
Reading
  • History
  • Biography
  • Magazines
  • Bible
  • Almanac
  • Old Moores almanac sold 100,000 one year
  • Novel
  • Epistolary
  • Satire
  • Etiquette books
  • Gothic
  • Mysteries of Udolpho by Ann Radcliffe (Northanger
    Abbey)
  • 150,000 titles were published in the English
    language.
  • Towards the end of the century, publishing
    increased 400.
  • Possible explanation The entry of fiction in the
    education system

27
The Temple of the Muses (Lackington Allen. Co.)
http//hibiscus-sinensis.com/regency/stores.htm
28
Lending Libraries Circulating Subscription
Libraries
  • Circulating Libraries
  • First circulating library in England was
    established around 1730.
  • By 1800, there were 26
  • Often ran by booksellers
  • Mostly held nonfiction, but also held plays,
    music scores, graphic arts, magazines
  • Fiction was a controversial genre!
  • Booksellers would lend and sell
  • Subscription Libraries
  • Started as a response to the circulating
    libraries and its selection
  • Library vs. Booksellers
  • Small subscription fee
  • One guinea for the subscription
  • Small fee per book
  • Books were expensive
  • Novel in 3 volumes 90
  • Tales of Fashionable Life by Maria Edgeworth

An evergreen tree of diabolical knowledge Sir
Anthony Absolute (Richard Sheridens The Rivals)
29
The Circulating Library in Scarborough
http//www2.shu.ac.uk/corvey/CW3/titlepages/47534-
1.jpg
30
Other Indoor Games
  • Billiards
  • Puzzles
  • Guessing games
  • Capping verses played by educated men

31
Pastimes for the Children
  • Dressed babies
  • Marbles
  • Dolls with glass eyes
  • Toy fiddles
  • Toy watches
  • Puzzles
  • Bilbo catchers
  • Shooting flies with small guns
  • Keeping Mayflies on a leash using a sewing string
  • Conquer
  • Pressing snails against another until a shell
    broke

http//www.collectorsweekly.com/articles/dolls-are
-more-than-toys/
32
Fighting as Entertainment
  • Cudgeling
  • Each opponent receives two sticks, one to hit and
    the other with a shield
  • Backswords
  • Singlestick
  • Each opponent receives one stick, and arm is tied
    to the back
  • Game ends when blood is drawn (sometimes it has
    to be an inch)
  • Good points to hit scalp, teeth, nose, etc.
    (wherever blood was most likely to be exposed)
  • Boxing
  • Wrestling
  • Illegal, but lived though the support aristocrats
  • (sponsorships, attendance, prizes)
  • Bare-fisted
  • Around 30 rounds
  • Women also fought with women and sometimes men

33
Animal fighting and torture
  • Dog fighting
  • Cockfighting
  • Welsh Main A tournament of 32 birds
  • Baiting A spectacle where a tied-up animal
    (bull was popular) was set up against dogs that
    are set loose
  • Badge baiting betting on how many dogs can make
    a badger come out of a box
  • Bear baiting
  • Shying Contestants throws sticks for a fee at a
    rooster that is tied to a stake in hopes of
    knocking the rooster down and grabbing the animal
    before it stands up. The winner wins the rooster
    and can continue the game, earning more winnings.
  • Supported by the local gentry, but there were few
    who opposed
  • Cockfighting participants came from all levels of
    society

34
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35
Stores and Shops
  • Square plate glass windows replace bottle bottoms
    of stores
  • Window displays
  • Lightened stores
  • Window-shopping
  • Jewelers and Goldsmiths (Marianne in Sense and
    Sensibility)
  • The Royal Exchange, first shopping mall in 1568

Behind the great glass windows absolutely
everything one can think of is neatly,
attractively displayed, and in such abundance of
choice as almost to make one greedy. On
Oxford Street, Sophie von Rochea, German
novelist, 1896
36
More stores
  • Hardin, Howell Co. was one of or the first
    department store, being established in 1809 at
    Pall Mall
  • 100 and 50 feet in length
  • Divided into 4 departments
  • Furs and fans
  • Haberdashery silks, lace, gloves, muslin
  • Jewelry, french clocks, perfume
  • Millinery and dresses

37
Travel and Tourism
  • Medieval ruins
  • Welsh mountains
  • British Museum
  • Peak and Lake Districts
  • For those who could not travel
  • Visits to neighbors for conversation, tea, dining
  • Parades and street spectacles
  • Cheese rolling
  • Northumberland during Christmas
  • Musicians and sword dancers go from door to door
    and perform. If they receive a tip, they fire a
    gun.

38
Austens Time vs. Today?
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unt-thumb-640xauto-1158.jpg
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jpg
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uck-hunt-wii-play.jpg
39
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40
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humbs/8071.jpg
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z_Diamondz_Large.jpg
41
Ball Activities
42
Ball Activities
  • Food
  • Dancing
  • CARD GAMES!

43
Social Interaction
  • Men Hunting, Horse Races, Boxing, Wrestling,
    Animal Fights
  • Women Reading, Music, Sewing, Conversing
  • Men Women Eating (not really), Dancing, and
    Card Playing!

44
Card Games
  • Allowed men and women to interact in a proper
    social context
  • Why is it important in Austens novels?
  • Used to reveal character
  • Used to provide a setting for men and women to
    interact

45
Card Games of the 18th Century
  • COMMERCE
  • Players 3-12
  • Object To finish with the best hand
  • From Highest to lowest

Three of a Kind Three in a row of same
suit The greatest value of 2 or 3 cards of the
same suit, counting Aces as 11, Court Cards as
10 and others at numerical value. If equal, a 3
card flush beats a 2 card one. If sti ll equal,
the tied player nearest in turn after the dealer
wins.
46
Card Games of the 18th Century
  • LOO
  • Players 3-17
  • Object To win tricks and earn a share of the pot
  • Shares similarities with poker
  • Opportunities to Bet, Raise, and Fold
  • Player with the best card, and/or the ability to
    trump the next highest card wins the pot

47
Card Games of the 18th Century
  • CASINO
  • Players 2-4 (more if on teams)
  • Object To be the first with 21 points
  • The only popular fishing game in 18th century
    London
  • Each Player is dealt four cards, and four cards
    are placed face up on the table
  • The player with the highest valued cards at the
    end of each hand gets the most points
  • The first player to reach 21 points wins

48
Playing Cards in Austen
  • Do you prefer reading to cards? That is rather
    singular!
  • Darcy to Elizabeth in Pride and Prejudice
  • After some time spent in saying little or doing
    less, Lady Middleton sat down to cassino and as
    Marianne was not in spirits for moving about, she
    and Elinor luckily succeeding to chairs, placed
    themselves at no great distance from the table.
  • Sense and Sensibility
  • Not as you represent it. Had she merely dined
    with him, she might only have discovered whether
    he had a good appetite but you must remember
    that four evenings have been also spent together
    -- and four evenings may do a great deal.
  • Yes these four evenings have enabled them to
    ascertain that they both like Vingt-un better
    than Commerce but with respect to any other
    leading characteristic, I do not imagine that
    much has been unfolded. Pride and Prejudice
  • On entering the drawing-room she found the whole
    party at loo, and was immediately invited to join
    them but suspecting them to be playing high, she
    declined it, for the short time she could stay
    below, with a book. Pride and Prejudice
  • Here, however, the kindness of Mrs. Jennings
    interposed most acceptably for to send the
    Colonel away while his love was in so much
    uneasiness on her sister's account would be to
    deprive them both, she thought, of every comfort
    and, therefore, telling him at once that his stay
    at Cleveland was necessary to herself that she
    should want him to play at piquet of an
    evening Sense and Sensibility

49
Ball Suggestions
  • Card Games
  • Poker
  • Speed
  • B.S.
  • Board Games
  • Checkers
  • Chess
  • Other Suggestions?

50
Sources
  • An Explanation of Cricket. Ed. David Mar. Oct.
    1995. 26 Apr. 2009. s/hosking/cricket/explanation.htm.
  • Austen, Caroline. My Aunt Jane, a Memoir - 1867.
    Jane Austen Society 1952.
  • Coopers Hill Cheese Rolling. Information
    Britain. 30 April 2009 tain.co.uk/customdetail.php?id2.
  • Cricket. Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Apr.
    2009. 27 Apr. 2009. /Cricket.
  • "The 18th Century Theatre." Britannica.
    Encyclopedia Britannica. Web.28 Apr 2009.
    Western-theatre/274700/The-18th-century-theatre.
  • The First Horse Races and Courses in Britain.
    Georgian Index. Ed. D. Wagoner. Aug 2000. 25 Apr
    2009. ort/horse/races.html.
  • Forsling, Yvonne. Regency Shopping. Regency
    England. 27 April 2009 om/regency/stores.htm.
  • Hall-Witt, Jennifer. Fashionable Acts Opera
    Elite Culture in London, 1780-1880. University of
    New Hampshire Press, 2007. Print.
  • http//www.davidparlett.co.uk/histocs/
  • http//www.historicgames.com/RPcards.html
  • http//jducoeur.org/game-hist/game-rules.html
  • http//www.pagat.com/
  • Lambert, Tim. Life in the 18th Century.
    Localhistories.org. 21 Apr. 2009. http//www.localhistories.org/18thcent.html.
  • Moody, Jane. Illegitamate Theatre in London,
    1770-1840. Cambridge. College University Press,
    2000. Print.
  • Morehead, Albert H. and Geoffery Mott-Smith, eds.
    Hoyles Rules of Games. 2nd ed. New York Signet,
    1983.
  • "A Must for Jane Fans." Albany Records. 27 Apr
    2009 ant.mvc?ScreenPRODStore_CodeARProduct_CodeTRO
    Y722.
  • Olsen, Kirstin. What Joy Was Mine!
    Entertainment. Daily Life in 18th-Century
    England. London Greenwood, 1999.

FIN
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