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Save when you buy multiple plays. Add four plays to your basket, and receive 25% off one of the plays.
The discount is applied automatically at checkout.
Author: Whitworth, Charles
Format: Paperback
Pages: 112
Publication date:
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
For plays the EU representative is usually the publisher or authorised agent. Contact details for EU representatives are provided within the play or its packaging. For most titles, this information is provided on the imprint page of the play.
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Published in 1575 and acted at Christ's College, Cambridge, probably as early as King Edward V's reign, the drama of Grandma Gurton and her lost sewing needle, which is finally retrieved from the bottom of her servant Hodge's breeches, is an outstanding example of mid-Tudor comedy. Although a university production, the play's doggerel rhymes, its village characters and their dialect speech, its seemingly innocuous plot and its Rabelaisian humour are the very opposite of academic or neo-classical. Yet its anonymous author's ingenuity manifests itself at every turn, not least in the multiple ironies evoked when Diccon the trickster makes Hodge believe that he will conjure the devil by kissing his backside in a travesty of religious or masonic oath-taking.
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