The Life of the Author: William Shakespeare. Anna Beer
his fortune in dangerous but exciting London. This too may be based on a false premise, that somehow Stratford was a rural, pastoral idyll in comparison to the dirty, gritty capital. Nowhere was safe from the everyday catastrophes of life in late sixteenth-century England, whether political and religious regime change, fire, plague, and poor harvests, or infant (and maternal) mortality. Like all his contemporaries, Shakespeare was engaged with a complex web of loyalties grounded in the household or extended family, the sprawling social unit that characterized late Elizabethan life, but this did not mean that Warwickshire and London represented two entirely separate existences. Gilbert, William’s closest brother in age, would act as his agent in Stratford during his frequent absences in London, whilst William would look out for his much younger brother Edmund in London (Richardson 2015).7 Moreover, one’s immediate family was important but not exclusively so. Other networks could be, and would be, just as important to William Shakespeare, not least those of the theater world.
For it is as an actor in London that William next appears in the archive, but only in 1592. After the christening of Hamnet and Judith, seven long years pass before their father’s name appears again in any document. Most assume he had been in the city for some time before 1592. Park Honan has Shakespeare settled in London by 1589 or 1590 at the latest, living in Shoreditch, and remaining there during some of his apprentice days in the theater, close to his fellow playwright (and exact contemporary) Christopher Marlowe. Honan vividly evokes the streets of Shoreditch – until 1588 also Richard Tarlton’s home turf – with its “jutting, far-overhanging storeys of shops” which “often broke off the sunlight so that, on a good day, the lanes were in shadow” (2005, p. 186).8
There’s a gap to be filled between Shakespeare’s christening in Holy Trinity Church, Stratford, and the seedy streets of Shoreditch, and biographers duly fill it. The goal is to get William to the big city and many and various are the routes by which he arrives.
One story goes that the return of the Queen’s Men to Stratford-upon-Avon in 1589 changed the course of Shakespeare’s life. The company were a man down after an unfortunate incident in Thame, Oxfordshire: their leading actor was killed in a street fight. Perhaps the 23-year-old William stepped in to fill the gap? It’s a nice idea, but implausible, not least because he would have had to have been remarkably impressive to take over a leading role.
More plausible is seeing young Will as a strategic rather than reluctant bridegroom. “Let us suppose that Shakespeare did not want to spend his life – or any more months than he already had done – as a Stratford artificer. The wedding would have been a means of escaping the life that had been organized for him”: Orlin (2016, p. 56) argues that this “new way to cluster the evidence” suggests that William’s marriage “may have been not one from which Shakespeare had to break free but instead the means by which he was able to break free.” The marriage remains a significant factor pushing him to London, his goal to support (not escape) his young family. Rather than a delusional act of self-destruction built on a fantasy from which Will had to escape as soon as possible, the marriage might have been a thoroughly sensible decision for an aspiring actor, intrinsic to his future success rather than an impediment to it.
Or perhaps William’s marriage in fact allows him to be an actor. An apprenticeship (and university for that matter) could not be combined with marriage, an actor’s life could. And that life could run parallel “with a very different life in Stratford” (Potter 2012, p. 55). Anne and the couple’s three very young children could and did live in there with William’s parents, while he – perhaps – toured the provinces with an acting troupe, moving in and out of the great houses of England, before ending up in London, his semi-permanent base, in 1588.9
William may disappear from the records for seven years, but it is quite possible he did not disappear from Stratford at all. According to David Fallow, despite his marriage precluding a formal apprenticeship, John Shakespeare was not going to let his eldest son do anything other than join the family business. This entailed visits to London, and therefore when William surfaces in the city it is “exactly where and when contacts in the wool trade would have been vital to the survival of the family business.” Shakespeare therefore arrives in London as “a businessman rather than an impoverished poet” (Fallow 2015, p. 38).
In contrast, there are those who insist the pull of the theater for young William is heightened by the desire to leave Stratford: the “power of its language, the mystery of mimesis, the potential to travel away from provincial Warwickshire” all drew Shakespeare to the city (Dutton 2018, p. 28) – or to Lancashire. Those who view Shakespeare as a crypto-Catholic take William north in the later 1580s as schoolmaster (or possibly actor) in the household of Sir Thomas Hesketh, whose wife and at least one of his sons were active Catholics.10 Some add the idea that William was sent to Lancashire to get him away from (religious) trouble in Warwickshire. When Hesketh died in 1588, the argument goes, Shakespeare passed into the household of the Earl of Derby, Hesketh’s patron, and thence to the life of a touring actor and novice playwright with the Earl of Derby’s son, Ferdinando, Lord Strange, the patron of one of the leading acting companies of the 1580s.11 Shakespeare’s experiences touring with Lord Strange’s Men may even emerge in his plays: when he imagines a performance “it is not in a public playhouse but in the private space of a royal palace or a lord’s house” (Potter 2012, p. 55).
And yet, for all the lure of London, Shakespeare is unlike his younger contemporary Ben Jonson, who refers to the city’s streets and pubs and theaters in his plays. William “always retained something of a pre-urban sensibility, in which playing was closely attached to the service of a lord and to great private houses” (Dutton 2018, p. 38). Not just that, it is a Midlands’ pre-urban sensibility, because Shakespeare’s earliest plays are “dotted with names of places in the Midlands.” Shakespeare’s continued connection to his Warwickshire roots – understood variously as pre-urban, narrowly provincial, or idyllic pastoral, and existing in his imagination as much as his lived experience – is a powerful theme in many “Lives.”
When and why Shakespeare began working in the theater in London (or elsewhere) remains murky. What is clearer is that to be an actor was to exist on the edge of convention. On the one hand, an actor was merely a household retainer, a lowly, liveried member within a deeply hierarchical unit, organized around the service of a lord and patron. At the same time, an actor was one step away from a vagabond, a byword for bad behavior, dissolute, “loitering” fellows, disrespectful of authority, “passing from country to country, from one gentleman’s house to another, offering their service, which is a kind of beggary” (Van Es 2013, p. 8, quoting from Wickham, Berry, and Ingram 2020, pp. 157–171).12 Hidden behind the invective was a horror of social mobility: “a common theme is the players’ rapid rise from travelling minstrels to gaudy and wealthy men” (Van Es 2013, p. 8). Actors were indeed “entrepreneurs, seeking to make a living in a developing marketplace – though one contested by a number of different parties, notably the Crown (the Queen’s government); Parliament; their own aristocratic patrons; and local authorities, often in the form of their mayors and councils” (Dutton 2018, p. 28). Acting could, and did, transform men’s fortunes.
Particularly acting in London. The theater world in the city had been changing rapidly from the time of William’s early childhood when performances (whether amateur or professional) were attached to a specific occasion, and at the invitation, and under the control, of the person commissioning the performance. By the time William entered his teens, playing companies were working through much of the year, performing to paying audiences, and even providing a selection of plays at each venue. And a few brave visionaries had started building theaters: in 1567, a stage and scaffolding in a farmhouse called the Red Lion about a mile from the city walls; 10 years on, The Curtain; 20, and the Rose is being built. The steady rate of building suggests that business was good. London was thriving in the years after 1588, temporarily free of the major epidemics which led to playhouse closures, and a population of 200,000 made it far and away the biggest city in England.
By 1590 there were “at least four substantial buildings attracting acting companies to London, with smaller venues existing besides. Playhouses proper, although partly open to the elements, could shelter thousands of spectators and were equipped with