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The Rehearsal

The Rehearsal. George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham (and friends) Perf. Dec 1671. The Antagonists. George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham (1628–1687 ) and John Dryden, the poet laureate. From Buckingham entry in the ODNB.

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The Rehearsal

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  1. The Rehearsal George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham (and friends) Perf. Dec 1671

  2. The Antagonists George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham (1628–1687) and John Dryden, the poet laureate.

  3. From Buckingham entry in the ODNB The duke's principal literary claim to attention is his satire upon contemporary heroic drama, The Rehearsal, which showed how well his gift for caricature and mimicry translated to both stage and page. The play was several years in the writing, and was apparently a collaborative effort with Martin Clifford, Thomas Sprat, and Samuel Butler. When eventually it was first performed, at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, on 7 December 1671, it exhibited both literary targets (Dryden) and political (Arlington). The Rehearsal was immediately popular, being published five times in his own lifetime, and performed nearly three hundred times until 1777, during which its lead role (Bayes) was taken by the greatest actors of the day such as Colley Cibber and David Garrick. The appearance in 1779 of an even better satire, Sheridan's The Critic, effectively ended its run, but The Rehearsal retains its importance as the pioneer of a tradition of dramatic burlesque upon the English stage.

  4. From Dryden entry in ODNB Dryden had dedicated Marriage à-la-mode to the earl in 1673, but in 'An Allusion to Horace' (circulated in manuscript c.1675) Rochester mixed crude spite with some shrewd criticism of Dryden's willingness to pander to an audience. Dryden's reply was in studiously general terms, though with unmistakable reference to Rochester, in the 'Preface' to All for Love(1678), where he comments on the affectation of some courtiers who aspire to be poets and judges of poetry but do not have the talent, and merely make fools of themselves. The duke of Buckingham used Dryden as the principal model for the playwright satirized as Mr Bayes in his play The Rehearsal (staged 1671), while a series of pamphlets in 1673 mounted an extended criticism of Dryden's plays and poems, deriding his style. Public attacks dogged Dryden throughout his career. The altercations with Shadwell rumbled on; his political interventions on the king's side in the exclusion crisis brought many versified rejoinders; and his conversion to Catholicism in 1685 prompted further abuse and satire. There are several hundred contemporary works in prose and verse, both manuscript and print, which praise or vilify him on literary, political, or religious grounds. Very rarely did Dryden respond in kind, though the provocation was extreme. 

  5. From AparnaDharwadker, ‘Restoration Drama and Social Class’ in A Companion to Restoration Drama, ed. Owen. Buckingham's The Rehearsal is the first substantial Restoration play about the institution of professional theatre, and engages fully with the effects of material and social relations on the theatrical marketplace through its metatheatrical structure. The professional playwright Bayes has abandoned the 'common pitch' for the 'grand design' of heroic drama, which he intends for 'some persons of Quality, and peculiar friends of mine, that understand what Flame and Power in writing is: and... do me the right... to approve of what I do'. 1

  6. From AparnaDharwadker, ‘Restoration Drama and Social Class’ in A Companion to Restoration Drama, ed. Owen. The metatheatrical format of Buckingham's play therefore shows the playwright at odds with the performers, who eventually abandon the rehearsal; cultivated viewers, whose ironic commentary forms the core of Buckingham's critique; and his own fragmentary drama, which collapses entirely due to his vulgarity, ignorance and social inexperience. 2

  7. From AparnaDharwadker, ‘Restoration Drama and Social Class’ in A Companion to Restoration Drama, ed. Owen. Both The Sullen Lovers and The Rehearsal therefore satirize heroic drama, but from opposite ends of the social spectrum. For Shadwell, the upcoming professional, the heroic mode represents the narcissistic fantasies of the class of privileged amateurs; for Buckingham, the privileged amateur, the same mode represents the compromises and limitations of professionalism. 3

  8. From AparnaDharwadker, ‘Restoration Drama and Social Class’ in A Companion to Restoration Drama, ed. Owen. By representing heroic drama as a form of indulgence for a specific class, both Shadwell and Buckingham use the social in addition to the aesthetic as a primary category of judgement, and their plays present class and authorship as virtually inseparable categories in the process that transmutes drama into cultural capital. Comedy, the genre of 'prose and sense' both these playwrights advocate, is also the most overtly social genre, but in the Restoration it raises and resolves the problems of class in interestingly diverse ways. 4

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