Pericles, Prince of Tyre

It was published in 1609 as a quarto, was not included in Shakespeare's collections of works until the third folio, and the main inspiration for the play was Gower's Confessio Amantis.[a] Modern textual studies suggest that the first two acts, 835 lines detailing the many voyages of Pericles, were written by a collaborator, who may well have been the victualler, panderer, dramatist and pamphleteer George Wilkins.The play opens in the court of Antiochus, king of Antioch, who has offered the hand of his beautiful daughter to any man who answers his riddle; but those who fail shall die.Pericles, the young Prince (ruler) of Tyre in Phoenicia (Lebanon), hears the riddle, and instantly understands its meaning: Antiochus is engaged in an incestuous relationship with his daughter.He is rescued by a group of poor fishermen who inform him that Simonides, King of Pentapolis, is holding a tournament the next day and that the winner will receive the hand of his daughter Thaisa in marriage.The choruses spoken by Gower were influenced by Barnabe Barnes's The Diuils Charter (1607) and by The Trauailes of the Three English Brothers (1607), by John Day, William Rowley, and Wilkins.[9] Most scholars support 1607 or early 1608 as most likely, which accords well with what is known about the play's likely co-author, George Wilkins, whose extant literary career seems to span only three years, 1606 to 1608.[4] The Cambridge editors reject this contention, arguing that the play is entirely by Shakespeare and that all the oddities can be defended as a deliberately old-fashioned style; however, they do not discuss the stylistic links with Wilkins's work or any of the scholarly papers demonstrating contrary opinions.In 1629, Ben Jonson lamented the audiences' enthusiastic responses to the play: No doubt some mouldy tale, Like Pericles; and stale As the Shrieve's crusts, and nasty as his fish— Scraps out of every dish Throwne forth, and rak't into the common tub (Ben Jonson, Ode (to Himself)) In 1660, at the start of the Restoration when the theatres had just re-opened, Thomas Betterton played the title role in a new production of Pericles at the Cockpit Theatre, the first production of any of Shakespeare's works in the new era.For example, nineteenth-century scholar Edward Dowden wrestled with the text and found that the play "as a whole is singularly undramatic" and "entirely lacks unity of action."[citation needed] The New Bibliographers of the early twentieth century Alfred W. Pollard, Walter Wilson Greg, and R. B. McKerrow gave increased attention to the examination of quarto editions of Shakespearean plays published before the First Folio (1623).And, while the play's textual critics have sharply disagreed about editorial methodology in the last half-century, almost all of them, beginning with F. D. Hoeniger with his 1963 Arden 2 edition, have been enthusiastic about Pericles.(Other, more recent, critics have been Stephen Orgel (Pelican Shakespeare), Suzanne Gossett (Arden 3), Roger Warren (Reconstructed Oxford), and Doreen DelVecchio and Antony Hammond (Cambridge))."[20] The Venetian ambassador to England Zorzi Giustinian and the French diplomat Antoine Lefèvre de la Boderie saw a play titled Pericles.
The 1609 quarto edition title page
Marina singing before Pericles , Thomas Stothard , 1825
quartoJacobeanWilliam ShakespeareFirst FolioConfessio AmantisCambridge editionpandererpamphleteerGeorge WilkinsThe Pattern of Painful AdventuresAntiochThomas StothardPhoeniciaLebanonincestuousregentTarsusfaminePentapolisfishermenEphesustempleMytileneJohn GowerGeoffrey ChaucerApollonius of TyreLawrence TwineBellott v. MountjoyThe Diuils CharterThe Trauailes of the Three English BrothersJohn DayWilliam Rowleybad quartoHamletThird FolioFolios and Quartos (Shakespeare)William JaggardFalse FolioOxfordstylisticOxford University PressNicholas RoweMacDonald P. JacksonBen JonsonRestorationThomas BettertonCockpit TheatreEdward DowdenTitus AndronicusT. S. EliotAlfred W. PollardWalter Wilson GregR. B. McKerrowStephen OrgelHarold BloomVenetianZorzi GiustinianAntoine Lefèvre de la BoderieGlobe TheatreWhitehallrecusantGoulthwaite HallYorkshireJohn RhodesneoclassicalSamuel PhelpsSadler's Wells TheatreClerkenwellThe Winter's TaleWalter Nugent MonckMaddermarket TheatreNorwichPaul ScofieldParis Belongs to UsTony RichardsonShakespeare Memorial TheatreLoudon SainthillGeraldine McEwanRichard JohnsonMark DignamAngela BaddeleyTerry HandsLeonardo da VinciVitruvian ManEmrys JamesSusan FleetwoodIan RichardsonApollo landingThe Other PlacePeter McEneryJulie PeasgoodGriffith JonesMike GwilymAmanda RedmanJuliet StevensonDavid JonesRudolph WalkerNigel TerryPeter SellarsAmerican homeless peopleRoyal National TheatreKathryn HunterAdrian NobleRoundhouseOrientalismRay FearonKananu KirimiBrian ProtheroeMary ZimmermanShakespeare Theatre CompanyGoodman TheatreHudson Shakespeare CompanyShakespeare in the ParksJoseph HajOregon Shakespeare FestivalGuthrie TheaterShakespeare's GlobeDominic DromgooleSam Wanamaker PlayhouseSheila ReidminimalistPlayhouse SquareThe Stratford FestivalMartha HenryRichard OuzounianGeraint Wyn DaviesEvan BuliungCBC TelevisionCBC Presents the Stratford FestivalTheatre for a New AudienceTrevor NunnChristian CamargoTom MannionWillard WhitePaapa EssieduAdjoa AndohUpstairs at the GatehouseValticeRoyal Shakespeare CompanyStratford-Upon-AvonChicago Shakespeare TheaterTamara HarveyAlfred EnochNicholl, CharlesWikisourceStandard EbooksProject GutenbergInternet off-Broadway DatabaseLibriVoxComediesAll's Well That Ends WellAs You Like ItThe Comedy of ErrorsCymbelineLove's Labour's LostMeasure for MeasureThe Merchant of VeniceThe Merry Wives of WindsorA Midsummer Night's DreamMuch Ado About NothingThe Taming of the ShrewThe TempestTwelfth NightThe Two Gentlemen of VeronaThe Two Noble KinsmenTragediesAntony and CleopatraCoriolanusJulius CaesarKing LearMacbethOthelloRomeo and JulietTimon of AthensTroilus and CressidaHistoriesKing JohnEdward IIIRichard IIHenry VHenry VIRichard IIIHenry VIIIEarly editionsQuarto publicationsSecond FolioProblem playsLate romancesHenriadGhost characterChronologyPerformancesSettingsScenesShakespeare's sonnetscomparison to PetrarchA Lover's ComplaintThe Phoenix and the TurtleThe Rape of LucreceVenus and AdonisApocryphaArden of FavershamThe Birth of MerlinCardenioDouble FalsehoodEdmund IronsideFair EmLocrineThe London ProdigalLove's Labour's WonThe Merry Devil of EdmontonMucedorusThe PuritanThe Second Maiden's TragedySejanus His FallSir John OldcastleSir Thomas MoreThe Spanish TragedyThomas Lord CromwellThomas of WoodstockUr-HamletVortigern and RowenaA Yorkshire TragedyThe Passionate PilgrimTo the QueenBirthplaceBibliographyComplete WorksTranslationsCoat of armsCollaborationsEditorsEnglish Renaissance theatreHandwritingLord Chamberlain's MenKing's MenThe TheatreCurtain TheatreNew PlacePortraitsReligious viewsSexualitySpelling of his nameLegacyAttribution studiesAuthorship questionBardolatryFestivalsGardensInfluenceMemorialsScreen adaptationsShakespeare and Star TrekShakespeare's influence on TolkienWorks titled after ShakespeareFolger Shakespeare LibraryShakespeare QuarterlyRoyal Shakespeare TheatreShakespeare Birthplace TrustShakespeare InstituteAnne HathawaySusanna HallHamnet ShakespeareJudith QuineyElizabeth BarnardJohn ShakespeareMary ArdenGilbert ShakespeareJoan ShakespeareEdmund ShakespeareRichard ShakespeareJohn HallThomas QuineyShakespeare and other authorsShakespeare's late romancesShakespeare apocryphaFirst waterThe PorpoiseLaurence Olivier Award for Best RevivalHedda GablerAn Inspector CallsMachinalUncle VanyaMourning Becomes ElectraThe CrucibleSaint JoanCat on a Hot Tin RoofAfter the DanceAnna ChristieLong Day's Journey into NightGhostsA View from the BridgeMa Rainey's Black BottomAngels in AmericaSummer and SmokeCyrano de BergeracConstellationsA Streetcar Named Desire