sovay: (Sydney Carton)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-02-09 11:53 pm

Uncovers unknown graves all stone-engraved

On top of the day-devouring exhaustion which was the hallmark of this weekend, I seem to have added a headache which I could be doing without, but [personal profile] spatch brought me a small painting on cardstock of a tuxedo cat from the arts market that meets at the Crystal Ballroom and we made burritos for dinner with black beans and very finely sliced steak tips, although next time we may need the next grade up of tortilla in that mine kept unraveling. [personal profile] rushthatspeaks described Barnabe Barnes' The Devil's Charter (1607) to me such that I cannot believe it has not been performed locally by one of the companies that make intermittent forays into revenge tragedy, since a poisoned bullet is one of the most Jacobean devices I have ever heard of. I did the laundry and Hestia did a creditable impression of a thing from M. R. James.

landofnowhere: (Default)

[personal profile] landofnowhere 2025-02-10 09:23 am (UTC)(link)
As far as I can tell the only time anyone has performed The Devil's Charter live in the modern era is one Zoom production from 2020 on YouTube. I don't know if it's the special effects budget, or what, it seems like a shame!
landofnowhere: (Default)

[personal profile] landofnowhere 2025-02-11 03:52 am (UTC)(link)
Indeed! While The Devil's Charter lacks the literary quality of other works of its time, it is absolutely never boring! Not to mention being light on misogyny compared to e.g. The Revenger's Tragedy and having two kick-ass female characters!
nineweaving: (Default)

[personal profile] nineweaving 2025-02-13 06:16 pm (UTC)(link)
The Devil's Charter is an absolute hoot! I like to think that in the 1607 production Lucrezia Borgia or the virago Countess of Furli (go ahead, kill my hostage children, I'm not surrendering) was played by the boy John Rice, who'd probably played the very first Lady Macbeth the year before.

Nine