AccessMyLibrary : Search Information that Libraries Trust AccessMyLibrary | News, Research, and Information that Libraries Trust

AccessMyLibrary    Browse    S    Spectator    DEC-04    The Spectator's notes.

The Spectator's notes.

Publication: Spectator

Publication Date: 18-DEC-04

Author: Moore, Charles W.
How to access the full article: Free access to all articles is available courtesy of your local library. To access the full article click the "See the full article" button below. You will need your US library barcode or password.

Bookmark this article

Print this article

Link to this article

Email this article

Digg It!

Add to del.icio.us

RSS

COPYRIGHT 2004 The Spectator Ltd. (UK)

People won't put it in Books of the Year, but there is no more entertaining Christmas present than The Lord Chamberlain Regrets by Dominic Shellard and Steve Nicholson (British Library). It is a history of British theatre censorship, and describes the strange system by which, until 1968, the chief courtier, the Lord Chamberlain, pre-censored all plays that were to be publicly performed. The system was always mistaken, and became increasingly absurd, as, well into the Fifties, the Lord Chamberlain tried unhappily to maintain the policy that there could be no jocular portrayal of Queen Victoria or even her son ('the play shows up King Edward VII in a tiresome light as regards girls'). Two other tough rules were that Christ or God could not be impersonated on stage (perhaps we're going back to that one) and that homosexuality could not be mentioned. Another was that plays should not depict the current politics of foreign countries, particularly ones which were, in theory at least, friendly. In 1938, for instance, a play called Take Heed had...

Read the full article for free courtesy of your local library.


More Articles from Spectator
What happens in Wyoming, honey.(Book Review)
December 18, 2004
The spectator's notes.
January 08, 2005
Religion is never easy, and sometimes it's hard to be a truly faithful...
January 01, 2005

What's on AccessMyLibrary?

32,379,037 articles
in the following categories:

Arts, Business, Consumer News, Culture & Society, Education, Government, Personal Interest, Health, News, Science & Technology