The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart Crow

During the mid-2010s, there appeared a pair of television shows featuring William Shakespeare in the title role, with Christopher Marlowe as a central supporting figure: Craig Pearce’s TNT drama Will and Ben Elton’s BBC comedy Upstart Crow. Pearce’s depiction of Marlowe as a brilliant but tortured,...

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Main Author: Michael D Friedman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sheffield Hallam University 2020-09-01
Series:Journal of Marlowe Studies
Online Access:https://journals.shu.ac.uk/index.php/Marlstud/article/view/31
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spelling doaj-61f9d16354224105b8f8e5be287b307e2021-02-24T13:25:30ZengSheffield Hallam UniversityJournal of Marlowe Studies2516-421X2020-09-0113254https://doi.org/10.7190/jms.v1i0.31The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart CrowMichael D Friedman0University of ScrantonDuring the mid-2010s, there appeared a pair of television shows featuring William Shakespeare in the title role, with Christopher Marlowe as a central supporting figure: Craig Pearce’s TNT drama Will and Ben Elton’s BBC comedy Upstart Crow. Pearce’s depiction of Marlowe as a brilliant but tortured, blaspheming homosexual corresponds very closely with what Lucas Erne calls the “mythographic image” of the playwright cultivated by Marlowe scholars and biographers. By contrast, Elton’s comic portrayal of Marlowe as a charming but unambitious “posh boy” who did not even write the plays attributed to him turns the stereotypical image of the playwright upside down. These two contrasting depictions of Christopher Marlowe himself correspond to the differing portrayals of his most famous protagonist: the tragic Doctor Faustus of the beginning and ending of that play, whose transgression of orthodox boundaries brings about his demise, and the comic Faustus of the middle scenes of the play, who squanders his considerable intellectual gifts.https://journals.shu.ac.uk/index.php/Marlstud/article/view/31
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael D Friedman
spellingShingle Michael D Friedman
The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart Crow
Journal of Marlowe Studies
author_facet Michael D Friedman
author_sort Michael D Friedman
title The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart Crow
title_short The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart Crow
title_full The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart Crow
title_fullStr The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart Crow
title_full_unstemmed The God-Haunted Atheist and the Posh Boy: Christopher Marlowe in Will and Upstart Crow
title_sort god-haunted atheist and the posh boy: christopher marlowe in will and upstart crow
publisher Sheffield Hallam University
series Journal of Marlowe Studies
issn 2516-421X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description During the mid-2010s, there appeared a pair of television shows featuring William Shakespeare in the title role, with Christopher Marlowe as a central supporting figure: Craig Pearce’s TNT drama Will and Ben Elton’s BBC comedy Upstart Crow. Pearce’s depiction of Marlowe as a brilliant but tortured, blaspheming homosexual corresponds very closely with what Lucas Erne calls the “mythographic image” of the playwright cultivated by Marlowe scholars and biographers. By contrast, Elton’s comic portrayal of Marlowe as a charming but unambitious “posh boy” who did not even write the plays attributed to him turns the stereotypical image of the playwright upside down. These two contrasting depictions of Christopher Marlowe himself correspond to the differing portrayals of his most famous protagonist: the tragic Doctor Faustus of the beginning and ending of that play, whose transgression of orthodox boundaries brings about his demise, and the comic Faustus of the middle scenes of the play, who squanders his considerable intellectual gifts.
url https://journals.shu.ac.uk/index.php/Marlstud/article/view/31
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