Cultural depictions of Elizabeth I of England

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Elizabeth I of England has inspired artistic and cultural works for over four centuries. The following lists cover various media, enduring works of high art, and recent representations in popular culture, film and fiction. The entries represent portrayals that a reader has a reasonable chance of encountering rather than a complete catalogue.

Contents

[edit] Art, literature, drama and music

  • Elizabeth's own writings, which were considerable, were collected and published by the University of Chicago Press as Elizabeth I: Collected Works.
  • Many artists glorified Elizabeth I during her reign and masked her age in their later portraits. Elizabeth was often painted in rich and stylised gowns. Elizabeth is often shown holding a sieve, a symbol of virginity [1].
  • Although she is not seen in the performance, the birth of Elizabeth is proclaimed in a scene of Shakespeare's play King Henry VIII.
  • Henry Purcell wrote a 1692 semi-opera The Fairy-Queen, an adaptation of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. One of Elizabeth's nicknames was "The Faerie Queen", after the poem in her honour by Edmund Spenser.
  • Elizabeth is a character in the play Mary Stuart by Friedrich Schiller (1800).
  • Gioacchino Rossini wrote his first Neapolitan opera on the subject of Elizabeth I, Elisabetta, regina d'Inghiliterra, in 1814–15, ultimately based on a three-volume Gothic romance novel, The Recess, by Sophia Lee.
  • Elizabeth is a character in the 1821 novel Kenilworth, by Sir Walter Scott.
  • Elizabeth appears in two operas by Gaetano Donizetti, Maria Stuarda (1834), based on Schiller's play, and Roberto Devereux (1837) about her affair with the Earl of Essex.
  • The young Elizabeth is a minor character in Mark Twain's novel The Prince and the Pauper.
  • 20th century American Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Maxwell Anderson dramatized episodes of Elizabeth's life in two of his most popular plays, Elizabeth the Queen (1930) and Mary of Scotland (1933).
  • Margaret Irwin wrote the Good Queen Bess trilogy based on Elizabeth's youth: Young Bess (1945), Elizabeth, Captive Princess (1950), and Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain (1953).
  • Benjamin Britten wrote an opera, Gloriana, about the relationship between Elizabeth and Essex, composed for the 1953 coronation of Elizabeth II.
  • Mary M. Luke wrote a definitive Tudor trilogy: Catherine the Queen (1968), A Crown for Elizabeth (1970), and Gloriana: The Years of Elizabeth I (1973), with the latter two books focusing on Elizabeth's youth and reign.
  • My Enemy the Queen by Victoria Holt (1982)
  • Legacy by Susan Kay (1985).
  • Queen of This Realm by Jean Plaidy (1985).
  • Much Suspected of Me by Maureen Peters (1991)
  • The Queen and the Gypsy by Constance Heaven (1991)
  • I, Elizabeth by Rosalind Miles (1994).
  • To Shield the Queen, a series of eight books featuring Ursula Blanchard, Lady in waiting to Elizabeth, by Fiona Buckley (1997–2006).
  • Elizabeth's story is told for children in Elizabeth I, Red Rose of the House of Tudor, a book by Kathryn Lasky in the Royal Diaries series published by Scholastic (1999).
  • Author Karen Harper has written a mystery series about Elizabeth. Included in this series are nine fictional novels. They are: The Poyson Garden (2000), The Tidal Poole (2000), The Twylight Tower (2002), The Queene's Cure (2003), The Thorne Maze (2003), The Queene's Christmas (2004), The Fyre Mirror (2006), The Fatal Fashione (2006), and The Hooded Hawke (2007).
  • Beware, Princess Elizabeth is a novel for children by Carolyn Meyer (2001).
  • Virgin: Prelude to the Throne by Robin Maxwell (2001). Elizabeth's story is spliced with her mother's in Maxwell's book The Secret Diary of Anne Boleyn. Maxwell also writes of a fictional child of Elizabeth and Dudley in The Queen's Bastard (1999).
  • Author Philippa Gregory portrayed Elizabeth as a character in four out of her five books on the Tudors. She is seen as a baby and a child in The Other Boleyn Girl (2001), a child in The Boleyn Inheritance (2006), a young woman in The Queen's Fool (2003), and a young queen in The Virgin's Lover (2004).
  • A historical fantasy of Elizabeth's life, featuring elven guardians, is recounted in This Scepter'd Isle (2004), Ill Met by Moonlight (2005), and By Slanderous Tongues (2007) by Mercedes Lackey and Roberta Gellis.
  • An aged and dying Queen Elizabeth was a central character in the 2005 Marvel Comics series Marvel 1602.
  • Queen Elizabeth I: A Children's Picture Book by Richard Brassey (2005)
  • Queen Elizabeth I and Her Conquests by Margret Simpson (2006)
  • The 2007 book Innocent Traitor by Alison Weir about Lady Jane Grey features Elizabeth as a young woman.

[edit] Film and television

There have been numerous notable portrayals of Queen Elizabeth on film and television; in fact, she is the most filmed British monarch.[2][3] George MacDonald Fraser wrote "no historic figure has been represented more honestly in the cinema, or better served by her players".[4]

[edit] Film

In the cinema, Elizabeth has been portrayed by:

[edit] Television

On television, Elizabeth has been portrayed by:

[edit] Video games

[edit] Other

  • Different incidents from the life of Elizabeth are re-enacted at the Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire each year in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The faire, which has been an annual celebration of Tudor history for over twenty years, takes place at the Mount Hope Estate and Winery, and is one of the largest and most critically acclaimed of its kind.

[edit] Links


[edit] References

  1. ^ For a catalogue of contemporary portraits, see: Portraits of Queen Elizabeth I by Roy C Strong, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1963.
  2. ^ FilmCrunch: Cate Blanchett to Reprise Royal Role
  3. ^ Famous People and their Lives: Queen Elizabeth I
  4. ^ Fraser, George MacDonald: The Hollywood History of the World, Fawcett, 1989, p. 69–70

[edit] Further reading

  • Fraser, George MacDonald. The Hollywood History of the World. Fawcett, 1989. ISBN 0-449-90438-5.
  • Watson, Nicola J., and Michael Dobson. England's Elizabeth: An Afterlife in Fame and Fantasy (2002) ISBN 0-19-818377-1.

[edit] See also

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