2 Restoration

The Restoration refers to the restoration of the monarchy in England with the coronation of Charles II:

 

Charles II
Coronation of Charles II in Westminster by John Michael Wright (1661)

Attending this political Restoration was a literary restoration, the restoration of theater, which had been prohibited during the Protectorate.  Restoration plays were intricately plotted.  The often-elaborate staging is illustrated in this set for Elkannah Settle’s The Empress of Morocco as it was performed at the Dorset Gardens Playhouse in 1673.  Plays became a favored pastime of a fashionable elite.

 

 

Dorset Gardens Playhouse, a set for Elkannah Settle’s The Empress of Morocco (1673)

These political and literary restorations were not unrelated.  The celebrities of the stage included the mistresses of the king, such as Nell Gwyn, pictured below:

 

Nell Gwyn
Actress Nell Gwyn by Peter Lely (ca. 1675)

The following video looks at the interconnected restorations of playboy and playhouses, and explains how the theater was not only restored but transformed:

 

 

Mastery Check:

  • To what political event does the Restoration refer?
  • Who and what was restored?
  • What literary genre was restored during the reign of Charles II?
  • What were some of the distinctive qualities of Restoration drama?
  • On what grounds did William Congreve defend theater in Way of the World?

 

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British Literature to 1800 Copyright © 2020 by Karen Winstead. All Rights Reserved.

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