Professor Jacky Bratton
Professor Jacky Bratton
Research Professor of Theatre and Cultural History
Phone: +44 1784 414986
Research interests
My research has ranged widely across the history of theatre and culture in Britain in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. My 2003 monograph New Readings in Theatre History offers a revisionist historiography arguing for a more organic, less judgemental and hierarchical understanding of the history of the British stage. It is a crystallisation of my interest in all the teeming life of the gas lit stage – I have written about melodrama on horseback and blackface minstrelsy as well as Henry Irving’s King Lear, dramatists from Jane Scott to Arthur Wing Pinero and music hall male impersonators like Vesta Tilley. In pursuit of new ways of reading the past of performance, I have drawn upon feminist and cultural materialist histories, and begun to collaborate with colleagues in practice-based research, where we are developing the revival of Romantic melodrama and burletta. My latest book, The Victorian Clown, looks at the roots of stand-up comedy in two unpublished manuscripts by Victorian comic men – a contortionist bottle-balancer and a circus clown. It is part of an AHRC-funded project which aims to set the understanding of nineteenth-century theatre on a broader basis. Two further books are part of this project. The next, by Dr Ann Featherstone, will map nineteenth and twentieth century travelling theatres across England and Wales, which brought entertainment to village greens and the back streets of mill and mining towns; the second is my next volume, which focusses on the mid-century foundations of London’s West End.
I only teach at graduate level, and welcome new PhD students in any historical area connected with my own research fields.
VIDEO - Tom Lawrence's Gagbook from The Victorian Clown by Jacky Bratton and Ann Featherstone
Filmed at a revival workshop Royal Holloway University of London June 28 - July 1 2007
http://www.rhul.ac.uk/dramaandtheatre/media/clown.mov
The Music Hall database formed part of my research a few years ago, and is now offered as an interactive resource for anyone interested in seeking information on people who appeared in the London Music Halls between 1860 and 1890.
- Forthcoming
The Internet : History 2.0?
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
- Published
Frances Anne Kemble
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
- Published
The Making of the West End Stage
Research output: Book/Report › Book
ID: 10942