Periodic Reporting for period 2 - THEATRONOMICS (THEATRONOMICS: The Business of Theatres, 1732-1809)
Période du rapport: 2023-01-01 au 2024-06-30
The central research question of THEATRONOMICS is how does a systematic analysis of eighteenth-century theatre’s financial records change our understanding of actors, playwrights, audiences, managers, and theatre’s place within London’s ecology? Understanding the financial mechanics of the theatres, particularly its diverse costbase, will enable scholars to do unprecedented comparative work on plays and playwrights across the century; it will allow us to understand the trajectory of ordinary actors’ across their career and compare male and female experience; it will illuminate the ‘back of house’ human infrastructure that supported these important cultural institutions; and, it will allow us to evaluate the managerial regimes of the men who ran the theatres in an entirely new way.
The project has seven main research aims:
1) Assess the performance of DL and CG as commercial entities
2) Compare the styles and efficiency of different managerial regimes
3) Analyse in detail the costbase of DL and CG
4) Develop an understanding of the career life-cycle of a Georgian actor
5) Measure the financial value of playwrights to the theatres
6) Sketch the theatre audience profile by theatre/genre/play
7) Establish the place of CG and DL within the ecology of London
Other significant tasks have included the design and build of a database; design and build of a brand and project website; sourcing scans of manuscript material; running workshops with the advisory board; prosopographical work on those employed by or associated with the London theatres; assigning generic categories to theatrical works; a literature review of contemporary primary material with financial information; extending the existing calendar of plays for Covent Garden and Drury Lane to 1808; dissemination of preliminary results at conferences/workshops/invited talks; and, devising meaningful categories for receipts and expenses for the theatres.
Financial data: The database that we have built currently has approximately 20,000 financial data points related to the income and expenditure of the theatres with approximately 70,000 more entered in spreadsheets awaiting checking before final upload. Once these have all been uploaded and an appropriate suite of analytical tools built, the financial vicissitudes of the theatres, the breakdown of their costbases, the careers of playwrights, the fortunes of individual plays, and the managerial efficiency of different regimes will be available for comparative analysis with an unprecedented degree of detail. Alongside our database, we have also secured, in partnership with the Folger Library, high-resolution scans of the account books for electronic publication.
Performance data: Our database includes 29,000 performance nights from 1732 to 1808. We have imported about 26,000 of these from the London Stage Database and have carried out extensive editing and cleaning of titles and genres which has enabled us to link different Performances under the same Work. We have also added about 3,000 new performance nights from 1800 to 1808 with performance details.
Prosopography of the eighteenth-century theatre: THEATRONOMICS aims to make visible the labour of the non-performing employees of the London theatres. Whereas scholarship to date has almost exclusively focused on actors and other performers, our project pays attention to the carpenters, dressers, security etc personnel also essential to the staging of eighteenth-century theatre. Moreover, our project also identifies significant tradespeople on whom the theatre relied for supplies and thus identifies the ways in which the theatre was interwoven with the commercial fabric of London.
Moreover, performer data imported to our database has been through several iterations of merging so that different instances of people appearing in our dataset can be linked to the same master record. Where possible, we have added dates (birth/death), geodata, VIAFs, page references to the Biographical Dictionary, and other datapoints to create full and useful records.
Once our data has all been checked and uploaded, we will build a set of tools to enable comparative analysis of the theatres, their financial state, and their employees and associated people.