Kings, Celebrities and Working Mums: Kjartan Poskitt’s Plays for Young Actors as History and Entertainment


Published: Apr 11, 2019
Keywords:
Kjartan Poskitt popular history popular historiography
Dorothea Flothow
Abstract

After postmodern approaches called into question the foundations of academic history in the 1970s and 1980s, recent studies have identified a new boom in popular history formats such as historical novels, costume drama and TV documentaries. This trend has also spurred new theoretical approaches towards (popular) history, which are both a continuation and a reaction to postmodern theories. On the basis of these, this paper analyses two plays by the British writer and comedian Kjartan Poskitt – Henry the Tudor Dude: A Musical Play (1995) and Nell’s Belles: The Swinging Sixteen-Sixties Show: A Musical (2002)—both aimed at young amateur actors. These two plays present panoramic views of the lives of the English kings Henry VIII and Charles II, respectively, and show their objects in a highly entertaining and irreverent light, concentrating on their flamboyant private lives and personal failures. The paper demonstrates how these plays approach the dual aims of teaching and entertaining that are so typical of both children’s literature and popular history in general. Moreover, it argues that though the plays represent a new development in the previously neglected field of historical drama for the young, they can also serve to demonstrate recent theoretical approaches towards (popular) history.

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Author Biography
Dorothea Flothow, University of Salzburg
Dorothea Flothow is Assistant Professor at the Department of English and American Studies at Salzburg University. She studied English Literature and Modern History at the Universities of Tübingen (Germany) and Reading (UK) and completed her PhD on war imagery in British children’s novels within the framework of the Collaborative Research Centre ‘Kriegserfahrungen,’ University of Tuebingen. Her research interests include historical drama and fiction, British children’s fiction, and the First World War. She is currently working on a project on the Restoration period in English popular historiography.
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