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masque and involved
In 1609, Inigo Jones appears as an architectural consultant at Hatfield House, making small modifications to the design as the project progressed, and in 1610, Jones was appointed Surveyor to Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales and in this position, Jones devised a masque for the Prince and was possibly involved in some alterations to St James ’ s Palace.
Like many other artists of the Tudor court, Eworth was also engaged in decorative work ; he was involved in the set design for a masque given by Elizabeth I in honor of the French Ambassador in 1572.

masque and music
John Dryden's masque King Arthur is still performed, largely thanks to Henry Purcell's music, though seldom unabridged.
The Mattachine Society was named by Harry Hay at the suggestion of James Gruber, inspired by a French medieval and renaissance masque group he had studied while preparing a course on the history of popular music for a workers ' education project.
In the tradition of masque, Louis XIV danced in ballets at Versailles with music by Jean-Baptiste Lully.
John Milton's Comus ( with music by Henry Lawes ) is described as a masque, though it is generally reckoned a pastoral play.
An edition of sixty-three items of music for the English court masque from 1604 to 1641, Brown University Press.
In 1607, he wrote and published a masque for the occasion of the marriage of Lord Hayes, and, in 1613, issued a volume of Songs of Mourning: Bewailing the Untimely Death of Prince Henry, set to music by John Cooper ( also known as Coperario ).
The vogue of the song-books was even more ephemeral, and, as in the case of the masque, the Puritan ascendancy, with its distaste for all secular music, effectively put an end to the madrigal.
His most significant work was his music for John Crowne's masque Calisto, or The Chaste Nymph.
Also in 1700 he finished second in a competition to write music for William Congreve's masque The Judgement of Paris ( John Weldon won ).
He also wrote the masque Peleus and Thetis and songs for John Dryden's Secular Masque, incidental music for William Shakespeare's The Tempest, Cymbeline, Romeo and Juliet and The Winter's Tale, and a quantity of chamber music including a set of twelve trio sonatas.
Lawes's name has become known beyond musical circles because of his friendship with John Milton, for whose masque, Comus, he supplied the incidental music for the first performance in 1634.
Written by Francis Davison with music by Thomas Campion, it is probably the first staged masque in England.
More famously, the 1695 revival had new music by Henry Purcell, most of it appearing in the masque that ended Act Two.
The masque features the music of Alfonso Ferrabosco the younger.
He was fond of field sports and of music, and in 1633 he had charge of the music in the great masque performed by the Inns of Court before the king and queen.
* Delia, or A masque of Night ( 1953, with W. H. Auden ; published in Botteghe Oscure XII ; never set to music )
Her brother-in-law Geoffrey Keynes asked her to provide scenery and costumes for a proposed ballet drawn from William Blake's Illustrations of the Book of Job to commemorate the centennial of Blake's death ; her second cousin, Ralph Vaughan Williams, wrote the music to the work which became known as Job, a masque for dancing, the premiere of which took place in Cambridge in 1931.
At Sceaux he produced operas and was in charge of the sixteen bi-weekly Grandes nuits in the season of 1714 – 1715, for which he produced interimèdes and allegorical cantatas in the court masque tradition, and other music, in the company of the most favoured musicians, for the most select audience in France.

masque and dancing
The masque has its origins in a folk tradition where masked players would unexpectedly call on a nobleman in his hall, dancing and bringing gifts on certain nights of the year, or celebrating dynastic occasions.
In the 20th century, Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote Job, a masque for dancing which premiered in 1930, although the work is closer to a ballet than a masque as it was originally understood.
However, a fall while dancing in a masque lamed him for life and ended this career.
The masque featured elaborate dancing, and the sophisticated special effects that were Jones's specialty: for example,
The guests are entertained by a masque, followed by dancing.
Terms like ' measure ' and ' foot it ' can also refer to dancing, and dance is often woven into the plot as part of a masque or masquerade ball, especially in plays by John Marston.

masque and within
Theatrical aspects were added to the gardens by William Kent, who studied the theatre and masque designs of Inigo Jones for the Stuart Court, which were owned by Lord Burlington and housed within his Villa.
Milton ’ s masque Comus was first performed in the Great Hall in 1634 and the tradition of a performance is continued each June and July when a Shakespearean play is performed in the open air within the Inner Bailey, as part of the successful Ludlow Festival.

masque and elaborate
The masque tradition developed from the elaborate pageants and courtly shows of ducal Burgundy in the late Middle Ages.
A particularly elaborate masque, performed over the course of two weeks for Queen Elizabeth, is described in the 1821 novel Kenilworth, by Sir Walter Scott.

masque and stage
He made a bitter attack on William Prynne, who had attacked the stage in Histriomastix, and, when in 1634 a special masque was presented at Whitehall by the gentlemen of the Inns of Court as a practical reply to Prynne, Shirley supplied the text — The Triumph of Peace.
Basically home-grown and with roots in the early 17th-century court masque, though never ashamed of borrowing ideas and stage technology from French opera, the spectaculars are sometimes called " English opera ".

masque and design
Inigo Jones design for a Knight in a Court masque.

masque and which
It is interesting that a play which is so steeped in esoteric imagery from alchemy and hermeticism should draw on the Mysteries for its central masque sequence.
The English semi-opera which developed in the latter part of the 17th century, a form in which John Dryden and Henry Purcell collaborated, borrows some elements from the masque and further elements from the contemporary courtly French opera of Jean-Baptiste Lully.
" started out as part of Alfred, a masque about Alfred the Great co-written by James Thomson and David Mallet which was first performed at Cliveden, country house of Frederick, Prince of Wales.
It remains among the best-known British patriotic songs up to the present, while the masque of which it was originally part is only remembered by specialist historians.
Lord Burlington would also have been aware of the Stuarts identification with Mercury through the theatre and masque set designs for the Stuart Court which were designed by Inigo Jones, the majority of which Lord Burlington owned.
No doubt this was due to the nature of the media in which he mainly worked, the masque and the song-book.
Although Rex is the titular " King " of Carnival, some observers believe that the Meeting of the Courts – in which Rex leaves his own festivities and is received by a seated Comus at the Mistick Krewe's bal masque – establishes Comus as the more prestigious of the two organizations in the Carnival hierarchy.
In 1771 Thomas Arne's masque The Fairy Prince premiered at Covent Garden for which Colman wrote the libretto.
* Plagiarist Robert Baron publishes his Deorum Dona, a masque, and Gripus and Hegio, a pastoral, which draw heavily on the poems of Edmund Waller and John Webster's The Duchess of Malfi.
( The Queen had a speaking role in Walter Montagu's masque The Shepherd's Paradise, which was staged on January 9, 1633, most likely after Prynne's book was in print.
In 1740, he collaborated with Thomson on a masque, Alfred, which was the vehicle for " Rule, Britannia !".
Handsome and accomplished, and reputedly an excellent dancer, he came to court, according to Naunton, ' by the galliard, for he came thither as a private gentleman of the Inns of Court in a masque, and for his activity and person, which was tall and proportionable, taken into the Queen's favour '.
During a Roman carnival play he wrote and acted in a masque, in which his character bustled about Rome distributing satirical prescriptions for diseases of the body and more particularly of the mind.
Jonson was also an important innovator in the specialised literary sub-genre of the masque, which went through an intense development in the Jacobean era.
* An eruption of general violence at the end, which ( in the Renaissance ) is often accomplished by means of a feigned masque or festivity
That is followed by growing a beard on Elmer's face and shaving it with a miniature mower, and finally a mud masque for the face which Bugs handles like cement.

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