Shakespeare's plays and poems > Plays of the middle and late years > Collaborations and spurious attributions
The Two Noble Kinsmen (c. 161214) brought Shakespeare into collaboration with John Fletcher, his successor as chief playwright for the King's Men. (Fletcher is sometimes thought also to have helped Shakespeare with Henry VIII.) The story, taken out of Chaucer's Knight's Tale, is essentially another romance, in which two young gallants compete for the hand of Emilia and in which deities preside over the choice. Shakespeare may have had a hand earlier as well in Edward III, a history play of about 159095, and he seems to have provided a scene or so for The Book of Sir Thomas More (c. 15931601) when that play encountered trouble with the censor. Collaborative writing was common in the Renaissance English stage, and it is not surprising that Shakespeare was called upon to do some of it. Nor is it surprising that, given his towering reputation, he was credited with having written a number of plays that he had nothing to do with, including those that were spuriously added to the third edition of the Folio in 1664: Locrine (159195), Sir John Oldcastle (15991600), Thomas Lord Cromwell (15991602), The London Prodigal (160305), The Puritan (1606), and A Yorkshire Tragedy (160508). To a remarkable extent, nonetheless, his corpus stands as a coherent body of his own work. The shape of the career has a symmetry and internal beauty not unlike that of the individual plays and poems.
David Bevington
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·Introduction
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·Shakespeare the man
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·Dramaturgy and Shakespeare in the theatre
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