Weddings
Masques were performed in honour of a
special occasion, and many of these were weddings. These sumptuous,
colourful performances are a truly magical and unique addition to
your day.
On your day, we understand how important
it is for everything to be right. We will discuss our ideas at length
with you to make sure that we create something which suits your wedding
perfectly, and can provide anything from a single costumed lutanist
to an entire masque. At one wedding, the bride and groom chose to
play a part in the masque, speaking a scripted interchange before
being seated in the place of honour to receive the bessings and good
wishes of various classical deities and spirits. For another we created
new music just for the occasion, and recorded it for the bride and
groom to keep.
In creating our performances we draw
on original Elizabethan and Jacobean masques such as Campion's masque
in honour of the marriage of Lord Hayes, Earl of Carlisle and favourite
of James I, to Honora Denny, daughter of the Sherrif of Hertfordshire.
In this masque Flora, the goddess of flowers and representative of
Phoebus (Apollo), arrives with Zephyrus, the west wind and her lover,
to present their good wishes to the happy couple. However, Night appears
with her nine Hours to protest against the marriage, which is robbing
her mistress Cynthia (Diana) of a nymph (the bride) from her train.
Fortunately the Evening Star Hesperus appears to announce that Phoebus
has pacified Cynthia, who is now content to see her nymph married.
All celebrate and bless the marriage, and Night causes the trees in
the grove to dance for joy. The reconciliation between Phoebus and
Cynthia symbolised not only the marriage which the masque celebrated,
but also the union between Scotland and England formed by James' accession
to the throne and further strengthened by this marriage.
The song which opens the play. The script
tells us that as the masque opens the tune of the song is played and
Flora and Zephyrus are seen plucking flowers from Flora's bower and
filling baskets held by two Silvans. Then they processed down stage
followed by these Silvans and four more with instruments, and when
they reached 'the dancing place' the four Silvans begin to play while
Zephyrus and the two Silvans sing this song and Flora casts flowers
all about.
Other occasions
Weddings were not the only occasions
celebrated with masques: they were often used as grand entertainments
for special visitors. The Earl of Cumberland gave one for James I
during a royal progress, and when Elizabeth I visited Kenilworth Castle
in 1575, she was treated to an elaborate water-borne pageant on the
great lake. Our masques are thankfully nowhere near as costly as these
events were (the cost of entertaining a King or Queen was so great
as to bankrupt some hosts!) but they still make a spectacular and
memorable addition to a celebration, whether the occasion is personal
or that modern equivalent of a pageant for honoured guests, the corporate
event.
While historically the Ante-masque was
performed by professional actors, often the host or members of his
household would take roles in the masque itself, or make up a group
of costumed dancers. As princes, the future Charles I and his brother
Henry often took part in masques staged by their father, James I.
Hosts are welcome to be involved in our performances if they wish,
(though this is by no means necessary) which can add to their guests'
entertainment!
Gallimaufry can also provide something
more subtle for quieter events: a quartet of musicians playing consort
music, for example. Or something more raucous, such as a wooing play
for an engagement party, perhaps.