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Dumbshow, also dumb show or dumb-show, is defined by the Oxford Dictionary of English as "gestures used to convey a meaning or message without speech; mime." In the theatre the word refers to a piece of dramatic in general, or more particularly a piece of action given in mime within a play "to summarise, supplement, or comment on the main action". "dumbshow", The Oxford Dictionary of English, ed. Stevenson, Angus, Oxford University Press, 2010, retrieved 29 November 2015

In the Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, Michael Dobson writes that the dumbshow was originally "an allegorical survival from the ". It came into fashion in 16th-century English drama in interludes featuring "personifications of abstract virtues and vices who contend in ways which foreshadow and moralize the fortunes of the play's characters".Dobson, Michael. "dumb show", The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, Oxford University Press, 2003, retrieved 29 November 2015

There are examples in Gorboduc (1561) throughout which dumbshow plays a major part, and in 's The Spanish Tragedy (1580s), 's The Battle of Alcazar (1594) and The Old Wives' Tale (1595), Robert Greene's Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay (1594) and the anonymous A Warning for Fair Women (1599).Cuddon, pp. 244–245 Shakespeare used dumbshow in , for the play within a play staged by Prince Hamlet and the players for King Claudius. That, like Revenge's dumbshow in The Spanish Tragedy, suggests by mime the action soon to take place in the main spoken drama.Birch, Dinah. "dumb show", The Oxford Companion to English Literature, Oxford University Press, 2009, retrieved 29 November 2015 In Dobson's view the dumbshow was becoming old-fashioned by Shakespeare's time, and the playwright's most elaborate dumbshows are in Pericles, a play intentionally constructed in "a mock-medieval dramatic idiom". In the 17th century, dumbshow survived as an element of the courtly , and in the Jacobean tragedies of Webster and Middleton dumbshows are featured in masque-within-the-play episodes.

From the 1630s the dumbshow no longer featured in mainstream British drama, but it resurfaced in , and in the 19th century. introduced a dumb character in his play A Tale of Mystery (1802), and the device of using a mute to convey essential facts by dumbshow became a regular feature of melodramas. In his Dictionary of Literary Terms (first published in 1977), J. A. Cuddon lists 19th century plays with the titles The Dumb Boy (1821), The Dumb Brigand (1832), The Dumb Recruit (1840), The Dumb Driver (1849) and The Dumb Sailor (1854).

Cuddon notes three 20th century instances of dumbshow in André Obey's Le Viol de Lucrece (1931), 's Waiting for Godot (1953) and 's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1966).


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