ABSTRACT

Henry Irving's much-anticipated production of King Arthur; a Drama in a Prologue and Four Acts arrived at a watershed moment in Victorian cultural history. This dramatic hit of London's 1895 season combined mainstream social, sexual and political values with a canny distillation of Victorian Arthurania – a prolific genre that had flourished for decades in poetry and painting, but had been slow to reach the legitimate stage. Irving and his collaborators extracted tales, characters and images from other media and crystallised them in the immanent physicality of the theatre. With an expert blend of textual, visual and aural elements, they crafted a theatrical experience that refracted Victorian ideals through the ostensibly medieval lens of Arthurian chivalry. In an era of geopolitical anxiety and patriotic imperialism, the heroic chivalry of King Arthur provided a reassuring nexus of national pride. In a West End season bracketed by the stunning rise and fall of Oscar Wilde, King Arthur offered welcome affirmation of normative masculinity.