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- Stage_jig abstract "By the close of the sixteenth century the term 'jig' (variously spelt 'jigg', 'jigge', 'gig', 'gigg', 'gigge', 'gigue', 'jigue', 'jeg', 'jegg') had come to refer simultaneously to 'a song', 'a dance' (see 'jig'), and 'a piece of music' (see 'gigue'),as well as taking on a specialist meaning in the early modern playhouse to refer to a relatively short drama sung to popular tunes of the day, and featuring episodes of dance, stage fighting, cross-dressing and disguisings, asides, masks, and elements of (what today would be called) 'pantomime'. These short comic dramas are often referred to by scholars and historians as a 'stage jig', 'dramatic jig' or, popularly, 'Elizabethan Jig' -- after the title of Charles Read Baskervill's seminal monograph on the subject, The Elizabethan Jig and Related Song Drama, published in 1929—to mark the dramatic form from its use as simply 'song' or 'dance'.".
- Stage_jig wikiPageID "24868842".
- Stage_jig wikiPageLength "10352".
- Stage_jig wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Stage_jig wikiPageRevisionID "678745938".
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Ballad.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Brice_Stratford.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Category:Theatrical_genres.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Commedia_dellarte.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Gigue.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Jack_Ketch.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Jig.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink John_Playford.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Kemps_Jig.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Measure_for_Measure.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Pierce_Penniless.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Restoration_(England).
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Tarlton.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink Sotie.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink The_Dancing_Master.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink The_English_Dancing_Master.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink The_Rose_(theatre).
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLink William_Kempe.
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jig".
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLinkText "Stage jig".
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLinkText "Stage-jig".
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLinkText "post-play entertainment featuring dance".
- Stage_jig wikiPageWikiLinkText "stage jig".
- Stage_jig colwidth "35".
- Stage_jig hasPhotoCollection Stage_jig.
- Stage_jig wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Stage_jig wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sections.
- Stage_jig wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Tone.
- Stage_jig subject Category:Theatrical_genres.
- Stage_jig type Article.
- Stage_jig type Genre.
- Stage_jig type Article.
- Stage_jig type Genre.
- Stage_jig comment "By the close of the sixteenth century the term 'jig' (variously spelt 'jigg', 'jigge', 'gig', 'gigg', 'gigge', 'gigue', 'jigue', 'jeg', 'jegg') had come to refer simultaneously to 'a song', 'a dance' (see 'jig'), and 'a piece of music' (see 'gigue'),as well as taking on a specialist meaning in the early modern playhouse to refer to a relatively short drama sung to popular tunes of the day, and featuring episodes of dance, stage fighting, cross-dressing and disguisings, asides, masks, and elements of (what today would be called) 'pantomime'. ".
- Stage_jig label "Stage jig".
- Stage_jig sameAs m.09ghlnp.
- Stage_jig sameAs Q7596820.
- Stage_jig sameAs Q7596820.
- Stage_jig wasDerivedFrom Stage_jig?oldid=678745938.
- Stage_jig isPrimaryTopicOf Stage_jig.