Folk plays have a tradition dating back to the middle ages, when communities came together to re-enact old tales about Robin Hood, Saint George and the Dragon, or other popular figures.
Many of the folk tales dramatized in the middle ages focused on fables about animals, including Reynard the Fox, Chaunticleer the Rooster, and Sigrim the Wolf. I myself once appeared in a folk drama as Noble the Lion.
On Sunday, I got a chance to see the folk drama The Fox and the Wolf performed by Fordham Medieval Dramatists. Based on a 13th-century fable, the play tells the story of how a Fox falls down a well and then tricks a wolf into getting him back out again (landing the Wolf in the well in the process).
At the beginning of the play, we met Lady Fortune, depicted this time not with her famous Wheel, but with two crowns. One crown appeared to offer good fortune, but often brought sorrow. The other crown appeared to offer bad fortune, but often brought unexpected good. Half of Fortune's gown was beautiful, while the other side was ripped to shreds. Similarly, her face showed good and bad on each side.
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| Lady Fortune |
After being introduced to this thematic element, we met Reynard the fox, who was cleverly portrayed by two people, one the body and the other a long swishy tale. Reynard raided the chickens, slaughtering them and having a feast. The Rooster Chaunticleer reprimanded him, but Reynard cunningly told Chaunticleer that he looked ill, and offered to bleed him from the chest. Chaunticleer didn't fall for it, but when Reynard walked away, he had his own fall, right down a well.
I also appreciated the acting and costuming of Sigrim the Wolf, who while strong and dangerous, wasn't too bright. Wells typically have a bucket on a rope, and when one end goes down, the other comes up. Sigrim, who appeared to be in a state of good fortune, plunged into the well with the rope, bringing Reynard, who appeared to have ill fortune, back up in the bucket. As frequently happens in stories like this, the two met in the middle, but it was too late for the poor Wolf to undo the damage.
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| Reynard the Fox and Sigrim the Wolf |
Medieval folk dramas can be a lot of fun, and they were often kept alive by performers long after the middle ages were over and done. The Victorian novelist Thomas Hardy was fond of folk plays, and I've even taught students his version of The Play of St. George. Recently, while visiting the Strand, I picked up a copy of Hardy's play The Famous Tragedy of the Queen of Cornwall. This folk drama tells the story of Iseult, the wife of King Mark, who fell in love with a knight by drinking a love potion on the sea voyage to her wedding.
I wrote my own version of the story, originally titled Iseult, and later Net of Dreams. I based mine on the oldest extant version of the tale, that recorded by Beroul, The Romance of Tristan. Hardy names the knight Sir Tristram, as did Sir Thomas Malory. He writes the story so it can be staged simply in any neutral playing space, though the book includes an image of what a Great Hall in Tintagel Castle might look like in our imaginations.
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| Illustration from 1923 edition |
Hardy apparently sent an early copy of the play to Harley Granville-Barker, a professional actor and playwright who also took a great interest in amateur performance. Folk dramas, whether performed outdoors like The Fox and the Wolf or indoors as Hardy's play was intended, can be delightful to watch and should be staged more often.






