Jump to content

Cultural depictions of Mary, Queen of Scots: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Maurice Hewlett novel about Mary Queen of Scots added.
m per WP:SDNONE (no other "Cultural depictions of" had a convincing short desc)
 
(39 intermediate revisions by 28 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|none}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
[[File:Mary Queen of Scots from Hermitage.jpg|right|thumb|A 19th-century painting of Mary Queen of Scots in the Hermitage, Russia]]
[[File:Mary Queen of Scots from Hermitage.jpg|right|thumb|A 19th-century painting of Mary Queen of Scots in the Hermitage, Russia]]
[[File:CassandraAusten-MaryQueenofScots.jpg|right|thumb|[[Cassandra Austen]]'s drawing of Mary Queen of Scots in [[Jane Austen]]'s burlesque [[Juvenilia|juvenile]] ''[[The History of England (Austen)|History of England]]'']]
[[File:CassandraAusten-MaryQueenofScots.jpg|right|thumb|[[Cassandra Austen]]'s drawing of Mary Queen of Scots in [[Jane Austen]]'s burlesque [[Juvenilia|juvenile]] ''[[The History of England (Austen)|History of England]]'']]
Line 7: Line 9:
[[File:Hepburn mary of scotland.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Katharine Hepburn]] in [[John Ford]]'s [[Mary of Scotland (film)|1936 film adaption]] of Maxwell Anderson's play ''Mary of Scotland'']]
[[File:Hepburn mary of scotland.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Katharine Hepburn]] in [[John Ford]]'s [[Mary of Scotland (film)|1936 film adaption]] of Maxwell Anderson's play ''Mary of Scotland'']]
In the 1936, 1971 and 2018 film biographies of Mary, fictional meetings between Queens Mary and Elizabeth take place.
In the 1936, 1971 and 2018 film biographies of Mary, fictional meetings between Queens Mary and Elizabeth take place.
*''The Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots'' (1895), the first appearance of Mary on film, depicts her beheading. It is one of the first films to utilize an intentional jump cut to create the illusion of a single shot beheading. The effect was so convincing at the time that many viewers believed that the actress was actually killed.{{cn|date=May 2019}}
*''[[The Execution of Mary Stuart]]'' (1895), produced by Thomas Edison, the first appearance of Mary on film, depicts her beheading. It is one of the first films to utilize an intentional jump cut to create the illusion of a single shot beheading.
*''[[The Loves of Mary, Queen of Scots]]'' (1923), stars [[Fay Compton]].
*''[[The Loves of Mary, Queen of Scots]]'' (1923), stars [[Fay Compton]].
*''[[Mary of Scotland (film)|Mary of Scotland]]'' (1936) was directed by [[John Ford]], written by [[Dudley Nichols]] (based on the stage play ''[[Mary of Scotland (play)|Mary of Scotland]]'' by [[Maxwell Anderson]], which was a [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] success in 1933). and stars [[Katharine Hepburn]] as Mary, [[Florence Eldridge]] as Elizabeth I, and [[Fredric March]] as Bothwell.
*''[[Mary of Scotland (film)|Mary of Scotland]]'' (1936) was directed by [[John Ford]], written by [[Dudley Nichols]] (based on the stage play ''[[Mary of Scotland (play)|Mary of Scotland]]'' by [[Maxwell Anderson]], which was a [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] success in 1933). and stars [[Katharine Hepburn]] as Mary, [[Florence Eldridge]] as Elizabeth I, and [[Fredric March]] as Bothwell.
*''[[Das Herz der Königin]]'' (''The Heart of a Queen'', 1940) features [[Zarah Leander]], the Swedish-German actress from the Nazi period as Mary. This [[Universum Film AG|UFA]] production, directed by [[Carl Froelich]], makes use of the historical story for anti-British propaganda in the context of the then ongoing [[World War II]].
*''[[Das Herz der Königin]]'' (''The Heart of a Queen'', 1940) features [[Zarah Leander]], the Swedish-German actress from the Nazi period as Mary. This [[Universum Film AG|UFA]] production, directed by [[Carl Froelich]], makes use of the historical story for anti-British propaganda in the context of the then ongoing [[World War II]].
*''[[Mary, Queen of Scots (1971 film)|Mary, Queen of Scots]]'' (1971), starring [[Vanessa Redgrave]] as Mary, [[Glenda Jackson]] as Elizabeth, [[Patrick McGoohan]] as Moray, [[Trevor Howard]] as Cecil, [[Ian Holm]] as Rizzio, [[Timothy Dalton]] as Darnley, and [[Nigel Davenport]] as Bothwell. was written by [[John Hale (screenwriter)|John Hale]], who also wrote a novelization of the film's screenplay. Two events were included that never historically took place: a private outdoor meeting between Elizabeth and Mary when Mary arrives in England and Elizabeth's visiting Mary in prison the night before Mary's execution.
*''[[Mary, Queen of Scots (1971 film)|Mary, Queen of Scots]]'' (1971), starring [[Vanessa Redgrave]] as Mary, [[Glenda Jackson]] as Elizabeth, [[Patrick McGoohan]] as Moray, [[Trevor Howard]] as Cecil, [[Ian Holm]] as Rizzio, [[Timothy Dalton]] as Darnley, and [[Nigel Davenport]] as Bothwell. was written by [[John Hale (screenwriter)|John Hale]], who also wrote a novelization of the film's screenplay. Two events were included that never historically took place: a private outdoor meeting between Elizabeth and Mary when Mary arrives in England and Elizabeth's visiting Mary in prison the night before Mary's execution.
*''[[The Mirror Crack'd]]'' (1980), a [[Miss Marple]] mystery, is [[metafiction]] (a film within a film centered around the making of a motion picture) about Elizabeth I and Mary Queen of Scots; [[Elizabeth Taylor]] portrays the actress playing Mary.
*''[[The Mirror Crack'd]]'' (1980), a [[Miss Marple]] mystery, is [[metafiction]] (a film within a film centred around the making of a motion picture) about Elizabeth I and Mary Queen of Scots; [[Elizabeth Taylor]] portrays the actress playing Mary.
*''[[Elizabeth: The Golden Age]]'' (2007) features [[Samantha Morton]] as Mary, Queen of Scots.
*''[[Elizabeth: The Golden Age]]'' (2007) features [[Samantha Morton]] as Mary
*''[[Mary Queen of Scots (2013 film)|Mary Queen of Scots]]'' (2013) , based on [[Stefan Zweig|Stefan Zweig's]] 1935 biography, was directed by [[Thomas Imbach]] and stars the bilingual French actress Camille Rutherford.
*''[[Mary Queen of Scots (2013 film)|Mary Queen of Scots]]'' (2013), based on [[Stefan Zweig|Stefan Zweig's]] 1935 biography, was directed by [[Thomas Imbach]] and stars the bilingual French actress Camille Rutherford.
*''[[Mary Queen of Scots (2018 film)|Mary Queen of Scots]]'' (2018) stars [[Saoirse Ronan]] as the titular character and [[Margot Robbie]] as Elizabeth.
*''[[Mary Queen of Scots (2018 film)|Mary Queen of Scots]]'' (2018) stars [[Saoirse Ronan]] as the titular character and [[Margot Robbie]] as Elizabeth.


==Literature==
==Literature==
===Fiction and drama===
===Fiction and drama===
This list is in chronological order.
* ''Immortal Queen'' by [[Elizabeth Byrd]]
* ''[[La Princesse de Clèves]]'' (1678), a novel by [[Madame de La Fayette]], features an artistic treatment of Mary, as a young dauphine.
*Mary is the subject of a short story in ''[[The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories]]'' (2006), [[Susanna Clarke]]'s collection of fantasy tales.
* [[Friedrich Schiller]]'s novel ''Wallenstein and Mary Stuart'' and play ''[[Mary Stuart (Schiller play)|Maria Stuart]]'' (1800) feature fictional meetings between Queens Mary and Elizabeth, added for dramatic effect.
*''[[La Princesse de Clèves]]'' (1678), by [[Madame de La Fayette]], is a novel in which an artistic treatment of Mary, as a young dauphine, features as a major character.
*''The Lady of Fire and Tears'' by [[Terry Deary]], is a children's novel about Mary, Queen of Scots.
* ''The Abbot'' (1820) by Sir [[Walter Scott]] (1820) covers the period of Mary's confinement in Loch Leven castle.
* ''Mary Stuart'' is a novel by Alexandre Dumas.
* ''Mary Stuart'' (1839-1840) is a novel by [[Alexandre Dumas|Alexandre Dumas, père]].
* ''Magdalen Hepburn'' (1854), by [[Margaret Oliphant]], is set during the [[Scottish Reformation]], and features both Mary and [[John Knox]] as characters.<ref>{{cite book |author=Aitken, William Russell |title=Scottish Literature in English and Scots: A Guide to Information Sources |date=1982 |publisher=Gale Research Co. |isbn=9780810312494 |page=146}}</ref>
* ''The Queen's Quair'' (1904) is a novel about Mary by [[Maurice Hewlett]].<ref> Joseph Wiesenfarth, ''History and Representation in Ford Madox Ford's Writings'' Amsterdam Rodopi, 2004 {{ISBN|9789042016132}} (p.112).</ref> H
* ''Mary Hamilton'' (1902) by [[Lord Ernest Hamilton]], a novel about a lady-in-waiting to Mary, is based on the traditional ballad, ''[[Mary Hamilton]]''.<ref>Colin Younger, ''Border Crossings: Narration, Nation and Imagination in Scots and Irish Literature and Culture''. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018. {{ISBN|9781443854115}} (pgs. 119-120)</ref>
*Mary features importantly in ''[[Francis Crawford of Lymond|The Lymond Chronicles]]'' by [[Dorothy Dunnett]].
* ''The Queen's Quair'' (1904) is a novel about Mary by [[Maurice Hewlett]].<ref>Joseph Wiesenfarth, ''History and Representation in Ford Madox Ford's Writings'' Amsterdam Rodopi, 2004 {{ISBN|9789042016132}} (p.112).</ref>
* ''The Memoirs of Mary, Queen of Scots'' by [[Carolly Erickson]]
* ''A Traveller in Time (''1939'')'', by [[Alison Uttley]], is a children's book about a young girl who finds herself in the time of and in the company of Anthony Babington, who is attempting to free Mary and overthrow Elizabeth.
*In ''The Princeling'', volume 3 of ''[[The Morland Dynasty]]'' historical novels series by [[Cynthia Harrod-Eagles]], the fictional Lettice Morland becomes embroiled in the dramatic events taking place at the court of Mary, Queen of Scots.
* ''Mary Queen of Scotland and the Isles'' (1992) is a novel by [[Margaret George]].
* ''The Gay Galliard: A Novel of Mary Queen of Scots'' (1941) is a novel by [[Margaret Irwin (novelist)|Margaret Irwin]] (1941).
* ''Shadow Queen'' is a supernatural novel by [[Tony Gibbs]], featuring Mary as its subject.
* ''Child Royal'' (1951) by [[D. K. Broster]] is a novel about Mary's childhood.
* ''The Other Queen'' (2008) is a novel by [[Philippa Gregory]], featuring Mary as its subject.
* ''The Royal Road to Fotheringay'' (1955) and ''[[The Captive Queen of Scots]]'' (1963) is a two-part saga by [[Jean Plaidy]], aka [[Eleanor Hibbert]], featuring Mary as its subject.
* Mary figures importantly in ''[[Francis Crawford of Lymond|The Lymond Chronicles]] (''1961-1975) by [[Dorothy Dunnett]].
* ''Full Story Inside'' is a modern novel by Steve Horsfall, featuring Mary as its subject.
*''The Gay Galliard: A Novel of Mary Queen of Scots'' (1941) is a novel by [[Margaret Irwin]] (1941).
* ''Immortal Queen'' (1972) by [[Elizabeth Byrd]]
*''Mary, Queen of Scots: Queen Without a Country, France, 1553'', from the [[Royal Diaries]] by [[Kathryn Lasky]], is a children's novel about Mary, Queen of scotts.
*''The Wild Queen'', by [[Carolyn Meyer]], Mary is a young adult historical novel featuring Mary, queen of Scots as the main character.
* ''Court of Shadows'', by [[Cynthia Morgan]], is a suspense novel.
* ''Magdalen Hepburn'' (1854), by [[Margaret Oliphant]], is set during the [[Scottish Reformation]], and features both Mary and [[John Knox]] as characters.<ref>{{cite book|author=Aitken, William Russell |title=Scottish Literature in English and Scots: A Guide to Information Sources|publisher= Gale Research Co.|date= 1982 |isbn=9780810312494|page=146}}</ref>
* ''Flawed Enchantress'' (1973) (in another edition, ''So Fair and Foul a Queen'' (1974)) is a novel by [[Maureen Peters (novelist)|Maureen Peters]].
* ''Flawed Enchantress'' (1973) (in another edition, ''So Fair and Foul a Queen'' (1974)) is a novel by [[Maureen Peters (novelist)|Maureen Peters]].
*In ''The Princeling (1981),'' volume 3 of ''[[The Morland Dynasty]]'' historical novels series by [[Cynthia Harrod-Eagles]], the fictional Lettice Morland becomes embroiled in the dramatic events taking place at the court of Mary, Queen of Scots.
* ''[[The Royal Road to Fotheringay]]'' (1955) and ''[[The Captive Queen of Scots]]'' (1963) is a two-part saga by [[Jean Plaidy]], aka [[Eleanor Hibbert]], featuring Mary as its subject.
*''Mary, Queen of Scots'' (1987) is a young adult novel by Sally Stepanek.
* [[Friedrich Schiller]]'s novel ''Wallenstein and Mary Stuart'' and play ''[[Mary Stuart (play)|Maria Stuart]]'' feature fictional meetings between Queens Mary and Elizabeth, added for dramatic effect.
* ''Mary Queen of Scotland and the Isles'' (1992) is a novel by [[Margaret George]].
* ''The Abbot'' (1820) by Sir [[Walter Scott]] (1820) covers the period of Mary's confinement in Loch Leven castle.
* ''Mary, Queen of Scots'', is a young adult novel by Sally Stepanek.
* ''Shadow Queen'' (1992) is a supernatural novel by Tony Gibbs, featuring Mary.
* ''Fatal Majesty'' (2000), by [[Reay Tannahill]] (2000), is a novel featuring Mary's story.
* ''Court of Shadows'' (1992), by Cynthia Morgan , is a suspense novel.
* ''[[Historical novels by Nigel Tranter set between 1286 and 1603#The Marchman|The Marchman; Warden of the Queen's March; The Queen's Grace]]'' is an historical novel by [[Nigel Tranter]].
* ''[[Historical novels by Nigel Tranter set between 1286 and 1603#The Marchman|The Marchman (1997), Warden of the Queen's March (1989) and The Queen's Grace (1953)]]'' are historical novels by [[Nigel Tranter]].
* ''Fatal Majesty'' (2000), by [[Reay Tannahill]] (2000), is a novel featuring Mary's story.
*''A Traveller in Time'', by [[Alison Uttley]], is a children's book about a young girl who finds herself in the time of and in the company of Anthony Babington, who is attempting to free Mary and overthrow Elizabeth.
* ''Queen's Own Fool: A Novel of Mary Queen of Scots'' (2001) by [[Jane Yolen]] and [[Robert J. Harris (writer)|Robert J. Harris]] is a children's novel about Mary, Queen of Scots and her jester [[Nichola (fool)|Nichola]].
*In ‘‘The Queen’s Consort’’ by Steven Veerapen, Mary is the main character and her second husband, Lord Darnley, is the protagonist.
*''Queen's Own Fool: A Novel of Mary Queen of Scots'' by [[Jane Yolen]] and [[Robert J. Harris (writer)|Robert J. Harris]] is a children's novel about Mary, Queen of Scots and her jester [[Nichola (fool)|Nichola]].
* ''Mary, Queen of Scots: Queen Without a Country, France, 1553'' (2002), from the [[Royal Diaries]] by [[Kathryn Lasky]], is a children's novel about Mary, Queen of Scots.
*''The Lady of Fire and Tears (2005)'' by [[Terry Deary]], is a children's novel about Mary, Queen of Scots.
*Mary is the subject of a short story in ''[[The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories]]'' (2006), [[Susanna Clarke]]'s collection of fantasy tales.
*''The Other Queen'' (2008) is a novel by [[Philippa Gregory]], featuring Mary as its subject.
*''Full Story Inside'' (2008) is a modern thriller by Steve Horsfall. The mystery centres on Information about Mary.
* ''The Memoirs of Mary, Queen of Scots'' (2009) is a novel by [[Carolly Erickson]]
*''The Wild Queen (2012)'', by [[Carolyn Meyer]], Mary is a young adult historical novel featuring Mary, Queen of Scots as the main character.
*In ''The Queen’s Consort'' (2018) by Steven Veerapen, Mary's second husband, Lord Darnley, is the protagonist.


===Historical biography and analysis===
===Historical biography and analysis===
This list is in chronological order.
* ''Marie Stuart'' (1936) by [[Stefan Zweig]], {{ISBN|2-253-15079-7}}
* ''Mary Queen of Scots'' (2006) by [[Retha Warnicke]], {{ISBN|0-415-29183-6}}
* ''[[Maria Stuart (biography)|Maria Stuart]]'' (1936) by [[Stefan Zweig]], {{ISBN|2-253-15079-7}}
* ''Queen of Scots'' by Rosalind K. Marshall, {{ISBN|1-873644-95-7}}
* ''[[Mary Queen of Scots (Fraser book)|Mary Queen of Scots]]'' (1969) by [[Antonia Fraser]], {{ISBN|0-385-31129-X}}
* ''Mary Queen of Scots'' by [[Antonia Fraser]], {{ISBN|0-385-31129-X}}
* "Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Babington conspiracy", by David Alan Johnson, ''Military Heritage'', August 2005, no. 1, Volume 7, ISSN 1524-8666
* "Mary Queen of Scots and the French Connection", ''History Today'', 54, 7 (July 2004), pp. 37–43, by Alexander Wilkinson
* ''Elizabeth and Mary: Cousins, Rivals, Queens'' (Vintage, 2005) by Jane Dunn, {{ISBN|0-375-70820-0}}.
* '' Queen of Scots: The True Life of Mary Stuart'' (New York, 2004) by John Guy, {{ISBN|0-618-25411-0}}
* ''Mary Queen of Scots and French Public Opinion, 1542–1600'' (Palgrave, 2005) by Alexander Wilkinson, {{ISBN|1-4039-2039-7}} (hdbk)
* ''Mary Queen of Scots: A Study in Failure'' (London, 1988) by [[Jenny Wormald]], {{ISBN|0-540-01131-2}}
* ''Mary Queen of Scots: A Study in Failure'' (London, 1988) by [[Jenny Wormald]], {{ISBN|0-540-01131-2}}
* ''Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Murder of Lord Darnley'' (New York, 2003) by [[Alison Weir (historian)|Alison Weir]], {{ISBN|0-345-43658-X}}
* ''Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Murder of Lord Darnley'' (New York, 2003) by [[Alison Weir (historian)|Alison Weir]], {{ISBN|0-345-43658-X}}
* ''The Kings & Queens of Scotland'' (Stroud, 2004) by [[Richard Oram]], {{ISBN|0-7524-2971-X}}
* ''The Kings & Queens of Scotland'' (Stroud, 2004) by [[Richard Oram]], {{ISBN|0-7524-2971-X}}
* "Mary Queen of Scots and the French Connection", ''History Today'', 54, 7 (July 2004), pp. 37–43, by Alexander Wilkinson
* '' Queen of Scots: The True Life of Mary Stuart'' (New York, 2004) by John Guy, {{ISBN|0-618-25411-0}}
* "Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Babington conspiracy", by David Alan Johnson, ''Military Heritage'', August 2005, no. 1, Volume 7, ISSN 1524-8666
* ''Mary Queen of Scots and French Public Opinion, 1542–1600'' (Palgrave, 2005) by Alexander Wilkinson, {{ISBN|1-4039-2039-7}} (hdbk)
* ''Elizabeth and Mary: Cousins, Rivals, Queens'' (Vintage, 2005) by Jane Dunn, {{ISBN|0-375-70820-0}}.
* ''Mary Queen of Scots'' (2006) by [[Retha Warnicke]], {{ISBN|0-415-29183-6}}
* ''Queen of Scots: Truth or Lies (''2011'')'' by Rosalind K. Marshall, {{ISBN|1-873644-95-7}}


===Photography and art books===
===Photography and art books===
Line 66: Line 72:


===Poetry===
===Poetry===
*In [[Nobel Prize|Nobel]] laureate [[Joseph Brodsky]]'s ''20 sonnets to Mary Stuart'' (in Russian) the poet addresses her as an interlocutor.
*In [[Nobel Prize|Nobel]] laureate [[Joseph Brodsky]]'s ''20 sonnets to Mary Stuart'' (in [[Russian language|Russian]]) the poet addresses her as an interlocutor.
*The Scottish poet [[Robert Burns]] wrote a poem ''Lament of Mary Queen of Scots, on the Approach of Spring'' upon Mary's feelings while in her captivity in England, towards her cousin Elizabeth I of England and foreboding of her approaching death.
*The Scottish poet [[Robert Burns]] wrote a poem ''Lament of Mary Queen of Scots, on the Approach of Spring'' upon Mary's feelings while in her captivity in England, towards her cousin Elizabeth I of England and foreboding of her approaching death.
*The Spanish poet [[Lope de Vega]] wrote an epic poem upon Mary Stuart's life and death: ''Corona trágica'' (''Tragic crown''), published in 1628.
*The Spanish poet [[Lope de Vega]] wrote an epic poem upon Mary Stuart's life and death: ''Corona trágica'' (''Tragic crown''), published in 1628.
*Shortly after Mary Stuart's execution in 1587, the English Jesuit poet [[Robert Southwell (jesuit)|Robert Southwell]] composed an emblem poem portraying Mary as a Catholic martyr.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pQA_AAAAIAAJ&pg=PR9&lpg=PR9&dq=robert+southwell+poems+decease+release&source=web&ots=eyBTXfkORx&sig=xdZ0l0kHa06i4_hCEBpHiMZB4dA#PPA171,M1|title=The Complete Poems of Robert Southwell: For the First Time Fully Collected and Collated with the Original and Early Editions and Mss. ...|first=Saint Robert|last=Southwell|date=October 4, 1872|publisher=private circulation|via=Google Books}}</ref> The poem was never published in the early modern period; even owning a manuscript version of the poem was "inevitable flirtation with treason" in Elizabethan England.<ref>''St. Robert Southwell: Collected Poems''. Ed. Peter Davidson and Anne Sweeney. Carcanet Press: Manchester U.K., 2007</ref>
*Shortly after Mary Stuart's execution in 1587, the English Jesuit poet [[Robert Southwell (jesuit)|Robert Southwell]] composed an emblem poem portraying Mary as a Catholic martyr.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pQA_AAAAIAAJ&dq=robert+southwell+poems+decease+release&pg=PR9|title=The Complete Poems of Robert Southwell: For the First Time Fully Collected and Collated with the Original and Early Editions and Mss. ...|first=Saint Robert|last=Southwell|date=October 4, 1872|publisher=private circulation|via=Google Books}}</ref> The poem was never published in the early modern period; even owning a manuscript version of the poem was "inevitable flirtation with treason" in Elizabethan England.<ref>''St. Robert Southwell: Collected Poems''. Ed. Peter Davidson and Anne Sweeney. Carcanet Press: Manchester U.K., 2007</ref>
*The 1596 edition of [[Edmund Spenser]]'s ''[[Faerie Queene]]'' includes an allegorical representation of the trial of Mary Stuart (Book 5, Canto ix, stanzas 36–50). Mary Stuart is represented by Duessa and Elizabeth is figured by Mercilla. The allegory dwells on Elizabeth's reluctance to condemn Mary. Elizabeth's delay of three months before agreeing to have Mary executed is represented by a gap of three stanzas at the end of Canto ix.<ref>''The Faerie Queene.'' Ed. A.C. Hamilton. Harlow, UK: Longman, 2001, p. 577 n.</ref> Mercilla's judgment and Duessa's execution do not actually occur until the beginning of the next Canto (x.1–4).
*The 1596 edition of [[Edmund Spenser]]'s ''[[Faerie Queene]]'' includes an allegorical representation of the trial of Mary Stuart (Book 5, Canto ix, stanzas 36–50). Mary Stuart is represented by Duessa and Elizabeth is figured by Mercilla. The allegory dwells on Elizabeth's reluctance to condemn Mary. Elizabeth's delay of three months before agreeing to have Mary executed is represented by a gap of three stanzas at the end of Canto ix.<ref>''The Faerie Queene.'' Ed. A.C. Hamilton. Harlow, UK: Longman, 2001, p. 577 n.</ref> Mercilla's judgment and Duessa's execution do not actually occur until the beginning of the next Canto (x.1–4).


Line 78: Line 84:
* The song "The Ballad of Mary (Queen of Scots)" by [[Grave Digger (band)|Grave Digger]] is about her time in prison.
* The song "The Ballad of Mary (Queen of Scots)" by [[Grave Digger (band)|Grave Digger]] is about her time in prison.
* The song "My Blood Will Live Forever" by [[Grave Digger (band)|Grave Digger]] is about her time before the execution.
* The song "My Blood Will Live Forever" by [[Grave Digger (band)|Grave Digger]] is about her time before the execution.
* ''Data Regina'' (2017), a multimedia suite by composer [[Olivia Louvel]], featuring violinist [[Fiona Brice]] andmastered by [[Antye Greie]], digs deep into the psychic warfare between two 16th century British Queens. Drawn to the life and writings of Mary Queen of Scots, a poet and essayist herself and one of the most read woman of her time, ''Data Regina'' is a body of work which gathers electronic songs, "The Antechamber", along with a series of instrumentals, "The Battles", a sonic landscape inspired by the 16th century battles on the Anglo-Scottish border.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dataregina.com/|title=Data Regina by Olivia Louvel|website=www.dataregina.com}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://thequietus.com/articles/22355-olivia-louvel-interview|title=The Quietus &#124; Features &#124; Escape Velocity &#124; Multiple Media: Olivia Louvel On Music, Art & 17th Century History|website=The Quietus}}</ref>
* ''Data Regina'' (2017), a multimedia suite by composer [[Olivia Louvel]], featuring violinist [[Fiona Brice]] and mastered by [[Antye Greie]], digs deep into the psychic warfare between two 16th century British Queens. Drawn to the life and writings of Mary Queen of Scots, a poet and essayist herself and one of the most read woman of her time, ''Data Regina'' is a body of work which gathers electronic songs, "The Antechamber", along with a series of instrumentals, "The Battles", a sonic landscape inspired by the 16th century battles on the Anglo-Scottish border.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.dataregina.com/|title=Data Regina by Olivia Louvel|website=www.dataregina.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://thequietus.com/articles/22355-olivia-louvel-interview|title=The Quietus &#124; Features &#124; Escape Velocity &#124; Multiple Media: Olivia Louvel On Music, Art & 17th Century History|website=The Quietus}}</ref>
* The song "[[To France]]" by [[Mike Oldfield]], featured in the 1984 album ''[[Discovery (Mike Oldfield album)|Discovery]]'', references Mary in its chorus.
* The song "[[To France]]" by [[Mike Oldfield]], featured in the 1984 album ''[[Discovery (Mike Oldfield album)|Discovery]]'', references Mary in its chorus.
*The song "[[Sad Song (Lou Reed song)|Sad Song]]" by [[Lou Reed]], featured in the 1973 album ''[[Berlin (Lou Reed album)|Berlin]]'', references Mary in its initial verses. The song was also recorded as a demo by Reed's band [[The Velvet Underground]] with different lyrics (this version appears on the box set ''[[Peel Slowly and See]]'' and the "Fully Loaded Edition" of ''[[Loaded (The Velvet Underground album)|Loaded]]'', but the Velvets' version still references Mary.
*The song "[[Sad Song (Lou Reed song)|Sad Song]]" by [[Lou Reed]], featured in the 1973 album ''[[Berlin (Lou Reed album)|Berlin]]'', references Mary in its initial verses. The song was also recorded as a demo by Reed's band [[The Velvet Underground]] with different lyrics (this version appears on the box set ''[[Peel Slowly and See]]'' and the "Fully Loaded Edition" of ''[[Loaded (The Velvet Underground album)|Loaded]]'', but the Velvets' version still references Mary.
*[[Robert Schumann]] composed a song cycle "Gedichte der Königin Maria Stuart" (Op. 135) based on five poems from the collection "Rose und Distel" by Gisbert Vincke (1852). This cycle was among the final works that Schumann composed before he went insane.
*[[Robert Schumann]] composed a song cycle "Gedichte der Königin Maria Stuart" (Op. 135) based on five poems from the collection "Rose und Distel" by Gisbert Vincke (1852). This cycle was among the final works that Schumann composed before he went insane.
*[[Richard Wagner]] composed a song "Adieux de Marie Stuart" (WWV 61, 1840) based on a poem by Pierre Jean Béranger.{{cn|date=May 2019}}
*[[Richard Wagner]] composed a song "Adieux de Marie Stuart" (WWV 61, 1840) based on a poem by Pierre Jean Béranger.{{citation needed|date=May 2019}}


==Opera==
==Opera==
Line 106: Line 112:
*[[Mary Carr Moore]] - ''David Rizzio'' (completed in 1932, on an Italian libretto)
*[[Mary Carr Moore]] - ''David Rizzio'' (completed in 1932, on an Italian libretto)
*[[Thea Musgrave]] - ''[[Mary, Queen of Scots (opera)|Mary, Queen of Scots]]'' (premiered in 1977 in [[Edinburgh]])
*[[Thea Musgrave]] - ''[[Mary, Queen of Scots (opera)|Mary, Queen of Scots]]'' (premiered in 1977 in [[Edinburgh]])
*[[Bain Murray]] - ‘’Mary Stuart, A Queen Betrayed’’ (1991) {{cite web |url=https://case.edu/ech/articles/m/murray-j-d-bain |title=Bain Murray, Encyclopedia of Cleveland History|date=11 May 2018 }}


==Radio==
==Radio==
* [[Joan Crawford]] played Mary in the March 10, 1937 ''[[Lux Radio Theatre]]'' adaptation of the film ''[[Mary of Scotland (film)|Mary of Scotland]]'', with [[Franchot Tone]] as Bothwell and [[Judith Anderson]] as Elizabeth.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.audio-classics.com/lluxradio.html|title=Lux Radio Theatre Log|website=www.audio-classics.com}}</ref>
* [[Joan Crawford]] played Mary in the 10 March 1937 ''[[Lux Radio Theatre]]'' adaptation of the film ''[[Mary of Scotland (film)|Mary of Scotland]]'', with [[Franchot Tone]] as Bothwell and [[Judith Anderson]] as Elizabeth.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.audio-classics.com/lluxradio.html|title=Lux Radio Theatre Log|website=www.audio-classics.com}}</ref>
* Episode 14 of the Australian radio series ''Famous Escapes'' is "Mary Queen of Scots Escapes from Prison" (1945); the actress who played Mary is not currently known.{{cn|date=May 2019}}
* Episode 14 of the Australian radio series ''Famous Escapes'' is "Mary Queen of Scots Escapes from Prison" (1945); the actress who played Mary is not currently known.{{citation needed|date=May 2019}}
* Another version of the ''[[Mary of Scotland (play)|Mary of Scotland]]'' play was broadcast on the ''[[United States Steel Hour|Theatre Guild on the Air]]'' on April 28, 1946, starring [[Helen Hayes]] as Mary and [[Helen Menken]] as Elizabeth (both of whom had originally played their roles on Broadway).<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Theatre-Guild-On-The-Air.html|title=The Definitive The Theatre Guild On The Air Radio Log|website=www.digitaldeliftp.com}}</ref>
* Another version of the ''[[Mary of Scotland (play)|Mary of Scotland]]'' play was broadcast on the ''[[United States Steel Hour|Theatre Guild on the Air]]'' on 28 April 1946, starring [[Helen Hayes]] as Mary and [[Helen Menken]] as Elizabeth (both of whom had originally played their roles on Broadway).<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Theatre-Guild-On-The-Air.html|title=The Definitive The Theatre Guild On The Air Radio Log|website=www.digitaldeliftp.com|access-date=20 March 2019|archive-date=2 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151202053216/http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Theatre-Guild-On-The-Air.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
* On June 10, 1947, the radio series ''[[Favorite Story]]'' broadcast "Mary Queen of Scots", the "favorite story" of [[Bing Crosby]], with [[Edna Best]] as Mary and [[Benita Hume]] as Elizabeth.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Favorite-Story.html|title=The Definitive Favorite Story Radio Log with Ronald Colman|website=www.digitaldeliftp.com}}</ref>
* On 10 June 1947 the radio series ''[[Favorite Story]]'' broadcast "Mary Queen of Scots", the "favourite story" of [[Bing Crosby]], with [[Edna Best]] as Mary and [[Benita Hume]] as Elizabeth.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Favorite-Story.html|title=The Definitive Favorite Story Radio Log with Ronald Colman|website=www.digitaldeliftp.com|access-date=20 March 2019|archive-date=12 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171012121923/http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/digitaldelitoo/dd2jb-Favorite-Story.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
* The [[CBS Radio]] series ''[[You Are There (series)|You Are There]]'' broadcast "The Execution of Mary Queen of Scots" on June 27th 1947, June 27th 1948 and April 3rd 1949.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-CBS-Is-There.html|title=The Definitive CBS Is There and You Are There Radio Articles and Logs with John Daly and Ken Roberts|website=www.digitaldeliftp.com}}</ref>
* The [[CBS Radio]] series ''[[You Are There (series)|You Are There]]'' broadcast "The Execution of Mary Queen of Scots" on 27 June 1947, 27 June 1948 and 3 April 1949.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-CBS-Is-There.html|title=The Definitive CBS Is There and You Are There Radio Articles and Logs with John Daly and Ken Roberts|website=www.digitaldeliftp.com|access-date=20 March 2019|archive-date=11 October 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111011050046/http://digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-CBS-Is-There.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
* Meg Fraser played Mary twice in [[BBC Radio 3]] productions, first in 2010 in Jo Clifford's adaptation of [[Madame de La Fayette]]'s novel ''[[La Princesse de Cleves]]''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00qztyg|title=BBC Radio 3 - Drama on 3, La princesse de Cleves|website=BBC}}</ref> and then in 2012 in David Harrower's adaptation of [[Friedrich Schiller]]'s play ''[[Mary Stuart (play)|Mary Stuart]]''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01msj6x|title=BBC Radio 3 - Drama on 3, Mary Stuart|website=BBC}}</ref>
* Meg Fraser played Mary twice in [[BBC Radio 3]] productions, first in 2010 in Jo Clifford's adaptation of [[Madame de La Fayette]]'s novel ''[[La Princesse de Cleves]]''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00qztyg|title=BBC Radio 3 - Drama on 3, La princesse de Cleves|website=BBC}}</ref> and then in 2012 in David Harrower's adaptation of [[Friedrich Schiller]]'s play ''[[Mary Stuart (Schiller play)|Mary Stuart]]''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01msj6x|title=BBC Radio 3 - Drama on 3, Mary Stuart|website=BBC}}</ref>
* A radio adaptation of [[Liz Lochhead]]'s play ''[[Mary Queen of Scots Got Her Head Chopped Off]]'' was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 4]] on 11 February 2011, with [[Gerda Stevenson]] as Mary and Myra McFadyen as Corbie.
* A radio adaptation of [[Liz Lochhead]]'s play ''[[Mary Queen of Scots Got Her Head Chopped Off]]'' was broadcast on [[BBC Radio 3]] on 11 February 2001, with [[Gerda Stevenson]] as Mary, [[Siobhan Redmond]] as [[Elizabeth I]], [[Bill Paterson (actor)|Bill Paterson]] as [[John Knox]], and Myra McFadyen as Corbie.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/ebac2011a02441b4bfd475e57fc2a176|title=Sunday Play: Mary Queen of Scots Got Her Head Chopped Off|website=genome.ch.bbc.co.uk|date=11 February 2001 }}</ref>
* [[Jeany Spark]] played Mary in Episode One, "It Came In with a Lass" (29 June 2013), of the first series of [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]'s [[BBC Radio 4]]'s ''The Stuarts''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0366wn3|title=BBC Radio 4 - The Stuarts, It Came In with a Lass|website=BBC}}</ref>
* [[Jeany Spark]] played Mary in Episode One, "It Came In with a Lass" (29 June 2013), of the first series of [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]'s [[BBC Radio 4]]'s ''The Stuarts''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0366wn3|title=BBC Radio 4 - The Stuarts, It Came In with a Lass|website=BBC}}</ref>
* On 8 December 2018, [[BBC Radio 4]] broadcast as part of their ''Unmade Movies'' series ''Alexander MacKendrick's Mary Queen of Scots'', adapted from the original screenplay by Alexander MacKendrick and Jay Presson Allen, with [[Ellie Bamber]] as Mary and [[Glenda Jackson]] as The Narrator.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0001gpg|title=BBC Radio 4 - Drama, Unmade Movies, Alexander MacKendrick's Mary Queen of Scots|website=BBC}}</ref>
* On 8 December 2018, [[BBC Radio 4]] broadcast as part of their ''Unmade Movies'' series ''Alexander MacKendrick's Mary Queen of Scots'', adapted from the original screenplay by Alexander MacKendrick and Jay Presson Allen, with [[Ellie Bamber]] as Mary and [[Glenda Jackson]] as The Narrator.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0001gpg|title=BBC Radio 4 - Drama, Unmade Movies, Alexander MacKendrick's Mary Queen of Scots|website=BBC}}</ref>


==Television==
==Television==
* In the Channel 4 television miniseries, ''[[Elizabeth I (2005 miniseries)|Elizabeth I]]'' (2005), the first two-hour segment partly centers around the conflict between [[Elizabeth I|Elizabeth]] and Mary (portrayed by [[Barbara Flynn]]), whose execution is graphically shown in a manner that is reportedly true to history.
* In the Channel 4 television miniseries, ''[[Elizabeth I (2005 miniseries)|Elizabeth I]]'' (2005), the first two-hour segment partly centres around the conflict between [[Elizabeth I|Elizabeth]] and Mary (portrayed by [[Barbara Flynn]]), whose execution is graphically shown in a manner that is reportedly true to history.
* In the [[Channel 5 (UK)|Channel 5]] television docudrama series ''Elizabeth I'' (2017), Mary is portrayed by Audrey L'Ebrellec.
* In the [[Channel 5 (UK)|Channel 5]] television docudrama series ''Elizabeth I'' (2017), Mary is portrayed by Audrey L'Ebrellec.
* The BBC-TV mini-series ''[[Elizabeth R]]'' (1971), episode 4: "Horrible Conspiracies", written by [[Hugh Whitemore]], is a generally historically accurate portrayal of Mary (played by [[Vivian Pickles]]) during her captivity in England, from her imprisonment at Chartley under the guardianship of [[Sir Amyas Paulet]] through to her trial and execution, using many of Mary's own reported words as dialogue. It includes an accurate portrayal of her execution including her use of a red petticoat (red being the colour of martyrdom in the Catholic religion), her positioning of her head with her hands on the block, and the two blows and sawing motion it took to remove her head. It also shows the executioner unwittingly grasping and pulling away her wig to reveal her grey hair.
* The BBC-TV mini-series ''[[Elizabeth R]]'' (1971), episode 4: "Horrible Conspiracies", written by [[Hugh Whitemore]], is a generally historically accurate portrayal of Mary (played by [[Vivian Pickles]]) during her captivity in England, from her imprisonment at Chartley under the guardianship of [[Sir Amyas Paulet]] through to her trial and execution, using many of Mary's own reported words as dialogue. It includes an accurate portrayal of her execution including her use of a red petticoat (red being the colour of martyrdom in the Catholic religion), her positioning of her head with her hands on the block, and the two blows and sawing motion it took to remove her head. It also shows the executioner unwittingly grasping and pulling away her wig to reveal her grey hair.
Line 127: Line 134:
* ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' episode 22 (1970) features a skit involving the first two episodes of "a new radio drama series: ''The Death of Mary Queen of Scots''".
* ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' episode 22 (1970) features a skit involving the first two episodes of "a new radio drama series: ''The Death of Mary Queen of Scots''".
* Lesley Smith, the curator of Tutbury Castle, portrayed Mary Queen of Scots for Living's ''Most Haunted'' in 2002 for a dramatic monologue of her time imprisoned there. Smith continues these re-enactments in the castle.
* Lesley Smith, the curator of Tutbury Castle, portrayed Mary Queen of Scots for Living's ''Most Haunted'' in 2002 for a dramatic monologue of her time imprisoned there. Smith continues these re-enactments in the castle.
* [[Reign (2013 TV series)|''Reign'' (2013 TV series)]] is a highly fictionalized period drama television show on [[The CW Television Network]] that follows the life of 15-year-old Mary, Queen of Scots, at French court beginning in 1557, while she awaits her marriage to [[Francis II of France]]. At court, Mary has to contend with the changing politics and power plays. Francis' mother, Queen [[Catherine de' Medici]], is secretly trying to prevent the marriage due to the advice of [[Nostradamus]], who had a vision that the wedding will lead to Francis' death. The series also follows the affairs of Mary's four Scottish handmaidens Lola, Kenna, Greer and Aylee, who are searching for husbands of their own at court. Mary is portrayed by Australian actress [[Adelaide Kane]].<ref>{{cite news|work=Sun Times|title=Australian Actress Secures Her Reign|url=http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/television/24325566-421/australian-actress-secures-her-reign.html}}</ref> The series began airing on October 13, 2013.
* [[Reign (2013 TV series)|''Reign'' (2013 TV series)]] is a highly fictionalized period drama television show on [[The CW Television Network]] that follows the life of 15-year-old Mary, Queen of Scots, at French court beginning in 1557, while she awaits [[Wedding of Mary, Queen of Scots and Francis, Dauphin of France|her marriage]] to [[Francis II of France]]. At court, Mary has to contend with the changing politics and power plays. Francis' mother, Queen [[Catherine de' Medici]], is secretly trying to prevent the marriage due to the advice of [[Nostradamus]], who had a vision that the wedding will lead to Francis' death. The series also follows the affairs of Mary's four Scottish handmaidens Lola, Kenna, Greer and Aylee (based on the queen's Scottish ladies-in-waiting, the four Maries - [[Mary Beaton]], [[Mary Fleming]], [[Mary Livingston]], and [[Mary Seton]]), who are searching for husbands of their own at court. Mary is portrayed by Australian actress [[Adelaide Kane]].<ref>{{cite news|work=Sun Times|title=Australian Actress Secures Her Reign|url=http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/television/24325566-421/australian-actress-secures-her-reign.html}}</ref> The series began airing on 13 October 2013.
* Grace McCabe portrays Mary in ''The Last Days of Mary, Queen of Scots'', the first episode of 2015 BBC history series ''The Last Days of...''
* Beth Cooke portrays Mary in 2016 [[BBC]] documentary ''Bloody Queens: Elizabeth and Mary''
* [[Olivia Chenery]] in 2017 Spanish and British miniseries ''[[Queens: The Virgin and the Martyr]]''
* [[Antonia Clarke]] portrays Mary in 2022 [[Starz]] television series ''[[The Serpent Queen]]'', which focuses on [[Catherine de Medici]] (portrayed by [[Samantha Morton]], who previously portrayed Mary, Queen of Scots, in ''[[Elizabeth: The Golden Age]]''), the mother of Mary's first husband [[Francis II of France]]
* A 1957 episode of the ''[[Wonderful World of Disney]]'' titled, "[[The Truth About Mother Goose]]", discussed the origins of three nursery rhymes. Series host [[Walt Disney]] attributed the [[Mary Mary Quite Contrary]] rhyme to the life of Mary Stuart. This episode featured a brief animated short about Mary's life, done in the artistic style of ''[[Sleeping Beauty (1959 film)|Sleeping Beauty]]''. The short touched on important moments in Mary's life, even ending with a scene of Mary being marched to her beheading.
* A 1957 episode of the ''[[Wonderful World of Disney]]'' titled, "[[The Truth About Mother Goose]]", discussed the origins of three nursery rhymes. Series host [[Walt Disney]] attributed the [[Mary Mary Quite Contrary]] rhyme to the life of Mary Stuart. This episode featured a brief animated short about Mary's life, done in the artistic style of ''[[Sleeping Beauty (1959 film)|Sleeping Beauty]]''. The short touched on important moments in Mary's life, even ending with a scene of Mary being marched to her beheading.
* In an episode of ''[[JoJo's Bizarre Adventure]]'', Mary is referenced when two fictional knights were said to have served her.
* In an episode of ''[[JoJo's Bizarre Adventure]]'', Mary is referenced when two fictional knights were said to have served her and turned themselves in to Elizabeth I in exchange for Mary's life, only to learn moments before their deaths that Mary had already been executed.
* Drag queen [[Rosé (drag queen)|Rosé]] impersonated Mary Queen of Scots for the [[Snatch Game]] episode of [[RuPaul's Drag Race (season 13)|''RuPaul's Drag Race'' Season 13]], where she received high praise for her impersonation and improvisational comedy.


==Theatre==
==Theatre==
Line 136: Line 148:


Mary, Queen of Scots, captured the imagination of Italian radicals and their fellow travellers as a political symbol. The restless interest in this tormented figure resulted in multiple 18th and 19th century plays, such as:
Mary, Queen of Scots, captured the imagination of Italian radicals and their fellow travellers as a political symbol. The restless interest in this tormented figure resulted in multiple 18th and 19th century plays, such as:
* ''Maria Stuarda'' (1778), an historical play by Count Vittorio Alfieri<ref name="auto1">{{cite book|date=2001 |title=Mary Stuart and the opera in her honour by Carlo Coccia|author=Weatherson, Professor Alexander }}</ref>
* ''Maria Stuarda'' (1778), an historical play by Count [[Vittorio Alfieri]]<ref name="auto1">{{cite book|date=2001 |title=Mary Stuart and the opera in her honour by Carlo Coccia|author=Weatherson, Professor Alexander }}</ref>
* ''Mary, Queen of Scots; An Historical Tragedy, Or, Dramatic Poem'' (1792) by Mary Deverell{{cn|date=May 2018}}
* ''Mary, Queen of Scots; An Historical Tragedy, Or, Dramatic Poem'' (1792) by Mary Deverell{{citation needed|date=May 2018}}
* ''Mary Stuart'' by [[Alexandre Dumas]]{{cn|date=May 2018}}
* ''Mary Stuart'' by [[Alexandre Dumas]]{{citation needed|date=May 2018}}
*''Il Trionfo dei Carbonari'' (1802) by [[Camillo Federici]], the pseudonym of Giovanni Battista Viassolo. It was published in Padua.
*''Il Trionfo dei Carbonari'' (1802) by [[Camillo Federici]], the pseudonym of Giovanni Battista Viassolo. It was published in Padua.
*''Marie Tudor'' (1833) by [[Victor Hugo]].
*''Marie Tudor'' (1833) by [[Victor Hugo]].
*''[[Mary Stuart (play)|Maria Stuart]]'' (''Mary Stuart'') (1800) is an influential play by [[Friedrich Schiller]] which was the basis for [[Donizetti]]'s opera and other works. It was most recently produced in London's [[West End theatre|West End]] in 2005, starring [[Janet McTeer]] and [[Harriet Walter]]. Both actresses repeated their performances on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] in 2009 and were nominated for a [[Tony Award]];<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=http://ibdb.com/production.php?id=481070|title=Mary Stuart – Broadway Play – 2009 Revival &#124; IBDB}}</ref> that production was directed by [[Phyllida Lloyd]], who also received a nomination for her work.<ref name="auto"/>
*''[[Mary Stuart (Schiller play)|Maria Stuart]]'' (''Mary Stuart'') (1800) is an influential play by [[Friedrich Schiller]] which was the basis for [[Donizetti]]'s opera and other works. It was most recently produced in London's [[West End theatre|West End]] in 2005, starring [[Janet McTeer]] and [[Harriet Walter]]. Both actresses repeated their performances on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] in 2009 and were nominated for a [[Tony Award]];<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=http://ibdb.com/production.php?id=481070|title=Mary Stuart – Broadway Play – 2009 Revival &#124; IBDB}}</ref> that production was directed by [[Phyllida Lloyd]], who also received a nomination for her work.<ref name="auto"/>
*''Edoardo Stuart in Scozia'' by [[August von Kotzebue]].
*''Edoardo Stuart in Scozia'' by [[August von Kotzebue]].
*''Matilde ossia i Carbonari'' (1809) presented the unhappy queen with a fictitious daughter (who too would figure, later, in Rossini’s ''[[Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra]]'' but shorn of any disloyal aspects)
*''Matilde ossia i Carbonari'' (1809) presented the unhappy queen with a fictitious daughter (who too would figure, later, in Rossini's ''[[Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra]]'' but shorn of any disloyal aspects)
*''I carbonari di Dombar'' [i.e., Dunbar]<ref name="auto1"/>
*''I carbonari di Dombar'' [i.e., Dunbar]<ref name="auto1"/>


Line 151: Line 163:
* British playwright [[John Drinkwater (playwright)|John Drinkwater]] wrote the one-act play ''Mary Stuart'', produced on Broadway in 1921.
* British playwright [[John Drinkwater (playwright)|John Drinkwater]] wrote the one-act play ''Mary Stuart'', produced on Broadway in 1921.
* [[Maxwell Anderson]]'s play ''[[Mary of Scotland (play)|Mary of Scotland]]'' was produced on Broadway in 1933, starring [[Helen Hayes]].
* [[Maxwell Anderson]]'s play ''[[Mary of Scotland (play)|Mary of Scotland]]'' was produced on Broadway in 1933, starring [[Helen Hayes]].
* [[Clifford Bax]]'s play ''[[Golden Eagle (play)|Golden Eagle]]'' was staged in the West End in 1946 featuring [[Claire Luce]] as Mary.
* The Scottish playwright [[Robert McLellan]] depicted the events of Mary's downfall, focussing on the months between March 1566 and June 1567, in his five-act play ''[[Mary Stewart (play)|Mary Stewart]]'' (1951), first produced in [[Glasgow]] by the [[Citizens Theatre]].
* The Scottish playwright [[Robert McLellan]] depicted the events of Mary's downfall, focussing on the months between March 1566 and June 1567, in his five-act play ''[[Mary Stewart (play)|Mary Stewart]]'' (1951), first produced in [[Glasgow]] by the [[Citizens Theatre]].
* [[Sarah Miles]] portrayed Mary Queen of Scots on Broadway and the West End in the play ''[[Vivat! Vivat Regina!]]'' (1971) written by her husband [[Robert Bolt]]
* [[Sarah Miles]] portrayed Mary Queen of Scots on Broadway and the West End in the play ''[[Vivat! Vivat Regina!]]'' (1971) written by her husband [[Robert Bolt]]

Latest revision as of 20:19, 1 June 2024

A 19th-century painting of Mary Queen of Scots in the Hermitage, Russia
Cassandra Austen's drawing of Mary Queen of Scots in Jane Austen's burlesque juvenile History of England

Mary, Queen of Scots, has inspired artistic and cultural works for more than four centuries. The following lists cover various media, enduring works of high art, and recent representations in popular culture. The entries represent portrayals that a reader has a reasonable chance of encountering rather than a complete catalogue.

Films

[edit]
An 1895 reproduction of the historic scene, produced by Edison Manufacturing Co.
Katharine Hepburn in John Ford's 1936 film adaption of Maxwell Anderson's play Mary of Scotland

In the 1936, 1971 and 2018 film biographies of Mary, fictional meetings between Queens Mary and Elizabeth take place.

Literature

[edit]

Fiction and drama

[edit]

This list is in chronological order.

Historical biography and analysis

[edit]

This list is in chronological order.

  • Maria Stuart (1936) by Stefan Zweig, ISBN 2-253-15079-7
  • Mary Queen of Scots (1969) by Antonia Fraser, ISBN 0-385-31129-X
  • Mary Queen of Scots: A Study in Failure (London, 1988) by Jenny Wormald, ISBN 0-540-01131-2
  • Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Murder of Lord Darnley (New York, 2003) by Alison Weir, ISBN 0-345-43658-X
  • The Kings & Queens of Scotland (Stroud, 2004) by Richard Oram, ISBN 0-7524-2971-X
  • "Mary Queen of Scots and the French Connection", History Today, 54, 7 (July 2004), pp. 37–43, by Alexander Wilkinson
  • Queen of Scots: The True Life of Mary Stuart (New York, 2004) by John Guy, ISBN 0-618-25411-0
  • "Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Babington conspiracy", by David Alan Johnson, Military Heritage, August 2005, no. 1, Volume 7, ISSN 1524-8666
  • Mary Queen of Scots and French Public Opinion, 1542–1600 (Palgrave, 2005) by Alexander Wilkinson, ISBN 1-4039-2039-7 (hdbk)
  • Elizabeth and Mary: Cousins, Rivals, Queens (Vintage, 2005) by Jane Dunn, ISBN 0-375-70820-0.
  • Mary Queen of Scots (2006) by Retha Warnicke, ISBN 0-415-29183-6
  • Queen of Scots: Truth or Lies (2011) by Rosalind K. Marshall, ISBN 1-873644-95-7

Photography and art books

[edit]

Poetry

[edit]
  • In Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky's 20 sonnets to Mary Stuart (in Russian) the poet addresses her as an interlocutor.
  • The Scottish poet Robert Burns wrote a poem Lament of Mary Queen of Scots, on the Approach of Spring upon Mary's feelings while in her captivity in England, towards her cousin Elizabeth I of England and foreboding of her approaching death.
  • The Spanish poet Lope de Vega wrote an epic poem upon Mary Stuart's life and death: Corona trágica (Tragic crown), published in 1628.
  • Shortly after Mary Stuart's execution in 1587, the English Jesuit poet Robert Southwell composed an emblem poem portraying Mary as a Catholic martyr.[4] The poem was never published in the early modern period; even owning a manuscript version of the poem was "inevitable flirtation with treason" in Elizabethan England.[5]
  • The 1596 edition of Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene includes an allegorical representation of the trial of Mary Stuart (Book 5, Canto ix, stanzas 36–50). Mary Stuart is represented by Duessa and Elizabeth is figured by Mercilla. The allegory dwells on Elizabeth's reluctance to condemn Mary. Elizabeth's delay of three months before agreeing to have Mary executed is represented by a gap of three stanzas at the end of Canto ix.[6] Mercilla's judgment and Duessa's execution do not actually occur until the beginning of the next Canto (x.1–4).

Music

[edit]
  • John Barry, composer of the soundtrack to the 1971 film, wrote two songs, "Wish Now Was Then" and "This Way Mary" with lyricist Don Black based on themes from the film. They were performed by Matt Monro, with the latter song covered by Scott Walker and Johnny Mathis amongst others.
  • The American progressive metal band Dream Theater uses a variation of the mark of Mary, Queen of Scots, as their trademark "Majesty" symbol.
  • The song "Fotheringay" by Fairport Convention (with lyrics by Sandy Denny) featured on the 1969 album What We Did on Our Holidays and is an interpretation of the story of Mary's last days in the prison of Fotheringhay Castle. After leaving Fairport Convention, Denny formed a folk rock band named Fotheringay, which released an eponymous debut album Fotheringay in 1970, the cover of which depicted an illustration of the band, including Sandy Denny dressed in Elizabethan costume.
  • The song "The Ballad of Mary (Queen of Scots)" by Grave Digger is about her time in prison.
  • The song "My Blood Will Live Forever" by Grave Digger is about her time before the execution.
  • Data Regina (2017), a multimedia suite by composer Olivia Louvel, featuring violinist Fiona Brice and mastered by Antye Greie, digs deep into the psychic warfare between two 16th century British Queens. Drawn to the life and writings of Mary Queen of Scots, a poet and essayist herself and one of the most read woman of her time, Data Regina is a body of work which gathers electronic songs, "The Antechamber", along with a series of instrumentals, "The Battles", a sonic landscape inspired by the 16th century battles on the Anglo-Scottish border.[7][8]
  • The song "To France" by Mike Oldfield, featured in the 1984 album Discovery, references Mary in its chorus.
  • The song "Sad Song" by Lou Reed, featured in the 1973 album Berlin, references Mary in its initial verses. The song was also recorded as a demo by Reed's band The Velvet Underground with different lyrics (this version appears on the box set Peel Slowly and See and the "Fully Loaded Edition" of Loaded, but the Velvets' version still references Mary.
  • Robert Schumann composed a song cycle "Gedichte der Königin Maria Stuart" (Op. 135) based on five poems from the collection "Rose und Distel" by Gisbert Vincke (1852). This cycle was among the final works that Schumann composed before he went insane.
  • Richard Wagner composed a song "Adieux de Marie Stuart" (WWV 61, 1840) based on a poem by Pierre Jean Béranger.[citation needed]

Oper

[edit]
Mary Queen of Scotts (c. 1578), by Nicholas Hilliard, depicts Queen Mary in captivity. She was a regular topic of 19th century European opera.

The subject of Mary, Queen of Scots was a common one in 19th century opera. Usually, the operas dealt with the period of her life when she was being persecuted by Elizabeth I of England. Mary was considered a sympathetic character in southern Europe due to her Catholicism.

Mary's story proved popular among liberals and revolutionaries in 19th-century Italy. These were especially attracted by the various plots made to save her as well as her death as a political martyr, both of which they interpreted as comparable to their own struggle. The Carbonari took their name from a mythical ring of English coal-burners, supposedly dedicated to Mary's cause. For this reason, the subject of Mary Stuart came to be seen as a concern of radicals, and operas about her were banned on several occasions.[9]

Nineteenth-century operas about Mary include:

Twentieth-century operas about Mary include:

Radio

[edit]

Television

[edit]
  • In the Channel 4 television miniseries, Elizabeth I (2005), the first two-hour segment partly centres around the conflict between Elizabeth and Mary (portrayed by Barbara Flynn), whose execution is graphically shown in a manner that is reportedly true to history.
  • In the Channel 5 television docudrama series Elizabeth I (2017), Mary is portrayed by Audrey L'Ebrellec.
  • The BBC-TV mini-series Elizabeth R (1971), episode 4: "Horrible Conspiracies", written by Hugh Whitemore, is a generally historically accurate portrayal of Mary (played by Vivian Pickles) during her captivity in England, from her imprisonment at Chartley under the guardianship of Sir Amyas Paulet through to her trial and execution, using many of Mary's own reported words as dialogue. It includes an accurate portrayal of her execution including her use of a red petticoat (red being the colour of martyrdom in the Catholic religion), her positioning of her head with her hands on the block, and the two blows and sawing motion it took to remove her head. It also shows the executioner unwittingly grasping and pulling away her wig to reveal her grey hair.
  • The BBC television miniseries Gunpowder, Treason & Plot (2004) dramatizes the reigns of Scottish monarchs Mary, Queen of Scots (played by French actress Clémence Poésy) and her son King James VI of Scotland, who became King James I of England and foiled the Gunpowder Plot.
  • In the CBBC sketch show Horrible Histories (2009–2015), Mary is portrayed by Martha Howe-Douglas and Jessica Ransom.
  • An episode of the British series Lovejoy ("The Colour of Mary", series 4) finds the main character seeking information and the whereabouts of Mary's pool table.
  • Monty Python's Flying Circus episode 22 (1970) features a skit involving the first two episodes of "a new radio drama series: The Death of Mary Queen of Scots".
  • Lesley Smith, the curator of Tutbury Castle, portrayed Mary Queen of Scots for Living's Most Haunted in 2002 for a dramatic monologue of her time imprisoned there. Smith continues these re-enactments in the castle.
  • Reign (2013 TV series) is a highly fictionalized period drama television show on The CW Television Network that follows the life of 15-year-old Mary, Queen of Scots, at French court beginning in 1557, while she awaits her marriage to Francis II of France. At court, Mary has to contend with the changing politics and power plays. Francis' mother, Queen Catherine de' Medici, is secretly trying to prevent the marriage due to the advice of Nostradamus, who had a vision that the wedding will lead to Francis' death. The series also follows the affairs of Mary's four Scottish handmaidens Lola, Kenna, Greer and Aylee (based on the queen's Scottish ladies-in-waiting, the four Maries - Mary Beaton, Mary Fleming, Mary Livingston, and Mary Seton), who are searching for husbands of their own at court. Mary is portrayed by Australian actress Adelaide Kane.[19] The series began airing on 13 October 2013.
  • Grace McCabe portrays Mary in The Last Days of Mary, Queen of Scots, the first episode of 2015 BBC history series The Last Days of...
  • Beth Cooke portrays Mary in 2016 BBC documentary Bloody Queens: Elizabeth and Mary
  • Olivia Chenery in 2017 Spanish and British miniseries Queens: The Virgin and the Martyr
  • Antonia Clarke portrays Mary in 2022 Starz television series The Serpent Queen, which focuses on Catherine de Medici (portrayed by Samantha Morton, who previously portrayed Mary, Queen of Scots, in Elizabeth: The Golden Age), the mother of Mary's first husband Francis II of France
  • A 1957 episode of the Wonderful World of Disney titled, "The Truth About Mother Goose", discussed the origins of three nursery rhymes. Series host Walt Disney attributed the Mary Mary Quite Contrary rhyme to the life of Mary Stuart. This episode featured a brief animated short about Mary's life, done in the artistic style of Sleeping Beauty. The short touched on important moments in Mary's life, even ending with a scene of Mary being marched to her beheading.
  • In an episode of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, Mary is referenced when two fictional knights were said to have served her and turned themselves in to Elizabeth I in exchange for Mary's life, only to learn moments before their deaths that Mary had already been executed.
  • Drag queen Rosé impersonated Mary Queen of Scots for the Snatch Game episode of RuPaul's Drag Race Season 13, where she received high praise for her impersonation and improvisational comedy.

Theatre

[edit]

18th and 19th centuries

[edit]

Mary, Queen of Scots, captured the imagination of Italian radicals and their fellow travellers as a political symbol. The restless interest in this tormented figure resulted in multiple 18th and 19th century plays, such as:

20th and 21st centuries

[edit]
Clare Eames in the Broadway production of John Drinkwater's Mary Stuart (1921)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Aitken, William Russell (1982). Scottish Literature in English and Scots: A Guide to Information Sources. Gale Research Co. p. 146. ISBN 9780810312494.
  2. ^ Colin Younger, Border Crossings: Narration, Nation and Imagination in Scots and Irish Literature and Culture. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018. ISBN 9781443854115 (pgs. 119-120)
  3. ^ Joseph Wiesenfarth, History and Representation in Ford Madox Ford's Writings Amsterdam Rodopi, 2004 ISBN 9789042016132 (p.112).
  4. ^ Southwell, Saint Robert (4 October 1872). "The Complete Poems of Robert Southwell: For the First Time Fully Collected and Collated with the Original and Early Editions and Mss. ..." private circulation – via Google Books.
  5. ^ St. Robert Southwell: Collected Poems. Ed. Peter Davidson and Anne Sweeney. Carcanet Press: Manchester U.K., 2007
  6. ^ The Faerie Queene. Ed. A.C. Hamilton. Harlow, UK: Longman, 2001, p. 577 n.
  7. ^ "Data Regina by Olivia Louvel". www.dataregina.com.
  8. ^ "The Quietus | Features | Escape Velocity | Multiple Media: Olivia Louvel On Music, Art & 17th Century History". The Quietus.
  9. ^ Weatherson, Alexander. "Queen of dissent: Mary Stuart and the opera in her honour by Carlo Coccia". donzinetticociety.com.
  10. ^ "Lux Radio Theatre Log". www.audio-classics.com.
  11. ^ "The Definitive The Theatre Guild On The Air Radio Log". www.digitaldeliftp.com. Archived from the original on 2 December 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  12. ^ "The Definitive Favorite Story Radio Log with Ronald Colman". www.digitaldeliftp.com. Archived from the original on 12 October 2017. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  13. ^ "The Definitive CBS Is There and You Are There Radio Articles and Logs with John Daly and Ken Roberts". www.digitaldeliftp.com. Archived from the original on 11 October 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  14. ^ "BBC Radio 3 - Drama on 3, La princesse de Cleves". BBC.
  15. ^ "BBC Radio 3 - Drama on 3, Mary Stuart". BBC.
  16. ^ "Sunday Play: Mary Queen of Scots Got Her Head Chopped Off". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. 11 February 2001.
  17. ^ "BBC Radio 4 - The Stuarts, It Came In with a Lass". BBC.
  18. ^ "BBC Radio 4 - Drama, Unmade Movies, Alexander MacKendrick's Mary Queen of Scots". BBC.
  19. ^ "Australian Actress Secures Her Reign". Sun Times.
  20. ^ a b Weatherson, Professor Alexander (2001). Mary Stuart and the opera in her honour by Carlo Coccia.
  21. ^ a b "Mary Stuart – Broadway Play – 2009 Revival | IBDB".