Before he suddenly passed away, John W. Robinson was working on a
manuscript that he saw as effecting a marriage between the dramatic and
the theatrical, as he felt there was too large a divide between literary
scholars and practitioners of the theater. In it, Robinson stated that
his purpose it to expound as plays the New Testament plays of the
Wakefield Master and some of the related York plays, including two by
the York Realist. . . . hop[ing] to show that the meaning and effect
of the Wakefield Master's and York Realist's plays will not appear
unless they are approached with the understanding that they were
performed, with some idea of how they were performed, and with some
appreciation of what they meant to a medieval audience. That manuscript
is presented here, a close study of eight plays and the elements
Robinson considers essential to performance: playwright, sponsors,
location, plot, script, players, and audience.