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The Woman's Prize: Or the Tamer Tamed

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The Tamer Tamed is the subtitle or alternative title to John Fletcher's The Woman's Prize, a comedic sequel and reply to The Taming of the Shrew.



The plot switches the gender roles of Shakespeare's play: the women seek to tame the men. Katherine (the shrew of the original) has died, and Petruchio takes a second wife, Maria. Maria denounces her former mildness and vows not to sleep with Petruchio until she turn him and bend him as [she] list, and mold him into a babe again. After many comedic exchanges and plot twists, Petruchio is finally tamed in the eyes of Maria, and the play ends with the two reconciled. The play is seen to reflect how society's views of women, femininity, and domestic propriety were beginning to change. It is said that Fletcher wrote this play to attract Shakespeare's attention - the two went on to collaborate on at least three plays together.

This brand new New Mermaid edition offers unique and fresh insight into the critical interpretation of the play. It builds on current critical foundations (the relationship with Taming of the Shrew, gender relations etc) and suggests different areas of interest (popular associations of the shrew, the question of reputation, and a re-examination of the play's structure). as well as examining stage history and recent productions.

108 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1647

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About the author

John Fletcher

864 books20 followers
born December 1579
died August 1625

English playwright John Fletcher collaborated with Francis Beaumont on romantic comedies, including Philaster (1610) and The Maid's Tragedy (1611).

John Fletcher identified as a Jacobean. He followed William Shakespeare as house for the men of the king among the most prolific and influential dramatists of his day; during his lifetime and in the early Restoration, his fame rivaled that of his predecessor.

In 1606, he began to appear as an author for the Children of the Queen's Revels, then performing at the Blackfriars theater. Commendatory verses by Richard Brome in the Fletcher 1647 folio place Fletcher in the company of Ben Jonson; a comment of Jonson's to Drummond corroborates this claim, although it is not known when this friendship began. At the beginning of his career, his most important association. The two together for close to a decade, first for the children and then for the King's Men. According to a legend transmitted or invented by John Aubrey, they also lived together (in Bankside), sharing clothes and having "one wench in the house between them." This domestic arrangement, if it existed, was ended by marriage in 1613, and their dramatic partnership ended after fell ill, probably of a stroke, the same year.

Though Fletcher's reputation has been eclipsed since, he remains an important transitional figure between the Elizabethan popular tradition and the popular drama of the Restoration.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 41 reviews
Profile Image for jules.
250 reviews2 followers
January 29, 2024
it's a very low bar to be better than the taming of the shrew, and fletcher solidly clears it in terms of gender politics, but we're still in middling-comedy-with-a-very-questionable-ending territory. his portrayal of petruchio is VERY disturbing in a way that i think works quite well but then it doesn't pay off very well. maria i'm glad you got the win but this guy is a violent domestic abuser, maybe just run. also, why are we in england now?
Profile Image for Veru.
67 reviews2 followers
January 25, 2020
Some very questionable parts aside, I have to say that I actually quite enjoyed this play. I am still appalled at some of the things being proposed/said by the men of the play, especially in regards to violence and, on multiple occasions, also rape. The scenes in which the women revolt against their husbands, however, were absolutely brilliant. When they talk about how one day women will wear breeches, I could not help but feel like they play was written by someone from our time who simply decided to locate it in early modern England, as it seemed like such a reference to our modern times.

I have to admit that the end irritated me a little bit, seeing that I could not understand why Maria and Petruchio decided to cast their differences aside and what had triggered it and I was disappointed by Maria saying that she will be his “servant”. I would have loved to see an ending in which the woman does not submit to this role, but in which both partners are truly equal, but I think that would simply have been too progressive and more or less never happened apart from some exceptions (Benedick and Beatrice, I am looking at you guys).

Scratch that. The perfect ending would have been Petruchio truly being dead. Anyone agrees? I hate him from the very bottom of my heart with all I have.

To let my inner literature student come out: I found the theme of warfare quite interesting and loved the fact that the women were often stylised as warriors and particularly likened to the Trojans (though they, of course, lost the battle). The play also pointed out the double standards, with Maria being harshly criticised and threatened with death for merely having refused to have sex with her husband, whereas Petruchio abused Kate and threatens to abuse Maria and is somehow still not treated as badly, but, in fact, lauded by most. The topic of female agency was also quite strong in this play with both Maria and her sister Livia using tricks to reach their goals, which I quite loved, though I do feel like the goal being (a peaceful) marriage did take away from that a little.

Either way, I can recommend to read this book and it was definitely a more satisfying and less frustrating read than Taming of the Shrew.
Profile Image for Eliza.
255 reviews49 followers
October 17, 2017
I LOVED THIS! 'how got she tongue?'
amazing, will endeavour to read more fletcher now
Profile Image for Matthew.
94 reviews19 followers
April 24, 2012
The sequel and antithesis to "The Taming of the Shrew," written in 1611 by John Fletcher, who would go on to collaborate with Shakespeare on three plays. What could be better than a contemporaneous play that rights the wrongs of "Shrew," to me Shakespeare's most distasteful work (and, yes, I know the savage "Titus Andronicus," the miserific "Timon of Athens," and the problem plays with their bed-tricks), one which I've read and seen as many times as any other piece of theatre, trying with all my might to like it, but always walking away with my stomach churning. I'm only a couple scenes in, so I can't be sure about this play yet, but here's an encouraging early line from Petruchio's second wife, Maria:

By the faith I have
In mine own noble will, that childish woman
That lives a prisoner to her husband's pleasure
Has lost her making, and becomes a beast,
Created for his use, not fellowship.
Profile Image for Rae Thompson.
40 reviews1 follower
December 16, 2022
Reread for my term paper. I love the women in this play, it’s just constant fuck yous to the patriarchy <3
188 reviews3 followers
June 10, 2019
This play can be seen as a response to Shakespeare's 'The Taming of the Shrew.' It is not a direct sequel but some of the character names are the same and it can be seen to address some of the consequences of what occurred in Shakespeare's play. As in the Shrew, Petruchio is a man who had married and tamed a shrew. That shrew is not named but can be regarded as equivalent toe Shakespeare’s Katharine. Petruchio is a widower with her death. At the play’s beginning he has just married Maria, the daughter of Petronius, and has yet to consummate the marriage. Maria, knowing Petruchio’s reputation as a shrew tamer, has refused to let him consummate the marriage unless he agrees to desist from that and to treat her differently. She sees marriage as a union of two people and as such she sees herself as equal to her husband and taming or deprecating her would be equivalent to taming himself. She locks herself up with some friends in this house and refuses to come out until he agrees. This leads to a widespread rebellion of the women of the town who join her in the house for a wild party that surprises the men of the town with its immodesty contrary to their perception of placid obedient women.

I found it difficult to read this play in contrast to that of Shakespeare. The language and the cultural references of the early 17th century play were very obscure to me. This may be the result of the effect that Shakespeare’s play ahs had on our culture. His language and his imagery have been passed down the generations and are not an intrinsic part of our culture while Fletcher has been forgotten outside of academic discourse. However, beneath the obscurity of the text, lies a very funny and very perceptive play. The play casts women not as entirely submissive beings with no minds of their own but to serve the needs of their fathers and their husbands as Katherine’s last speech in the Shrew indicated. It can be remembered that even in that play, a bet was made on the ability of a husband to order his wife to come into his presence. Only Petruchio won that bet with Katharine’s compliance. Both Bianca and the widow refused their husband’s order. Katharine’s speech was a remonstrance to those two women to give up their shrewish ways. They were still shrews at the end.

The power of this paly appears to me to be in the acceptance of what must have been the reality in Shakespeare’s day as it in in ours. The women of that day had minds of their own and refused any cultural imperative to marital submission. It is this knowing wink at the reality that is the humour of this play. Satire is funny when people see something deeply real about themselves. This play’s humor is a knowing wink at “The Taming of the Shrew’ and the cultural stereotypes contained within it. Shakespeare’s ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor’ contains women who ae independent enough too easily detect and deal with Falstaff’s attempted seductions. Falstaff asserted the ability to easily manipulate women, but they proved more than his equal in manipulation. The Tamer presents its women in the same light and as such its humour lies in its collaboration with the audience in seeing the falsity of the cultural belief otherwise.

This all being said; the obscurity of the language and the refences made this a very difficult pay for me to read. For Someone of this era, this is not a play that one would find entertaining on the stage. Its language is just too obscure. If someone carefully studies the text and considers the notes supplied, one can see that that this is an hilarious insightful play. However, it is just that. This is a text that has to be studied an historical artifact. It is not an entertainment.
Profile Image for Eleanor.
378 reviews46 followers
February 24, 2021
"Mistake me not, I have a new soul in me
Made of a north wind, nothing but tempest,
And like a tempest shall it make all ruins
Till I have run my will out."


4.5/5 stars.

WHY DID NO ONE TELL ME THIS PROTO-FEMINIST REVISION OF THE TAMING OF THE SHREW EXISTED UNTIL NOW?

Picture the following: After a contentious marriage to Petruchio in which she was actually never tamed, Katherine dies. Petruchio remarries a woman named Maria, determined to succeed this time in forging an obedient wife for himself. Maria, however, has other ideas, deciding to give Petruchio a taste of his own medicine. And at the end, it is not Maria, but Petruchio, who is tamed.

Twenty years after Shakespeare wrote The Taming of the Shrew, Fletcher penned this response, in which the tables are turned and the focus of the narrative is gender inequality, gender roles, and structural violence against women (in particular regarding the institution of marriage), all from what most scholars consider to be a proto-feminist perspective (and I would agree).

I loved so many things about this story. I loved the nonjudgmental, immediate solidarity between women of different classes all banding together to assert their rights. I loved the realistic portrayal of varying degrees of misogyny--it doesn't all look the same, but it's all harmful. I loved the brilliant, unrelenting Bianca, who I would come the closest to comparing to a modern feminist out of all the characters. And I underlined and tabbed so many passages, like the following:

"All the several wrongs
Done by imperious husbands to their wives
These thousand years and upward strengthen thee!"

- Bianca, I.ii.122-124

"And we appear like her that sent us hither,
That only excellent and beauteous Nature,
Truly ourselves, for men to wonder at,
But too divine to handle."

- Maria, I.iii.251-254

"Tell me of due obedience. What's a husband?
What are we married for? To carry sumpters?
Are we not one piece of you, and as worthy
Our own intentions as you yours?"

- Maria, III.ii.146-149

YOU KNOW WHAT, I ORIGINALLY GAVE THIS BOOK 4 STARS, BUT MY HEART IS TELLING ME TO ROUND UP TO FIVE AND I WILL BECAUSE I DO WHAT I WANT. But I'll still talk about the ending. There's a passage in the introduction to this edition in which the editor, Dr. Lucy Munro, summarizes my feelings on this quite well:

"Fletcher is sympathetic to the plight of women caught within patriarchal structures, but he is not a twenty-first century feminist, and it is unrealistic to expect him to be able to imagine an alternative to these structures [. . .] A temporary inversion of gender roles is possible, and may have beneficial long-term results, but it can only be temporary, and while marriage may have been a problematic institution, it was the only one available."

To me, this doesn't diminish the value of The Tamer Tamed as a powerful proto-feminist narrative. I don't think it undermines Fletcher's points about gender-based inequality and structural violence, and I would still highly, highly recommend this play.

Recommended to: Fans of classics; people interested in feminist theory; anyone who's ever liked Shakespeare, even once.
Profile Image for Liam Furlong.
112 reviews2 followers
February 3, 2025
John Fletcher (1579 – 1625): the man who saw The Taming of the Shrew and thought what we're thinking now. In his agitated "sequel" to Shakespeare's play, Fletcher inverts the perverted advice on how to keep your woman in line with a fiery progressivism that pushed his 1611 audience to gird their loins in more ways than one. The Tamer Tamed: right from its beginning, the nuance rings loud and clear.

So let's start with that beginning: Shakespeare's Petruccio, famed tamer of shrewish women, has taken a new bride after the death of his infamous Kate. This new bride, Maria, is wise to Petruccio's tricks, however. With the help of her cousin, she galvanizes the women of the town to barricade themselves inside the mansion and lay siege against the belligerent menfolk from above. Of course this is an early 17th-century comedy, so what transpires includes: absurdist warfare, a chamberpotful of innuendos, two faked deaths, one secret engagement, and a wedding at the end to tie the whole thing up with a bow.

While I wish the character of Maria didn't crumble under comedic conventions by making up with Petruccio, I'm still grateful to see Fletcher stir the pot in the ways that he does. His monologues fortify his women with staggering momentum until we too want to join Bianca's charge into the fray, or we too are begging Maria to blow even more of Petruccio's money just for spite.

The prowess of Fletcher's monologues doesn't end here, though, because while the feminist sympathies are many, he still decides to write Petruccio as an arguably sympathetic character. For although we snicker and cheer when Maria raises the stakes, we wince --even a little bit-- at Petruccio's words as he's staked alive. Once again: the nuance clearly, cleanly peals.

Just like Shakespeare's shows, players have interpreted Fletcher's The Tamer Tamed in myriad ways that aren't just aesthetically interesting and fun but are also thematically innovative. Inflection, just as much as the writing, matters a lot to this play. It's the chief metric for seeing how thoroughly tamed the tamer is, after all, how vindicated Maria in her taming. Just read Act 5, and I'm sure you'll see what I mean.

Performing and even reading The Tamer Tamed offers a world of creative liberties that I don't think one can ever exhaust. That's where both the relevance and the joy of plays like Fletcher's come from. If you liked The Taming of the Shrew, you'll like this play. If you hated The Taming of the Shrew, you'll really like this play. I'd bet money on it, but given that such a bet would get you to read it, I'd win either way --might as well start calling me Rowland.

Didn't get that reference? Read The Tamer Tamed and find out!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
595 reviews12 followers
February 3, 2018
John Fletcher's "The Woman's Prize; or, The Tamer Tam'd" is a sequel to Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew." It took me an embarrassingly long time to figure out that it not only reversed the scenario of the original play, but actually used some of the same characters! Fletcher's plot has Petruchio, who tamed the "shrew" Katherine in Shakespeare, remarry a younger woman, Maria. But when he tries to consummate the marriage, Maria turns the tables on him, barricading herself in her room until he himself is tamed!

This was the twelfth and final play covered in the lecture series I have been following on Elizabethan and Jacobean theater beyond Shakespeare. In the accompanying lecture I learned that Fletcher was a younger playwright in the same theater company as Shakespeare. They actually collaborated on a few plays at the end of Shakespeare's career, including Henry VIII, which may explain why that play seemed so atypical to me. Shockingly to our modern sensibilities, Fletcher's work stayed in the theater company's repertoire long after Shakespeare's!

"The Woman's Prize/Tamer Tam'd" is an enjoyable read. It has some hilarious scenes, including ones where the women join forces in military style to fend off the men. For other readers, I recommend that you read it directly in conjunction with Shakespeare's play. In many ways it can serve as a corrective to the misogyny inherent in the original. Plus you will enjoy the overlap of the characters in the two plays from the outset, rather than midway through as I did.
Profile Image for Ilia.
338 reviews3 followers
September 24, 2024
A rare case where the sequel improves on the original, showing that The Taming of the Shrew’s dodgy sexual politics were questioned even in Shakespeare’s day. Fletcher turns the tables on the flamboyant “wife-breaker” by having the women in the play group together to go on strike and demand conditions for better treatment. There’s a bit of balancing there, as some of the demands seem then as now quite frivolous – Maria making free with her husband’s wealth in a way that doesn’t quite square with the responsible management of the household. But arguably this is just another ploy to “break” Petruchio’s will. Once achieved, Maria promises mutuality and obedience, although as the play’s beginning suggests, these promises at a play’s end don’t always last a marriage.
392 reviews8 followers
February 18, 2020
This was better than Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, to which it is a sequel, in some ways and inferior in other ways.
The characters are more cartoonish, in a good way, which is good comedy. On the other hand, the lines aren't as good as Shakespeare's, and the characterization is a bit weaker, too. So all in all, I'd say this play is pretty decent, but no more than that, despite its feminist bent.

Or to put it in verse:
It's always gonna be quite hard
to try to outperform the Bard.
Profile Image for Nut Meg.
123 reviews31 followers
June 19, 2025
A fun play, full of innuendo and the same kind of tricks and twists that might be expected in a Shakespeare work, which is more than fitting given it's a sequel and proto-feminist commentary on The Taming of the Shrew. The language isn't as beautiful as the Bard's but it has a similar sense of humor. Revels Student Edition is particularly good, including a lengthy introduction with valuable historical context. While not essential reading, this is an excellent addition to any Shakespeare fans library.
Profile Image for Tom.
421 reviews4 followers
October 31, 2022
Why this play isn't performed more often is the only surprise here: it's filthy, funny, farcical and feminist (the four Fs).

Now, if you want a fascinating response to this AND Shakespeare's much older The Taming of the Shrew, read the chapter in Emma Smith's This Is Shakespeare, but really: read this play, and (if you're a theatre company) put it on: I'll come.
Profile Image for Serafina  Pevensie .
127 reviews
March 10, 2023
Where was this play when 12 year old feminist me was disappointed by the bards wifetaming story? I liked how the uncompromising female voice was vindicative but not odious and that it wasn't so much manshaming as reaching equality. Pleasure wasn't sacrificed and neither was amusement. Shakespeare could never.

🥇📖
Profile Image for Russio.
1,188 reviews
August 5, 2020
Flip of the Taming of the Shrew - very funny and a strong feminist tract. The first three acts go by in a whirl while the last two bring home the message, although lack the verve of what has come before to some extent.
Profile Image for Georgia.
26 reviews3 followers
September 11, 2024
An unauthorised sequel that surpasses the original, though the bar was not very high. I really enjoyed this play, but it is a bit shit and I am self aware enough to recognise that. Do I think Pertrucio is a great guy? No. Do I love to hate him? Absolutely.
Profile Image for Cate Oken.
58 reviews
July 26, 2025
Absolutely INSANE that a Taming of the Shrew sequel actually exists. I like the premise, and I like that the female characters play a larger role than in most Early Modern English plays. However, I'm not a huge fan of the dialogue, and I'm unsure what to make of the ending. 3 stars
Profile Image for G.
545 reviews15 followers
August 6, 2021
Not exactly Shakespeare, but a contemporary-John Fletcher. A sequel, supposedly, to The Taming of the Shrew. Entertaining if nothing more.
Profile Image for tessa.
166 reviews
June 28, 2022
i was not expecting so many sexual innuendos. it peaked in the first act though
Profile Image for Tate Fonda.
22 reviews2 followers
February 15, 2024
Perhaps a more comfortable story than the original (The Taming of the Shrew), but not as structurally refined as Shakespeare. Longer than necessary.
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