Tuesday 30 June 2020

30 June, 1596 - The Second Part of Tamar Cam

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: ye 27 of June 1596 ... R at  2 pte of tambercame ... xxs

In modern English: [30th] June, 1596 .... Received at Second Part of Tamar Cam .. 20 shillings
Today, the Admiral's Men performed The Second Part of Tamar Cam, a lost play that dramatized the exploits of the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan;  you can read more about it in the entry for 28th April 1592.

From a 15th century French edition of Marco Polo:
Hulagu (on the left) orders 
the imprisonment of the
Caliph of Baghdad 
in his own treasure-vault to starve.
This is a disappointing day for the company. While The First Part of Tamar Cam is still receiving solid box office, the newly-introduced sequel is slumping. Londoners seem to be enjoying Tamar Cam's early adventures, but are less interested to know what happens next.



Henslowe links



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Monday 29 June 2020

29 June, 1596 - The First Part of Tamar Cam

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: ye 26 of June 1596 ... R at  1 pte of tambercame ... xxxs

In modern English: [29th] June, 1596 ... Received at First Part of Tamar Cam ... 30 shillings
Today is St Peter's Day, a special day in the church calendar. The Admiral's Men have revived Tamar Cam, a lost play that told of war and wizardry during the exploits of the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan; you can read more about it in the entry for 28th April 1592.

The company has returned to Tamar Cam after a week and a half, and the box office continues to be solid, suggesting that the company's adding of the sequel to their repertory is maintaining interest in Part One.

Persian illustration of Hulagu Khan (the likely inspiration for Tamar Cam) and his Christian wife


Henslowe links



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Sunday 28 June 2020

28 June, 1596 - The Blind Beggar of Alexandria

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 25 of June 1596 ... R at the beager ... xixs

In modern English: [28th] June, 1596 ... Received at The Beggar ... 19 shillings

Beggars in Alexandria; an undated photograph
from Brooklyn Museum's Lantern Slide Collection
Today is St Peter's Eve, a time for evening bonfires echoing Midsummer's Eve. The Admiral's Men have revived The Blind Beggar of Alexandria, a comedy by George Chapman about a master of disguise. You can read more about this play in the entry for 12 February.

Despite its popularity, the company has opted to rest The Blind Beggar for three and a half weeks. But the result is not an even bigger audience than usual, but rather a slump. The company must be disappointed.

Henslowe links



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Friday 26 June 2020

26 June, 1596 - Crack Me This Nut

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 23 of June 1596 ...  R at cracke me this nvtt ... xijs

In modern English: [26th] June, 1596 ...  Received at Crack Me This Nut ... 12 shillings

Dessert Still Life by Georg Flegel (1566-1638)
Today, for the last time, the Admiral's Men returned to Crack Me This Nut. We know nothing about the content of this lost play, but you can read more about it in the entry for 5th September, 1595.

This is the final recorded performance of Crack Me This Nut in Henslowe's records of performance. The play premiered 10 months ago, in September, 1595, and has appeared onstage 16 times. It has never been one of the company's biggest hits, but neither has it been notably unpopular. At this point, however, with a fairly sparse audience after a much bigger one a fortnight ago, the company seems to have decided to call it a day.

This isn't the end for Crack Me This Nut, however. Five years from now, in 1601, Henslowe will record paying a tailor for buckram (a kind of stiff cloth) to make a new costume for the play, so the company must have been planning a revival. Those nuts still needed cracking!


What's next?


There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 27th June was a Sunday in 1596 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 28th June for a week that will include a new play. See you then!



Henslowe links



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Thursday 25 June 2020

25 June, 1596 - Troy

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 22 of June 1596 ... ne ... R at troye ... iijll ixs 

In modern English: [25th] June, 1596 ... New ... Received at Troy ... £3 and 9 shillings


Today, the Admiral's Men premiered a new play! Troy is lost, as is so often the case,  but its title tells us that its subject was the Trojan War and other clues in the historical record hint at more specific details. Let's investigate what the audience might have seen on stage today...

The tales of Troy


It is hard to know what a play called Troy might have included, as the Trojan War is a huge and complex set of legends comprising countless tales, There is the judgement of Paris, in which the Trojan prince wins Helen of Troy as a reward for selecting Aphrodite in a divine beauty competition. There is Paris's abduction or seduction of Helen, and his taking of her back to Troy. There is Menelaus's persuading of the Greek kings to unite and take Helen back.

Achilles drags the body of Hector around
the walls of Troy; from Biagio
d'Antonio's The Death of Hector (1490s)
There is the becalming of the Greek fleet at Aulis and Agamemnon's sacrifice of his own daughter in return for a wind. There are the ten years of battle around the beseiged Troy, with contests between the noble Trojan Hector and the almost indestructible Achilles. Ultimately, there is the death of Hector at the hands of Achilles, and, later, Achilles' own death, struck by an arrow fired by Paris. 

There is the climax of the war, in which the Greeks pretend to go home, but leave a giant wooden horse, supposedly an offering to be brought by the joyful Trojans into the their city but in fact stuffed with Greek soldiers who creep out at night and begin the sacking of Troy.

And then there are all the tales of the aftermath, such as Agamemnon's death at the hands of his wife on his return, her death at the hands of her son Orestes, and also of the adventures of Odysseus during his ten-year journey home, as recounted in the Odyssey.

Aeneas's Flight from Troy
by Federico Barocci (1598)
And those are only the original Greek stories. Also popular in English culture was the medieval tale of Troilus and Cressida, about lovers divided by the war. And so too were the legends about the Trojan refugees: Aeneas, whom the Romans believed to be their ancestor, and Brutus, whom the Britons believed to be the founder of London.

We cannot know how much of this material appeared in the play of Troy, but there are hints in the historical evidence.


The play


Detail from The Siege of Troy
by Biagio d'Antonio (1490s)
In 1598, Henslowe listed the props at the Rose playhouse, which contained "one great horse with his legs". Could this be the wooden horse?  If, so, it must surely have been made for Troy.

In 1612, the actor-playwright Thomas Heywood (who would later write his own two-part play about Troy called The Iron Age) wrote An Apology for Actors, a rebuttal of anti-theatrical campaigners. In it, he celebrates the power of the actor to "move the spirits of the beholder to admiration" and offers various examples of heroic stage characters to illustrate his point. We have already encountered Heywood's recollection of the two Hercules plays at the Rose, but in another of his examples, he describes how powerful it is 

to see a soldier shaped like a soldier; walk, speak, act like a soldier; to see a Hector, all besmeared with blood, trampling on the bulks of kings; a Troilus returning from the field in the sight of his father Priam, as if man and horse even from the steed's rough fetlocks to the plume on the champion's helmet had been together plunged in a purple ocean.
If Heywood is recalling an actual stage scene here, he must have seen two Trojan heroes soaked in blood from the battlefield: Hector, trampling on the bodies of the Greek kings that he has defeated, and Troilus returning to his father the king. Perhaps that play was Troy; certainly, no such scenes exist in any surviving Renaissance play about Troy. On the other hand, Troilus wouldn't be riding a horse onstage, so this description isn't fully convincing as an accurate memory. And other lost plays are possible, as we'll see.

A fight between Hector and Ajax, from 
the title page of Thomas Heywood's
The Iron Age (c.1613)
The other fragments of evidence consist of references in Henslowe's Diary to several other lost plays about Troy, all of which were written in 1599 by Thomas Dekker and Henry Chettle. The first is an adaptation of Troilus and Cressida (it may have inspired Shakespeare`s own version, written a few years later). The second is Troy's Revenge, with the Tragedy of Polyphemus, which must have told the tale of Odysseus' voyage home, including his battle with the eponymous Cyclops; the title implies that the hero's toils were represented as divine revenge for his role in Troy's fall. Finally, Agamemnon, which appears to have been originally called Orestes' Furies, must have told the tale of Agamemnon's return and of the cycle of revenge that befell his family.


The sacking of Troy, from the title
page of Thomas Heywood's The
Second Part of the Iron Age 
(c.1613)
All of this suggests that the Admiral's Men were creating a gigantic multi-play narrative of the Trojan War and its aftermath. In his catalogue of British drama, Martin Wiggins proposes that Troy might have been included among them, and might have included the sacking of the city and the wooden horse, since no other play among the cycle appears to have dramatized that important material.

Troy would certainly have fitted well with the repertory of the Rose, because plays about sieges were always popular there, such as Jerusalem and The Siege of London. But whatever the exact subject matter of Troy, today's premiere was a great success, with a full house.


FURTHER READING


Troy information

  • Martin Wiggins, British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue, vol. 3 (Oxford University Press, 2013), entry 1037. 


Henslowe links



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Wednesday 24 June 2020

24 June, 1596 - Phocas

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 22 of June 1596 ... R at focas ... ls

In modern English: [24th] June, 1596 ... Received at Phocas ... 50 shillings

Phocas depicted in Richard
Rainoldes' Chronicle of all the
Noble Emperors of the Romans (1571)
Today was Midsummer's Day, a public holiday and a time for late-night bonfires and festivity! On this special day, the Admiral's Men returned to Phocas, their tragedy about an army officer who became Byzantine emperor and ruled as a tyrant. You can read more about this play in the entry for 20 May.

After a disappointing performance last week, Phocas is today getting a tremendous boost from the festive atmosphere of Midsummer's Day; a very large crowd has shown up to see this Roman tragedy.


Henslowe links



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Tuesday 23 June 2020

23 June, 1596 - The Jew of Malta

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 21 of June 1596 ... R at the Jew of malta ... xiij 

In modern English: [23rd] June, 1596 ... Received at The Jew of Malta ... 13 shillings

Caravaggio's portrait of the Grand
Master of the Knights of Malta,
1607-8.
Today is a sad day! This is the very last appearance in Henslowe's box office records of The Jew of Malta, Christopher Marlowe's satirical comic tragedy. You can read more about this play in the blog entry for 26th February 1592.

This is the 36th performance of The Jew of Malta recorded in the Diary, making it the most frequently-staged play. We first saw it back in February, 1592, when it was already an old play. During the first year of performances recorded by Henslowe, it almost always achieved box office well above the average and was thus the most consistently popular play.

Over the following years, audiences have gradually shrunk and The Jew of Malta no longer seems to excite London's theatregoers. The company seems to have decided that they will not be able to recapture that magic without a very long hiatus.

This is not the end of The Jew of Malta, however. The play will remain in the repertory of the Admiral's Men, and in 1601 Henslowe will record them buying properties for a revival at their new theatre, the Fortune. As late as the 1630s, the play will be performed to King Charles I at Whitehall. And it is still being revived even today.



Henslowe links



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Monday 22 June 2020

22 June, 1596 - The Second Part of Tamar Cam

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: ye 20 of June 1596 ... R at  the 2 pte of tambercame ... xxxvs

In modern English: [22nd] June, 1596 ... Received at The Second Part of Tamar Cam .. 35 shillings
Today, the Admiral's Men performed The Second Part of Tamar Cam, a lost play that dramatized the exploits of the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan;  you can read more about it in the entry for 28th April 1592.

From a 15th century French edition of Marco Polo:
Hulagu (on the left) orders the
imprisonment of the Caliph of Baghdad in his own
treasure-vault to starve.
This is the second performance of Tamar Cam 2 in its new life as a play for the Admiral's Men, and it has received a comfortably large audience, just over the average for the Rose, and very similar to that of The First Part yesterday.  Londoners seem pleased to be able to see the pair on two consecutive days.



Henslowe links



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Sunday 21 June 2020

21 June, 1596 - The First Part of Tamar Cam

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: ye 19 of June 1596 ... mr pd ... R at  1 pte of tambercame ... xxxvjs

In modern English: [21st] June, 1596 ... Master paid ... Received at First Part of Tamar Cam ... 36 shillings
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Tamar Cam, a lost play that told of war and wizardry during the exploits of the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan; you can read more about it in the entry for 28th April 1592.

The company has returned to Tamar Cam after a week and a half, and the box office is considerably higher. This may well be because of the successful premiere of the sequel last week, which could have revived interest in Part One.

Persian illustration of Hulagu Khan (the likely inspiration for Tamar Cam) and his Christian wife

Today's entry also includes a note that Henslowe paid the license for the Rose to the Master of the Revels; you can read more about this in the entry for 8 November, 1595.


Henslowe links



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Wednesday 17 June 2020

17 June, 1596 - Harry V

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 17 of June 1596 ... R at hary the v ... xxvijs 

In modern English: 17th June, 1596 ... Received at Harry V ... 27 shillings

King Henry V, posthumous portrait
(late 16th or early 17th century)
Today, the Admiral's Men performed Harry V, their play about King Henry V of England, who, according to legend, gave up a dissolute lifestyle and led his country to victory against the French at the Battle of Agincourt before his untimely death. You can read more about this play in the entry for 28 November.

The company has revived Harry V after two and a half weeks, and its box office continues to rise, rather than fall, which is an unusual thing to see in Henslowe's Diary.


What's next?


There will be no blog entry for the next few days. Henslowe's Diary becomes muddled at this point, but the simplest explanation is that the players did not perform on Friday or Saturday this week, for unknown reasons. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 21st - see you then!


Henslowe links



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Tuesday 16 June 2020

16 June, 1596 - Phocas

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 16 of June 1596 ... R at ffocasse ... xxs

In modern English: 16th June, 1596 ... Received at Phocas ... 20 shillings

Phocas depicted in Richard
Rainoldes' Chronicle of all the
Noble Emperors of the Romans (1571)
Today, the Admiral's Men returned to Phocas, their tragedy about an army officer who became Byzantine emperor and ruled as a tyrant. You can read more about this play in the entry for 20 May.

The company has waited nearly two weeks to revive Phocas.and its box office has today plunged quite dramatically. It seems it is not destined to be a blockbuster.


Henslowe links



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Monday 15 June 2020

15 June, 1596 - Pythagoras

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 15 of June 1596 ... R at pethagores ... xxiijs 

In modern English: 15th June, 1596 ... Received at Pythagoras ... 23 shillings

Pythagoras as portrayed in Raphael's
The School of Athens (1509-11)
Today, the Admiral's Men returned to Pythagoras, their lost play about the Greek philosopher. You can read more about this play in the entry for 16 January

After its great success during the Whitsuntide holiday a fortnight ago, the box office for Pythagoras has returned to normal, being just under the average for the Rose.

Henslowe links



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Sunday 14 June 2020

14 June, 1596 - The Siege of London

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 14 of June 1596 ... R at sege of london ... xxxs 

In modern English: 14th June, 1596 ... Received at Siege of London ... 30 shillings

Thomas Neville's siege of London, from a
1391 French manuscript
Today the Admiral's Men staged The Siege of London, an enigmatic lost play that might have portrayed the attacks on London by Canute in 1016 or by Thomas Neville in 1471. You can read more about this play in the entry for 27 December, 1594.

This is yet another peculiar reappearance of The Siege of London. The company staged it last September, ignored it until January, and then ignored it again until now. Perhaps they are experimenting to test its appeal. Today's performance is much more successful than the last two. Will it return to the normal repertory?


Henslowe links



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Friday 12 June 2020

12 June, 1596 - Dr Faustus

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 12 of June 1596 ... R at doctor fostes... xvijs

In modern English: 12th June, 1596 ... Received at Doctor Faustus ... 17shillings

Faustus summoning Mephistopheles: from the
1616 text of the play 
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Dr Faustus, Christopher Marlowe's famous tragedy about a scholar who sells his soul to the devil. You can read more about it in the entry for 2 October.

The company has waited over a month to return Dr Faustus to the stage. But London's theatregoers do not appear to have been missing this old and shopworn play.


What's next?


There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 13 June was a Sunday in 1596 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 14th. See you then!

Henslowe links



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Thursday 11 June 2020

11 June, 1596 - The Second Part of Tamar Cam

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: ye 11 of June 1596 ... ne ... R at  the 2 pte of tambercame ... iijll

In modern English: 11th June, 1596 ... Received at The Second Part of Tamar Cam .. £3
Today, the Admiral's Men performed The Second Part of Tamar Cam, which has not been seen on the Rose Stage for many years! Like The First Part, which was revived on 7 May this year and has received several performances since, The Second Part hasn't been staged here since 1593. The play was a tale of war and wizardry that dramatized the exploits of the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan;  you can read more about it in the entry for 28th April 1592.

From a 15th century French edition of Marco Polo:
Hulagu (on the left) orders the
imprisonment of the Caliph of Baghdad in his own
treasure-vault to starve.
As with The First Part, this play was previously the property of Lord Strange's Men but has now apparently come into the hands of the Admiral's. Also as with The First Part, Henslowe describes the play as "new" even though it is not; perhaps the old playtext has been heavily revised for this revival. Either way, it seems the company has been happy enough with the response to The First Part to experiment with staging the sequel.

The sequel's return to the Rose has been greeted by an almost full house, so the company must be very pleased with their decision.



Henslowe links



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Wednesday 10 June 2020

10 June, 1596 - The First Part of Tamar Cam

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: ye 10 of June 1596 ... R at  tambercame ... xxviijs

In modern English: 10th June, 1596 ... Received at Tamar Cam ... 28 shillings
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Tamar Cam, a lost play that told of war and wizardry during the exploits of the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan; you can read more about it in the entry for 28th April 1592.

The company seems to be on a roll of performing Tamar Cam once a week, and this week's box office is a bit higher than last time. And the players have a plan to boost it higher... tune in tomorrow to find out how!

Persian illustration of Hulagu Khan (the likely inspiration for Tamar Cam) and his Christian wife


Henslowe links



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Tuesday 9 June 2020

9 June, 1596 - A Toy to Please Chaste Ladies

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 9 of June 1596 ... R at the chaste ladye ... xviijs 

In modern English: 9th June, 1596 ... Received at The Chaste Lady ... 18 shillings

Two Women at a Window by Murillo (1655-60)
Today, the Admiral's Men returned to A Toy to Please Chaste Ladies, an enigmatic lost play; you can read more about it in the entry for 14 November, 1595.

The company has ignored this normally unpopular play for six weeks, and today's revival shows that few theatregoers had been missing it.


Henslowe links



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Monday 8 June 2020

8 June, 1596 - The Wise Man of West Chester

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 8 of June 1596 ... R at wisman of weschester ... xxs 
In modern English: 8th June, 1596 ... Received at Wise Man of West Chester ... 20 shillings

A man, who might possibly be
wise, carved on the choir
stalls of Chester Cathedral
Today, the Admiral's Men revived The Wise Man of West Chester, a lost play that appears to have been about a wizard in the English city of Chester; you can read more about it in the entry for 3 December, 1594.

This is the first time the once-popular Wise Man of West Chester has been revived for over a month. But, as with a lot of recent performance, its box office is higher than last time - another sign that business in general is improving in summer.


Henslowe links



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Sunday 7 June 2020

7 June, 1596 - Crack Me This Nut

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 7 of June 1596 ...  mr pd ... R at cracke me this nvtte ... xxviijs

In modern English: 7th June, 1596 ...  Master paid ... Received at Crack Me This Nut ... 28 shillings

Dessert Still Life by Georg Flegel (1566-1638)
Today, the Admiral's Men returned to Crack Me This Nut. We know nothing about the content of this lost play, but you can read more about it in the entry for 5th September, 1595.

The company has waited a month to restage Crack Me This Nut, and, like a lot of performances at the Rose of late, its box office has risen, perhaps as a result of summer sun.

Today's entry also includes a note that Henslowe paid the license for the Rose to the Master of the Revels; you can read more about this in the entry for 8 November, 1595.


Henslowe links



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Friday 5 June 2020

5 June, 1596 - The First Part of Tamar Cam

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: ye 5 of June 1596 ... R at  tambercame ... xxviijs

In modern English: 5th June, 1596 ... Received at Tamar Cam ... 28 shillings
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Tamar Cam, a lost play that told of war and wizardry during the exploits of the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan; you can read more about it in the entry for 28th April 1592.

The company has waited just over a week to bring back Tamar Cam and the box office has risen a little.

Persian illustration of Hulagu Khan (the likely inspiration for Tamar Cam) and his Christian wife


What's next?


There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 6th June was a Sunday in 1596 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 7th, for a week that will include a new(ish) play. See you then!


Henslowe links



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Thursday 4 June 2020

4 June, 1596 - Phocas

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 4 of June 1596 ... R at tragedie of focas ... xxxjs

In modern English: 4th June, 1596 ... Received at Tragedy of Phocas ... 31 shillings

Phocas depicted in Richard
Rainoldes' Chronicle of all the
Noble Emperors of the Romans (1571)
Today, the Admiral's Men returned to Phocas, their tragedy about an army officer who became Byzantine emperor and ruled as a tyrant. You can read more about this play in the entry for 20 May.

The company has waited a week and a half to return this new play to the stage for its third performance. The play is doing solidly well - it's not lighting the stage on fire but neither has it collapsed instantly. Londoners seem to think it's OK.


Henslowe links



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Wednesday 3 June 2020

3 June, 1596 - The Blind Beggar of Alexandria

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 3 of June 1596 ... R at the blinde beager ... xxxxjs

In modern English: [3rd] June, 1596 ... Received at The Blind Beggar ... 41 shillings

Beggars in Alexandria; an undated photograph
from Brooklyn Museum's Lantern Slide Collection
Today, the Admiral's Men revived The Blind Beggar of Alexandria, a comedy by George Chapman about a master of disguise. You can read more about this play in the entry for 12 February.

The enormous audiences of the Whitsuntide holiday appear to be over, but this is still an impressive showing for The Blind Beggar, which remains remarkably popular.


Henslowe links



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Tuesday 2 June 2020

2 June, 1596 - Longshanks

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 2 of June 1596 ... R at longshancke ... iijll  

In modern English: 2nd June, 1596 ... Received at Longshanks ... £3

Portrait of Edward I in
Westminster Abbey
Today, the Admiral's Men returned to Longshanks, their lost play about King Edward I of England; you can read more about it in the entry for 29 August, 1595.

It's been more than a month since the company last performed Longshanks, but this is a tremendous return for the play: an almost full theatre thanks to the continuing Whitsuntide holiday. Hurrah!

Henslowe links



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Monday 1 June 2020

1 June, 1596 - Chinon of England

Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...

Henslowe writes: ye 1 of June 1596 ... R at chinone of Jngland ... iijs

In modern English: 1st June, 1596 ... Received at Chinon  of England ... [£]3

The Knights of the Round
Table, from the Compilation
arthurienne de Micheau
Gonnot (1470)
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Chinon of England, their lost Arthurian drama about a fool who becomes a knight. You can read more about this play in the entry for 3 January. Henslowe records only 3 shillings box office, but that must be an error for pounds.

It has only been a few days since we last saw Chinon of England, and the roller-coaster ride that is its box office continues. The previous outing saw hardly anyone in the audience, yet today the Rose is nearly full! The reason is that the holiday period of Whitsuntide continues and Londoners are in a festive mood.


Henslowe links



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