Sunday, 31 October 2021

31 October, 1597 - Friar Spendleton

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

Henslowe writes: octobȝ | 31 | ne | tt at fryer splendelton |  02 | 00

In modern English: October 31st, [1597] ... total at Friar Spendleton ... £2 [i.e. 40 shillings]


Welcome back! After another mysterious gap in performances, the Rose is open for business again with a new play! But the end of the Diary approaches: Henslowe's box office records will cease, without fanfare or spectacle, on 5 November. Prepare a handkerchief.

Portrait of a Camaldulense
Friar
by Moroni (1560s)
Today was the premiere of Friar Spendleton, a new play, now lost.  Unfortunately, there is nothing more we can say about it. No character of that name appears elsewhere, and it is thus impossible to know the story was about. Perhaps, given the attitudes of Protestant England, the friar was a figure of fun, or of evil. But who can say?

The box office is unimpressive for a premiere, suggesting that London's theatregoers are not very excited about plays about friars.

What's next?


There will be no entry tomorrow, for reasons unknown. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on 2 November. See you then!


FURTHER READING


Friar Spendleton information

  • Martin Wiggins, British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue, vol. 3 (Oxford University Press, 2013), entry 1046.
  • Christopher Matusiak and Roslyn L. Knutson, "Friar Spendleton", Lost Plays Database (2019), accessed August 2021. 

Henslowe links


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Wednesday, 20 October 2021

20 October, 1597 - Hardicanute and another short hiatus

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

Henslowe writes: tt at hardwute | 00 | 16

In modern English: [20th October, 1597] ... total at Hardicanute ... 16 shillings

Today, the players performed a play we have not previously seen at the Rose!  The exact date of this performance is unclear, by the way; Henslowe does not identify the day, merely placing the entry between 19th and 31st October, so my choice of the 20th is merely a guess.

Henslowe calls this play Hardwute, which scholars have interpreted as a garbled form of Hardicanute, one of the Danish kings of England. They thus assume it to be the same play as the Canute that will appear in the Diary in a few days time. The play is now lost, but its title tells us something of its content. 

Henslowe does not mark Hardicanute as "new", so it may be an older play that has been resuscitated after a spell in the archives. One reason for its earlier absence from Henslowe's Diary may be that it belonged to Pembroke's Men, whose actors have recently begun to perform at the Rose. 

The play


Hardicanute as depicted in the Genealogical
Roll of the Kings of England
(14th century)
'Hardicanute' is an anglicization of Harthacnut, the ill-fated son of Canute, a Danish Viking who ruled England in the early eleventh century. When Canute died, Hardicanute, still in his early twenties, became King of Denmark, but his half-brother Harold Harefoot assumed power in England. 

Hardicanute's mother, Queen Emma, was determined that he should be king of England, especially because Harold had murdered one of her sons by a previous husband. When Harold unexpectedly died, she and Hardicanute sailed for England and assumed power. 

But Hardicanute was a despotic ruler. He also became known as an oath-breaker when he had Earl Eadwulf of Bernicia assassinated after promising him safe conduct. There may then have been few tears when Hardicanute died after only two years on the throne, apparently as a result of drinking too much at a wedding, although poison has been suspected. 

Emma depicted in The Encomium
of Queen Emma
(c. 1050)
Hardicanute was succeeded by his half-brother (another of Emma's sons), Edward the Confessor, who would reign far more successfully. 

The bare facts of Hardicanute's short reign do not suggest much of a story, but a talented dramatist could no doubt spin something interesting out of it. The youthful monarch who becomes a hated tyrant could have been an exciting role for an actor, and the role of the formidable Queen Emma could have been a striking one.

The below average box office does not, however, suggest that London's theatregoers are excited by the staging of Hardicanute. The players will need to rummage deeper in the archives!


What's next?


There will now be another unexplained hiatus in the entries, and Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will return on Hallowe'en. See you then!



FURTHER READING


Hardicanute information


Henslowe links


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Wednesday, 13 October 2021

13 October, 1597 - Doctor Faustus and a short hiatus

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

Henslowe writes: tt at docter fostes ... 0

In modern English: [13 October, 1597]  ... total at Doctor Faustus ... 0

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 this play in the entry for 2 October, 1594. But no box office figure is recorded, and Henslowe will list no more performances for a week.

Dr Faustus is one of the most famous plays of the English Renaissance, but its box office as recorded in Henslowe's Diary has generally been unremarkable. Although the zero in today's entry surely does not mean that no-one came at all (more likely it is an error of some kind), it is a sadly appropriate grave-marker for the play's last appearance in Henslowe's Diary.

That does not mean that this is the end of the line for Dr Faustus. There are records of it being performed in other playhouses decades later, and it will live on in the cultural memory (see here for examples). But for us, it's a rather awkward goodbye to a legend.


What's next?


For unknown reasons, no more performances are listed until 20 October. See you then!


Henslowe links



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Tuesday, 12 October 2021

12 October, 1597 - A Humorous Day's Mirth

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

Henslowe writes: tt at the comodey of vmers... | 02 | 00

In modern English: [12 October, 1597] ... total at Comedy of Humours ... £2 [i.e. 40 shillings]

Today, the Admiral's Men revived their 
A classic image of a
melancholic, from
Robert Burton's Anatomy
of Melancholy (1622)
Comedy of Humours
, which is almost certainly another name for George Chapman's A Humorous Day's Mirth. You can read more about this eccentric comedy in the entry for 11 May

A Humorous Day's Mirth  was the a smash hit of this year, and it makes sense for the company to return it swiftly to the stage. However, today's box office, though nothing to sneeze at, has not equaled the heights of its earlier popularity. 

Henslowe links



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Monday, 11 October 2021

11 October, 1597 - Hieronimo and a new beginning

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

Henslowe writes: In the name of god amen the xj of octobe begane my lord admerals & my lord of penbrockes men to playe at my howse 1597

11 |  tt at Joroneymo | 02 | 00


In modern English: In the name of god, Amen; 11 October began my Lord Admiral's and my Lord of Pembroke's Men to play at my house, 1597 
11th [October, 1597] ... total at Hieronimo ... £2

Welcome back! Today, the Rose playhouse has re-opened its doors after London's theatres were closed back in July. If you recall, the authorities had demanded that the playhouse cease performances until "Allhallowtide next", which would indicate the end of October, but the players have returned early, for reasons unknown.

As you can see from Henslowe's note at the top of today's entry, there are some changes at the Rose. The Admiral's Men, who have been performing here for many years, are now apparently joined by the Earl of Pembroke's Men. This is the company that had previously been performing at the Swan playhouse down the road, and whose production of the scandalous Isle of Dogs play may have been the cause of the shutdown of the theatres. Pembroke's Men were apparently no longer able to perform at the Swan, and it is not clear whether some of the members have merged with the Admiral's, or whether the two companies are remaining separate, perhaps taking turns at the Rose. 

Woodcut from the 1615 edition of The Spanish Tragedy.
To mark their return to the Rose, the players have revived Hieronimo, which is almost certainly an alternate title for Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy, a famous and much-loved old play about the revenge of a grieving father for his son's death. You can read more about it in the entry for 14th March, 1592. London's theatregoers seem surprisingly unexcited by the return of playing to the Bankside, however, with the theatre only about half full. 

This is the last performance of The Spanish Tragedy recorded in Henslowe's diary. The old classic is one of the most frequently-performed plays in the Diary, and has been seen 29 times since its first appearance five years ago (when it was already no spring chicken).  But a last entry in the Diary doesn't mean its stage life is over. We are now in the final batch of Henslowe's records of performances, and the end of this blog is thus nigh! I should warn you that the last entries are not a spectacular climax; they are puzzling and intermittent, with several hiatuses, and ultimately, they will fizzle out unceremoniously in mid-November. Don't say I didn't warn you.


Henslowe links


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Wednesday, 28 July 2021

28 July, 1597 - The Witch of Islington, The Isle of Dogs, and the closure of the theatres

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

Henslowe writes: 28 | tt at the wiche of Jselyngton | 01 | 08

In modern English: 28th [July, 1597] ... total at The Witch of Islington ... £1 and 8 shillings [i.e. 28 shillings]

London seen from Islington in 1665,
by Wenceslas Hollar
Today, the Admiral's Men performed The Witch of Islington, a mysterious lost play about which you can read more in the entry for 14 July. But Henslowe has something far more important to worry about: the government has ordered that the theatres of London be closed down and destroyed! 

We've seen closures before. At several points in the last few years the theatres have been shuttered in order to prevent the spread of plague, and more than once in response to riots and public unrest. Today's order is more extreme though. It's also mysterious, as the motivation is uncertain; however, circumstantial evidence suggests that a scandalous play at the Swan playhouse may have provoked a government crackdown on theatre. Let's look at what happened.

The closure of the theatres


The Privy Council in 1604. Detail
from The Somerset House Conference
Today, the Privy Council sent out a startling order to the justices of Middlesex. Instead of the usual demand that the theatres be closed for a specific reason, this one is more drastic. It begins by saying that the Queen has learned "that there are very great disorders committed in the common playhouses, both by lewd matters that are handled on the stages and by resort and confluence of bad people". It orders that "there be no more plays used in any public place within three miles of the City until Allhallowtide next" (that is, until the end of October).

But then it makes a far more extreme demand:

that you do send for the owners of the Curtain, Theatre, or any other common playhouse, and enjoin them by virtue hereof forthwith to pluck down quite the stages, galleries and rooms that are made for people to stand in, and so to deface the same as they may not be employed again to such use.

The theatre owners, in other words, must tear down and destroy their theatres. Although his own playhouse is not mentioned, Henslowe must be horrified. He could be looking at the end of his career as a theatre impresario. 

Spoiler alert: the theatres will indeed be closed until October, but they will not be destroyed. We don't know why, but we can at least explore one possible reason for this assault upon the players. 


The scandal of The Isle of Dogs


The most likely reason for the Privy Council's anger is that the players at the Swan playhouse, located close to Henslowe's Rose, performed a satirical play entitled The Isle of Dogs. Scholars have struggled to piece together the details because the evidence is fragmentary and because the forger John Payne Collier (whom we have met before) inserted fake references to the play into Henslowe's Diary. Once those are weeded out, we end up with the following information. 

On 10 August, Henslowe hired a new actor, contracting with him to begin performing as soon as the ongoing restraint on theatre is lifted. Henslowe mentions that the "restraint is by the means of playing The Isle of Dogs".

On the same day, a government inquisitor, Richard Topcliffe, wrote to the Secretary of State, Sir Robert Cecil, about an informant that he was working with, whom he describes as "the first man that discovered to me that seditious play called The Isle of Dogs", a play that was of "a venomous intent and a preparative to some far-fetched mischief". 

And on 15 August, the Privy Council wrote to Topcliffe that they had learned of "a lewd play that was played in one of the playhouses on the Bankside, containing very seditious and slanderous matter", and that they had thus "caused some of the players to be apprehended and committed to prison"; one of the players "was not only an actor but a maker of part of the said play". A different document reveals that the players in question were Gabriel Spencer, Robert Shaw and Ben Jonson, the latter of whom must have been the co-author as he was already a well-known playwright by 1597. 

The Council continued that Topcliffe must interrogate these men in order to find out "what is become of the rest of their fellows that either had their parts in the devising of that seditious matter or that were actors or players in the same, what copies they have given forth of the said play and to whom, and such other points as you shall think meet to be demanded of them". Decades later, William Drummond recorded the highlights of a conversation with Ben Jonson, who reminisced about his imprisonment, saying that "his judges could get nothing of him to all their demands but 'ay' and 'no'". 

The Council also ordered Topcliffe to examine "such papers as were found in Nashe's lodgings". This refers to another playwright, Thomas Nashe (whom we have earlier encountered as a possible co-author of The First Part of Henry VI), whose home had apparently been searched by the authorities. In 1599, Nashe wrote a book called Nashe's Lenten Stuff, which refers to "the strange turning of The Isle of Dogs from a comedy to a tragedy two summers past" and insists that he was an innocent party, having written only Act One : "the other four acts without my consent, or the least guess of my drift or scope, by the players were supplied, which bred both their trouble and mine too". It implies that he escaped to Great Yarmouth.
From these records, we can deduce that Jonson and Nashe wrote a play that was performed at the Swan and was perceived as seditious. It was reported to the authorities and the players ran away, save three who were captured and interrogated. The Isle of Dogs must have been quite a sensation, and there are many references to it in writings of the time. Unfortunately none of them tell us what the play was actually about (they seems to assume that their readers will know). The play's title refers to a swampy peninsula formed by a bend in the Thames east of London, but that is of no help in determining the subject matter. You can read various theories in Roslyn L. Knutson's article on the play for the Lost Plays Database.

Whatever The Isle of Dogs was about, it may have been the cause of today's closure of the theatres (although the two events may be unconnected). If it was the cause, Henslowe must be furious at the recklessness of his neighbours at the Swan. 

The Rose will thus be silent until October 11. See you then!



FURTHER READING


Information on The Isle of Dogs and the closure of the theatres

  • Carol Chillington Rutter, Document of the Rose Playhouse (Manchester University Press, 1984), 113-18
  • Martin Wiggins, British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue, vol. 3 (Oxford University Press, 2013), entry 1081.
  • Roslyn L. Knutson and others, "Isle of Dogs, The", Lost Plays Database (2021), accessed July 2021. 

Henslowe links



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Tuesday, 27 July 2021

27 July, 1597 - Five Plays in One

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

Henslowe writes: 27 | tt at v playes in one | 00 | 14
In modern English: 27th [July, 1597] ... total at Five Plays in One .. 14 shillings

The number 5 in a
column of figures
in Henslowe's Diary
Welcome back! The Rose has been closed for a week, perhaps owing to the departure of actor Martin Slater, but performances have now restarted. 

For the re-opening, the Admiral's Men have revived their lost piece Five Plays in One, which was probably a collection of one-act plays, perhaps linked by a narrative device; you can read more about it in the entry for 7 April. This is the last appearance of Five Plays in One in the Diary.

Things may seem to be back to normal, but in fact the players are about to experience a nasty shock - tune in tomorrow to find out why! 



Henslowe links



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