Sunday 31 January 2021

31 January, 1597 - Hieronimo

Here's what Lord Strange's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: 31 | tt at Joronymo ... | 01 | 04

In modern English: 31st [January, 1597] ... total at Hieronimo ... 
£1 and 4 shillings [i.e. 24 shillings]

Woodcut from the 1615 edition of The Spanish Tragedy.
Today, Lord Strange's Men revived Hieronimowhich 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 this play in the entry for 14th March, 1592.

The company continues to perform The Spanish Tragedy approximately once per week. Today's box office is a little better than last time, and the old play continues to do better than most of the newer ones.



    Henslowe links



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    Friday 29 January 2021

    29 January, 1597 - A Woman Hard to Please

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

    Henslowe writes: 29 | tt at womon hard to please ... | 02 | 03 

    In modern English: 29th [January, 1597] ... total at Woman's Hard to Please ... £2 and 3 shillings [i.e. 43 shillings]

    Today, the Admiral's Men revived their enigmatic lost play A Woman Hard to Please. You can read more about this play in the entry for 27 January.

    A woman looks deeply unimpressed by her
    rescuer in Paolo Uccello's St George and
    the Dragon
    (c.1470)
    The company has rushed A Woman Hard to Please back to the stage only two days after its premiere. Today's box office indicates a theatre much more than half full, suggesting strong word of mouth among theatregoers.


    What's next?


    There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 30 January was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 31st, for a week that will include a play haven't seen before.

    Henslowe links


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    Thursday 28 January 2021

    28 January, 1597 - Long Meg of Westminster

    Here's what the Admiral's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
    Henslowe writes: 28 | tt at long mege | 0 | 07

    In modern English: 28th [January, 1597] ... total at Long Meg ... 7 shillings
    Long Meg, from
    a 1750 edition
    of the jest-book
    Today, for the last time, the Admiral's Men revived Long Meg of Westminster, their play about the Amazonian warrior woman of London legend. You can read more about this play in the entry for 14 February, 1595.

    Long Meg has not been seen at the Rose since the end of November. Despite its promising subject matter, it rarely attracted large audiences and today's crowd is tiny. The company seems to have decided to give up on it, as today is its last recorded appearance. Farewell, Long Meg!


    Henslowe links



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    Wednesday 27 January 2021

    27 January, 1597 - A Woman Hard to Please

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

    Henslowe writes: 27 | ne | tt at womane hard to please ... | 2 | 11 

    In modern English: 27th [January, 1597] ... new ... total at Woman Hard to Please ... £2 and 11 shillings [i.e. 51 shillings]

    Today, the Admiral's Men staged a new play! Unfortunately, A Woman Hard to Please is yet another lost play about which we know nothing.

    A woman looks deeply unimpressed by her
    rescuer in Paolo Uccello's St George and
    the Dragon
    (c.1470)
    With only the title available to us, it is difficult to speculate on what happened in this play, although perhaps the eponymous woman was pleased at the end in some kind of comic resolution.  

    We may be reminded that not too long ago, the Admiral's Men were performing A Toy to Please Chaste Ladies. Despite its title, that play typically received very poor box office and thus seems to have pleased no-one, chaste ladies or otherwise; it has not been seen since November. One cannot help wondering whether the title of today's play is some kind of riposte. 

    As for the actors, they will not be entirely pleased with the response to this play, as the Rose is busy but not full.


    FURTHER READING


    A Woman Hard to Please information


    Henslowe links


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    Tuesday 26 January 2021

    26 January, 1597 - Nebuchadnezzar

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

    Henslowe writes: 26 | tt at Nabucadonizer ... | 0 | 09
    In modern English: 26th [January, 1597] ... total at Nebuchadnezzar ... 9 shillings

    Nebuchadnezzar's dream
    of the tree, from
    Speculum Humanae
    Salvationis
    , a 15th-
    century French manuscript
    Today, the Admiral's Men performed Nebuchadnezzar, their Biblical drama about the Babylonian king whose dreams were interpreted by the prophet Daniel. You can read more about this play in the entry for 18 December, 1596

    Another change has happened in Henslowe's accounting system today: instead of beginning each entry with "R" for "received", he now begins them with "tt", which means "totalis", Latin for "total". As I discussed in the entry for 24 January, the significance of this change is uncertain. 

    The company continues to revive Nebuchadnezzar frequently, but its box office remains dismal. One cannot help but suspect it will soon be for the chop. 


    FURTHER READING


    Information on "tt"

    • R.A. Foakes, ed. Henslowe's Diary, 2nd ed. (Cambridge University Press, 2002), xxxviii-xxxix

    Henslowe links



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    Monday 25 January 2021

    25 January, 1597 - 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: 25 | R at the blinde beager ... | 0 | 19

    In modern English: 25th [January, 1597] ... Received at The Blind Beggar ... 19 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 company has returned The Blind Beggar after a week and a half, and has received a higher box office than recent outings, albeit still not very impressive.



    Henslowe links



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    Sunday 24 January 2021

    24 January, 1597 - That Will Be Shall Be and a new accounting system

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

    Henslowe writes: Janewary 1597 | 24 |  R at that wilbe shalbe ... | 0 | 17 | 00 19-07 

    In modern English: 24th January, 1597 ... Received at That Will Be Shall Be ... 17 shillings

    Something strange has just happened. As you can see from the entry above, Henslowe has suddenly changed his accounting system! The format that we have become used to over the years has been replaced by an entirely new one, in which five numbers follow the play title. In addition, two days, from now, Henslowe will cease to begin each entry with "R" for "received", and will instead begin them with "tt", which is short for "totalis" (Latin for "total"). The reasons for some of these changes are unknown.


    The scholarly consensus is that the two numbers following the play title are the box office takings in pounds and shillings (for the uninitiated, there are twenty shillings to the pound). Previously, Henslowe had recorded his box office takings only in shillings, not bothering to mention pounds unless the amount rose as high as £3, which it did only on exceptional occasions. Now, he always counts the pounds. In order to keep continuity with the previous entries in this blog and thus make comparisons easier, I will specify in the 'modern spelling' version of the entry both the figures given by Henslowe and their equivalent in shillings only (this is not necessary for today's entry, since the takings were less than £1).

    But there is a mystery about Henslowe's new system. The box office takings are always followed by  three more numbers (today, "00 19-07"). Unfortunately, nobody knows their meaning; some scholars suspect that they represent the receipts taken at the door to the theatre (recall that Henslowe's box office takings are only for entry into the gallery or seating area), but this is not certain and they might represent some other entirely different receipts or expenditures. Since the meaning is unclear, I have decided to leave these figures out of subsequent blog entries, to avoid confusion.  

    Apart from that, today was an ordinary day at the Rose. The Admiral's Men revived That Will Be Shall Be, an enigmatic lost play about which you can read more in the entry for 30 December, 1596. The company continues to perform That Will Be Shall Be more than once a week, and its box office continues to be unspectacular. 


    A female archer tries to take down a war elephant. The man on the
    right appears to share the sentiments of this play's title.
    From the Smithfield Decretals (c.1340)



    FURTHER READING


    Information on the new accounting system

    • Neil Carson, A Companion to Henslowe's Diary (Cambridge University Press, 1988), 18-19
    • R.A. Foakes, ed. Henslowe's Diary, 2nd ed.(Cambridge University Press, 2002), xxxvii-xl


    Henslowe links



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    Friday 22 January 2021

    22 January, 1597 - Hieronimo

    Here's what Lord Strange's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
    Henslowe writes: ye 22 of Janewarye 1597 ... R at Joronymo ... xixs

    In modern English: 22nd January, 1597 ... Received at Hieronimo ... 19 
    shillings 

    Woodcut from the 1615 edition of The Spanish Tragedy.
    Today, Lord Strange's Men revived Hieronimowhich 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 this play in the entry for 14th March, 1592.

    The company seems to be settling into a groove of performing The Spanish Tragedy once a week. Today's crowd is not very large, but this old play is still doing a lot better than the newer members of the repertory this week.


    What's next?


    There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 23 January was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 24th, when everything will suddenly look weird and different - watch this space to find out why!


      Henslowe links



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      Thursday 21 January 2021

      21 January, 1597 - Vortigern

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

      Henslowe writes: ye 21 of Janewary 1597 ... R at valteger ... xxijs 
      In modern English: 21st January, 1597 ... Received at Vortigern ... 12 shillings

      Vortigern in his burning
      castle. From a 14th-century
      manuscript of Peter of
      Langtoft's Chronicle of
      England.
        
      Today, the Admiral's Men chose to perform Vortigern, their play about the legendary British king whose actions brought about the arrival of the Anglo-Saxons in Britain. You can read more about this play in the entry for 4th December, 1596

      The company has waited a fortnight to revive Vortigern, but the wait has had no impact upon its popularity, as the crowd remains very small. 


      Henslowe links



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      Wednesday 20 January 2021

      20 January, 1597 - Captain Thomas Stukeley

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

      Henslowe writes: ye 20 of Janewary 1597 ... R at stewtley ... xjs 
      In modern English: 20th January, 1597 ... Received at Stukeley ... 11 shillings

      1629 Portuguese illustration of the Battle of Alcazar
      Today, the Admiral's Men revived Captain Thomas Stukeley, their tale about the titular English mercenary's adventures in Ireland, Spain and Morocco, and his death at the Battle of Alcazar. You can read more about this play in the entry for 10 December, 1596.

      The company has waited a week and a half to revive Stukeley. But after some solid success in previous outings, today's audience has plummeted. 

      Henslowe links



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      Tuesday 19 January 2021

      19 January, 1597 - Nebuchadnezzar

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

      Henslowe writes: ye 19 of Janewary 1597 ... R at nabucadonyzer ... xs 
      In modern English: 19th January, 1597 ... Received at Nebuchadnezzar ... 10 shillings

      Nebuchadnezzar's dream
      of the tree, from
      Speculum Humanae
      Salvationis
      , a 15th-
      century French manuscript
      Today, the Admiral's Men performed Nebuchadnezzar, their Biblical drama about the Babylonian king whose dreams were interpreted by the prophet Daniel. You can read more about this play in the entry for 18 December, 1596

      The box office for Nebuchadnezzar continues to sink lower and lower. As always, one should remember that it is being performed in an open-air theatre in January during the Little Ice Age. But still, it's the lowest performer of group of plays introduced at the same time. 

      Henslowe links



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      Monday 18 January 2021

      18 January, 1597 - That Will Be Shall Be

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

      Henslowe writes: ye 18 of Janewary 1597 ... R at that wilbe shalbe ... xvs 

      In modern English: 18th January, 1597 ... Received at That Will Be Shall Be ... 15 shillings

      Today, the Admiral's Men revived That Will Be Shall Be, an enigmatic lost play. You can read more about this play in the entry for 30 December, 1596.

      The company is continuing to perform That Will Be Shall Be more than once a week, but its box office has now collapsed. Perhaps it has already become over-familiar. 


      A female archer tries to take down a war elephant. The man on the
      right appears to share the sentiments of this play's title.
      From the Smithfield Decretals (c.1340)



      Henslowe links


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      Sunday 17 January 2021

      17 January, 1597 - Hieronimo

      Here's what Lord Strange's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
      Henslowe writes: ye 17 of Janewary 1597 ... R at Joronymo ... xxs

      In modern English: 17th January, 1597 ... Received at Hieronimo ... 20 
      shillings 

      Woodcut from the 1615 edition of The Spanish Tragedy.
      Today, Lord Strange's Men revived Hieronimowhich 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 this play in the entry for 14th March, 1592.

      The company has returned to The Spanish Tragedy after a week. But the large crowds that came to see it on its first two outings this season have dwindled; the excitement of the return of a classic seems to have faded. 

        Henslowe links




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        Friday 15 January 2021

        15 January, 1597 - 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 15 of Janewary 1597 ... R at the blinde beager ... ixs

        In modern English: 15th January, 1597 ... Received at The Beggar ... 9 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 last time the company staged The Blind Beggar, three weeks ago, it received a microscopically small audience. Today's is not much better; this play has most definitely passed its sell-by date.


        What's next?


        There will be no blog entry tomorrow, because 16 January was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 17th for a week of old favourites. 


        Henslowe links



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        Thursday 14 January 2021

        14 January, 1597 - Alexander and Lodowick

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

        Henslowe writes: ye 14 of Janewary 1597 ... ne ... R at elexsander & lodwicke ... lvs 

        In modern English: 14th January, 1597 .. New ... Received at Alexander and Lodowick ... 55 shillings

        Today, the Admiral's Men performed a new play! Alexander and Lodowick was based on a well known story about two friends who swap places. Although the play itself is lost, two other versions allow us to speculate on its content.  

        An old tale


        If you are familiar with John Webster's 1613 tragedy The Duchess of Malfi, you might remember a curious moment in the first act in which the Duchess, assertively wooing her surprised steward Antonio, assuages his anxiety by joking that in bed she will, "Like the old tale in Alexander and Lodowick, / Lay a naked sword between us, keep us chaste". Perhaps Webster was remembering a scene from the play performed at the Rose.

        A very generic illustration accompanying the
        printed text of the ballad of The Two Faithful Friends
        But the story of Alexander and Lodowick goes back further than this play. The unknown playwright probably found it in a popular collection of stories entitled The History of the Seven Wise Masters of Rome, which had been through several editions between 1493 and 1602.  A shorter and tidier version of the story can be found in a ballad, The Two Faithful Friends: The Pleasant History of Alexander and Lodowick (first published around 1630, but likely in existence for a long time beforehand); the play could have been based on the ballad, or vice versa. (If you would like to listen to the ballad being sung, you can, thanks to the English Broadside Ballad Archive!)

        The story


        The two possible sources allow us to speculate about what the Rose audience saw. The following description is based on the shorter version in the ballad, although I have noted one interesting difference between the two versions toward the end. 

        Alexander, Prince of Hungary, and Lodowick, Prince of France, are at the court of the Emperor of Germany. The two young men are close friends and happen to look identical, but Alexander is the better fighter of the two. When Alexander wins the hand of the princess in a tournament, he gives her to Lodowick instead, knowing that Lodowick loves her, and having his own fiancée waiting for him back home in Hungary. 

        But the evil Spanish prince Guido, disappointed at not winning the princess for himself, accuses her of being unchaste. To prove her virtue, Lodowick must fight Guido in a trial by combat. But since Alexander is the better fighter, the two adopt a cunning plan: Alexander will pretend to be Lodowick and will fight Guido for him.

        There is a problem, though: Alexander is supposed to be returning home to marry his fiancée. Alexander  therefore proposes that Lodowick take his place at the wedding. Lodowick must not go too far, however: Alexander requests that "Although thou wed her as thy wife, / Yet know 'tis in my name; / Let her remain a virgin pure / I do request the same."

        So, Lodowick travels to Hungary and performs Alexander's role at the wedding. In order to ensure that his friend's request is followed, he sets a naked sword between himself and the puzzled bride in bed, so as to to prevent any contact between them (this is the sequence that Webster remembered in The Duchess of Malfi).

        The plan works out neatly, as Alexander defeats Guido and then returns to resume his rightful place in Hungary, while Lodowick returns to his own bride. But Alexander's wife, frustrated that she has not experienced "love's pastime" with her husband, has sought comfort in another lord, and the two poison Alexander, turning him into a leper so that he is banished from his country.

        Marcus Geerhaerts (1561-1636),
        Portrait of Two Brothers
        Alexander learns that the only cure for his affliction is to bathe in the blood of a child. He travels to Lodowick's court in France and seeks help from his friend, who now has children. In the version of the tale in The Seven Wise Masters of Rome, Lodowick's love for his friend is so strong that he slits the throats of his twin sons and cures Alexander with their blood; happily, once the cure is effected, the two sons are magically restored to life with a thread of gold around their necks. The ballad, however, tones down Lodowick's infanticidal devotion to his friend: although he still bathes Alexander in child-blood, he uses bloodletting rather than murder to acquire it; despite his wife's horror at his actions, the children survive.

        In both versions, the cured and angry Alexander returns home and executes his his wife and her lover. Happy ending! Or, as the ballad puts it, "Their griefs to joys converted were, / Their pleasures did transcend."

        It is hard to tell whether this story would have been performed as an anguished psychological drama or as knockabout silliness. But whatever the tone, Alexander and Lodowick is a moderate success today: although it has not succeeded in filling the Rose to capacity, the crowd is still very large.



        FURTHER READING


        Alexander and Lodowick information



        Henslowe links



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        Wednesday 13 January 2021

        13 January, 1597 That Will Be Shall Be

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

        Henslowe writes: ye 13 of Janewary 1597 ... R at that wilbe shalbe ... xxijs 

        In modern English: 13th January, 1597 ... Received at That Will Be Shall Be ... 22 shillings

        Today, the Admiral's Men revived That Will Be Shall Be, an enigmatic lost play. You can read more about this play in the entry for 30 December, 1596.

        On its fourth performance in only two weeks, That Will Be Shall Be has received a fairly small audience. It had achieved some success during the Christmas season, but it seems likely that outside of the festive season it is not viewed as anything special. 


        A female archer tries to take down a war elephant. The man on the
        right appears to share the sentiments of this play's title.
        From the Smithfield Decretals (c.1340)



        Henslowe links


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        Tuesday 12 January 2021

        12 January, 1597 - Nebuchadnezzar

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

        Henslowe writes: ye 12 of Janewary 1597 ... R at nabycadnazer ... xiijs 
        In modern English: 12th January, 1597 ... Received at Nebuchadnezzar ... 13 shillings

        Nebuchadnezzar's dream
        of the tree, from
        Speculum Humanae
        Salvationis
        , a 15th-
        century French manuscript
        Today, the Admiral's Men performed Nebuchadnezzar, their Biblical drama about the Babylonian king whose dreams were interpreted by the prophet Daniel. You can read more about this play in the entry for 18 December, 1596

        Only a small audience has shown up for Nebuchadnezzar today. This play has not proven a success. 

        Henslowe links



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        Monday 11 January 2021

        11 January, 1597 - Hieronimo

        Here's what Lord Strange's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
        Henslowe writes: ye 11 of Janewary 1597 ... R at Joranymo ... xxxxs

        In modern English: 11th January, 1597 ... Received at Hieronimo ... 40
         shillings 

        Woodcut from the 1615 edition of The Spanish Tragedy.
        Today, Lord Strange's Men revived Hieronimowhich 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 this play in the entry for 14th March, 1592.

        Having returned the hoary Spanish Tragedy to the repertory a few days ago, the Admiral's Men must be relieved to see that it can still draw a large crowd despite its age. 

          Henslowe links



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          Sunday 10 January 2021

          10 January, 1597 - Captain Thomas Stukeley

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

          Henslowe writes: ye 10 of Jenewary 1597 ... R at stewtley ... xxviijs 
          In modern English: 10th January, 1597 ... Received at Stukeley ... 28 shillings

          1629 Portuguese illustration of the Battle of Alcazar
          Today, the Admiral's Men revived Captain Thomas Stukeley, their tale about the titular English mercenary's adventures in Ireland, Spain and Morocco, and his death at the Battle of Alcazar. You can read more about this play in the entry for 10 December.

          After a tremendously successful Christmas performance, the company has waited a fortnight to revive Stukeley. In the less lively post-Christmas season, it continues to be relatively successful, drawing an audience that half-fills the Rose. 


          Henslowe links



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          Friday 8 January 2021

          8 January, 1597 - Vortigern

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

          Henslowe writes: ye 8 of Jenewary 1597 ... R at valteger ... xijs 
          In modern English: 8th January, 1597 ... Received at Vortigern ... 12 shillings

          Vortigern in his burning
          castle. From a 14th-century
          manuscript of Peter of
          Langtoft's Chronicle of
          England.
            
          Today, the Admiral's Men chose to perform Vortigern, their play about the legendary British king whose actions brought about the arrival of the Anglo-Saxons in Britain. You can read more about this play in the entry for 4th December, 1596

          The company has waited a week to revive Vortigern after its successful New Year's Day performance. Today, the crowd is very small though, suggesting that things are returning to normal after the Christmas season. 

          What's next?


          There will be no blog entry tomorrow, as 9 January was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 10th, for a week that will include a new play. See you then!

          Henslowe links



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          Thursday 7 January 2021

          7 January, 1597 - Hieronimo

          Here's what Lord Strange's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
          Henslowe writes: ye 7 of Jenewary 1597 ... R at Joronymo ... iijll

          In modern English: 7th January, 1597 ... Received at Hieronimo ... 
          £3 

          Woodcut from the 1615 edition of The Spanish Tragedy.
          What a surprise! Today, a long-forgotten play has returned to the Rose. We last saw The Spanish Tragedy (or Hieronimo, as Henslowe calls it) four years ago in 1593. Back then, it was being performed by Lord Strange's Men, but there is continuity, as Edward Alleyn was the leading actor of both companies, and would have taken the leading role of Hieronimo, the grieving father who becomes an insane revenger. You can read more about this play in the entry for 14th March, 1592.

          The company's return of The Spanish Tragedy to the Rose follows a pattern that we have seen earlier. Tamburlaine and Doctor Faustus are other examples of older plays that Edward Alleyn had starred in when acting with other companies, and have somehow now returned to the company currently occupying the Rose. 

          The Spanish Tragedy had once been one of the most popular days of its age. It was already an old play when we first encountered it in Henslowe's Diary, and like most plays in the repertory, it gradually declined it popularity. The Admiral's Men may be calculating that after four years, the audience will be ready to love it again. And they appear to be correct, as the revival has brought a huge crowd to the Rose, almost filling it. Once again, Londoners can hear Alleyn uttering the famous lines, "Oh eyes, no eyes, but fountains fraught with tears!"

            Henslowe links



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            Wednesday 6 January 2021

            6 January, 1597 - That Will Be Shall Be

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

            Henslowe writes: ye 6 of Jenewary 1597 ... R at that wilbe shalbe ... xxxxijs 

            In modern English: 6th January, 1597 ... Received at That Will Be Shall Be ... 42 shillings

            Today is Twelfth Night, the end of the Christmas season, and a day of festivity. On this day, the Admiral's Men revived That Will Be Shall Be, an enigmatic lost play. You can read more about this play in the entry for 30 December, 1596.

            This is another good result for That Will Be Shall Be, which has attracted a larger than average crowd to the Rose on its third performance, despite being performed three times in just one week. However, these big audiences may be due to the Christmas festivities, so we will see if the play continues to be popular next week. 


            A female archer tries to take down a war elephant. The man on the
            right appears to share the sentiments of this play's title.
            From the Smithfield Decretals (c.1340)



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            Tuesday 5 January 2021

            5 January, 1597 - Doctor Faustus

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

            Henslowe writes: ye 5 of Jenewary 1597 ... R at docterfostes ... vs

            In modern English: 5th January, 1597 ... Received at Doctor Faustus ... 5 shillings

            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, 1594.

            Dr Faustus was last seen at the Rose three weeks ago, and its box office keeps getting worse. There seems to be little mileage left in this old classic. 


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            Monday 4 January 2021

            4 January, 1597 - Nebuchadnezzar

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

            Henslowe writes: ye 4 of Jenewary 1597 ... R at nabucadonizer ... xvjs 
            In modern English: 4th January, 1597 ... Received at Nebuchadnezzar ... 16 shillings

            Nebuchadnezzar's dream
            of the tree, from
            Speculum Humanae
            Salvationis
            , a 15th-
            century French manuscript
            Today, the Admiral's Men performed Nebuchadnezzar, their Biblical drama about the Babylonian king whose dreams were interpreted by the prophet Daniel. You can read more about this play in the entry for 18 December, 1596

            The rollercoaster ride of the Christmastide season continues, as two successful performances are followed by this very disappointing one for Nebuchadnezzar. Londoners are not in festive mood every single day of the Christmas season.

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            Sunday 3 January 2021

            3 January, 1597 - That Will Be Shall Be

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

            Henslowe writes: ye 3 of Jenewary 1597 ... R at that wilbe shalbe ... xxxxijs 

            In modern English: 3rd January, 1597 ... Received at That Will Be Shall Be ... 42 shillings

            Today, the Admiral's Men revived That Will Be Shall Be, an enigmatic lost play. You can read more about this play in the entry for 30 December, 1596.

            London's theatregoers seem to have responded favourably to That Will Be Shall Be, which premiered a few days ago to a large audience, and has received a similarly sized audience today. This is an encouraging sign, although it may be due to the ongoing Christmas festivities, rather than to the quality of the play itself.

            A female archer tries to take down a war elephant. The man on the
            right appears to share the sentiments of this play's title.
            From the Smithfield Decretals (c.1340)




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            Friday 1 January 2021

            1 January, 1597 - Vortigern

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

            Henslowe writes: ye 1 of Jenewary 1596 ... R at valteger ... xxxxvs 
            In modern English: 1st January, [1597] ... Received at Vortigern ... 45 shillings

            Vortigern in his burning
            castle. From a 14th-century
            manuscript of Peter of
            Langtoft's Chronicle of
            England.
              
            Happy New Year! On the first day of 1597, an important holiday in the Elizabethan calendar, the Admiral's Men have chosen to perform Vortigern, their play about the legendary British king whose actions brought about the arrival of the Anglo-Saxons in Britain. You can read more about this play in the entry for 4th December, 1596

            The box office for Vortigern is greatly improved today, no doubt because many Londoners are in festive mood again. 


            What's next?


            There will be no blog entry tomorrow, as 2 January was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 3rd, for a week that will include the surprise return of an old favourite. 

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