Friday, 30 April 2021

30 April, 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:  30 |  tt at what wilbe shalbe ... | 00 | 14
In modern English: 30th [April, 1597]  ... total at What Will Be Shall Be ... 14 shillings 

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

The company seems to have decided to perform That Will Be Shall Be only about once a month, apparently regarding it as one of their less important plays. Today's box office is better than last time but still unimpressive.


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)



What's next?


There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 1 May was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 2nd - see you then!


Henslowe links



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Thursday, 29 April 2021

29 April, 1597 - Uther Pendragon

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

Henslowe writes: 29 | ne | tt at vterpendragon ... | 02 | 14

In modern English: 29th [April, 1597] ... new ... total at Uther Pendragon ... £2 and 14 shillings [i.e. 54 shillings]

Today, the Admiral's Men introduced a new play! Like so much of their repertory, Uther Pendragon is lost, but this time its title clearly indicates its subject matter: the legend of the father of King Arthur. No doubt Merlin the magician appeared in this play, since Henslowe's 1598 inventory of costumes lists a "Merlin gown and cape".

Uther Pendragon from a 1255
manuscript copy
of Matthew
Paris's Epitome of Chronicles 
There must be a connection with another play that the Admiral's Men were performing until recently, Vortigern. As we have seen, that play was about the eponymous Briton warlord who killed and usurped King Constantius, forcing his brothers, Aurelius and Uther, to flee. So it seems likely that Uther Pendragon was a sequel about their return. 


The legends of Uther


In the legends of British history, the brothers Aurelius and Uther return to Britain to reclaim the throne following Vortigern's death; as the eldest, Aurelius is crowned. The author of Uther Pendragon could have found the story in many sources, but the most famous is Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain (1136).

Geoffrey tells many tales about Uther. In one of them (perhaps a little difficult to stage), he helps Merlin to bring stones from Ireland to build Stonehenge. Another is about his accession to the throne: Uther sees a comet in the shape of a dragon and Merlin regards this as a sign of his glorious future; sure enough, he wins a battle and thus takes on the name 'Pendragon'. Aurelius is then assassinated and Uther becomes King. 

Uther Pendragon and Merlin, from British
Library manuscript Royal 20 A II
(early 14th century)
Another famous legend concerns Uther and Igerna (better known today as Igraine), the wife of Gorlois, Duke of Cornwall. Uther falls in love with her at a feast. Gorlois keeps Igerna within the fortress of Tintagel, but Uther secures the magical aid of Merlin, who enables him to assume the appearance of Gorlois, enter the castle and have sex with her. Subsequently, Gorlois is killed and Uther marries her; their son is Arthur. Merlin takes the baby away, and he is raised away from the court.

The end of Uther's story is spectacular too. Civil war breaks out in Britain and, despite being ill, Uther has himself carried on a litter to lead his troops to victory at Verulam (St Albans), after which he dies.


Uther in Elizabethan London


These stories were popular in Elizabethan England. In his study of Arthurian drama, Paul Whitfield White notes that Shakespeare's First Part of Henry VI (staged at the Rose a few years ago) includes a reference to "that stout Pendragon", who "in his litter sick, / Came to the field and vanquishèd his foes" (Act 3, scene 5).

George Clifford in tilting attire;
portrait by Nicholas Hilliard (c.1590)
What is more, thousands of Londoners would have seen Uther and Merlin during the annual Accession Day tilts (jousting competitions) in November. White explains that the Queen's official champion, George Clifford, Earl of Cumberland, would arrive dressed as Uther Pendragon, an allusion to his family seat at Pendragon Castle in Cumbria and to his family crest of the red dragon. A stage castle was erected in the tiltyard and an actor playing Merlin recited a prophecy about a red and a white dragon (which we learned about in the entry on Vortigern); Merlin's vision of the future was then staged as Arthur and his knights emerged from the castle. Perhaps the play was in part a tribute to Clifford,  who had a link to the Admiral's Men: a brilliant naval officer, he had fought the Spanish alongside the company's patron, the Lord Admiral Charles Howard


The play


We don't know which of these legends appeared in Uther Pendragon. However, it's possible to glimpse what it might have been like by looking at a later play, William Rowley's The Birth of Merlin (1622). The play is primarily about Uther's older brother Aurelius and his manipulation by a wicked Saxon princess, but it does depict Uther going to fight Vortigern and the comet that prophesies his triumph:

Blazing star appears. 

UTHER. Look, Edol:
Still this fiery exalation shoots
His frightful horrors on th'amazed world;
See, in the beam that's 'bout his flaming ring,
A dragons head appears, from out whose mouth
Two flaming flakes of fire stretch east and west.

EDOL. And see, from forth the body of the star
Seven smaller blazing streams directly point
On this affrighted kingdom.

The Birth of Merlin ends with Uther ascending the throne and Merlin creating a spectacular vision of the life and death of his future son, King Arthur:

Merlin strikes. Hoeboys. Enter a king in armour, his shield quartered with thirteen crowns. At the other door enter divers princes who present their crowns to him at his feet, and do him homage; then enters Death and strikes him; he, growing sick, crowns Constantine. Exeunt.

Perhaps today's play had similar kinds of theatrical spectacle. 

Whatever happened in the play of Uther Pendragon, today's box office is very encouraging. The last two premieres have been disappointing, but this one has drawn a much bigger crowd, almost filling the Rose. Things may be returning to the way they used to be.



FURTHER READING


Uther Pendragon information


  • Andrew Gurr, Shakespeare's Opposites: The Admiral's Company, 1594-1625 (Cambridge University Press, 2009), 228.
  • Martin Wiggins, British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue, vol. 3 (Oxford University Press, 2013), entry 1070.
  • Paul Whitfield White, "The Admiral's Lost Arthurian Plays," in Lost Plays in Shakespeare's England, edited by David McInnis and Matthew Steggle (Palgrave, 2014), 153-5.
  • Roslyn L. Knutson, "Uther Pendragon", Lost Plays Database (2019), accessed April, 2021.

Henslowe links


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Wednesday, 28 April 2021

28 April, 1597 - Belin Dun

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

Henslowe writes: 28 | mr pd | R at bellendon | 001 | 00

In modern English: 28th [April, 1597] ... Master paid ... Received at Belin Dun ... £1 [i.e. 20 shillings]

A highwayman portrayed in Richard
Head's The English Rogue (1666)
Today, the Admiral's Men performed Belin Dun, their lost play about the notorious robber who terrorized the highways around Dunstable during the reign of King Henry I; you can read more about this play in the entry for 10 June, 1594.

The company has been performing Belin Dun about once a week since its return to the repertory. After a decline last week, today's result is higher again.  

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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Tuesday, 27 April 2021

27 April, 1597 - Alexander and Lodowick

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

Henslowe writes: 26 | R at elexsander & lodwicke ... | 01 | 1 02

In modern English: 26th [April, 1597] ... received at Alexander and Lodowick ... £1 and 2 shillings [i.e. 22 shillings]

A very generic illustration accompanying the
printed text of the ballad of The Two Faithful
Friends: The Pleasant History of Alexander
and Lodowick
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Alexander and Lodowick, a lost play about two friends who swap places. You can read more about this play in the entry for 14 January

The company has waited a fortnight to revive Alexander and Lodwick after previously having staged it once a week. This appears to have improved its box office slightly, as if the play had been missed. 

Henslowe links



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Monday, 26 April 2021

26 April, 1597 - A French Comedy

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

Henslowe writes: 22 | tt at frenshe comodey ...  | 01 | 02

In modern English: 26th [April, 1597] | total at French Comedy |  £1 and 2 shillings [i.e. 22 shillings]

Antoine Watteau, Actors of the
Comédie-Française
(1710s)
Today, the Admiral's Men performed A French Comedy, a lost play. You can read more about this play in the entry for 18 April.

The company is pushing their new comedy hard, with three performances in just over a week. Today's box office is not especially high, but it remains the same as last time, so the play is not in decline yet. 


Henslowe links


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Sunday, 25 April 2021

25 April, 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: 25 | tt at v playes in one | 01 | 13
In modern English: 25th [April, 1597] ... total at Five Plays in One ... £1 and 13 shillings [i.e. 33 shillings]

The number 5 in a
column of figures
in Henslowe's Diary
Today, the Admiral's Men 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

The company has returned these plays to the stage after only five days and the result is surprisingly strong - there may be life in the five plays yet.

Henslowe links


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Friday, 23 April 2021

23 April, 1597 - Guido

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

Henslowe writes: 23 | tt at gvido | 00 | 16

In modern English: 23rd [April, 1597] ... total at Guido ... 16 shillings

Guido Cavalcanti, one
of the possible subjects
of this play, in a painting
by Cristofano dell'Altissimo 
Today, for the last time, the Admiral's Men performed Guido, an enigmatic lost play that might have been about the poet Guido Cavalcanti. You can read more about this play in the entry for 19 March.

This is a surprise: Guido's appearance today is its last one in the Diary, after only five performances. The play had been returning solid box office, but the Admiral's Men have ignored it for nearly three weeks, and today's audience is smaller. Many other plays have done far worse, but for some reason the company will decide that this one is not worth their time. Farewell Guido, we hardly knew you! 

What's next?


There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 24 April was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 25th - see you then!


Henslowe links



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Thursday, 22 April 2021

22 April, 1597 - A French Comedy

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

Henslowe writes: 22 | tt at a frenshe comodey ...  | 01 | 02

In modern English: 22nd [April, 1597] | total at A French Comedy |  £1 and 2 shillings [i.e. 22 shillings]

Antoine Watteau, Actors of the
Comédie-Française
(1710s)
Today, the Admiral's Men performed A French Comedy, a lost play. You can read more about this play in the entry for 18 April.

This is the second performance of A French Comedy, which the company debuted only four days ago. Unfortunately, its prospects are not looking good; the box office is already half what it was. 


Henslowe links


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Wednesday, 21 April 2021

21 April, 1597 - Hieronimo

Here's what Lord Strange's Men performed at the Rose playhouse on this day, 424 years ago...
Henslowe writes: 21 | tt at Jeronymo ... | 00 | 17

In modern English: 21st [April, 1597] ... total at Hieronimo ... 17 
shillings 

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

The company has waited six weeks to return this classic to the stage, but the box office is now in decline. 


    Henslowe links



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    Tuesday, 20 April 2021

    20 April, 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: 20 | tt at v playes in one | 00 | 19
    In modern English: 20th [April, 1597] ... total at Five Plays in One ... 19 shillings

    The number 5 in a
    column of figures
    in Henslowe's Diary
    Today, the Admiral's Men 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 third outing for Five Plays in One just a few days after the last one and its box office is already poor. No chance of a sleeper hit here, it would seem.

    Henslowe links


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    Monday, 19 April 2021

    19 April, 1597 - Belin Dun

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

    Henslowe writes: 19 | tt at belendon | 00 | 09

    In modern English: 19th [April, 1597] ... total at Belin Dun ... 9 shillings

    A highwayman portrayed in Richard
    Head's The English Rogue (1666)
    Today, the Admiral's Men performed Belin Dun, their lost play about the notorious robber who terrorized the highways around Dunstable during the reign of King Henry I; you can read more about this play in the entry for 10 June, 1594.

    The company has waited just over a week to restage Belin Dun. But on its third performance after its return to the repertory, the box office is already disastrous. 

    Henslowe links



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    Sunday, 18 April 2021

    18 April, 1597 - A French Comedy

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

    Henslowe writes: 18 | ne | tt at a frenshe comedie ...  | 02 | 00

    In modern English: 18th [April, 1597] | New | Total at A French Comedy |  £2 [i.e. 40 shillings]


    Antoine Watteau, Actors of the
    Comédie-Française
    (1710s)
    Today, the Admiral's Men premiered a new play! But A French Comedy is unfortunately lost. Confusingly enough, it has (almost) the same title as The French Comedy, a play that the company performed a few times back in 1595. I assume that this is a different play, as Henslowe marks it "ne" for "new".

    As with the previous lost French comedy, we do not know what the content of this one was. No doubt it mocked the French, but in what way?

    The play's debut is inauspicious, with an audience much smaller than what might be expected for a premiere.


    FURTHER READING


    A French Comedy information


    • Andrew Gurr, Shakespeare's Opposites: The Admiral's Company, 1594-1625 (Cambridge University Press, 2009), 228.
    • Rosyln L. Knutson, "French Comedy, A", Lost Plays Database (2019), accessed April, 2021. 
    • Martin Wiggins, British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue, vol. 3 (Oxford University Press, 2013), entry 1066.


    Henslowe links


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    Friday, 16 April 2021

    16 April, 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: 16 | tt at womon hard to please | 00 | 05 

    In  modern English: 16th [April, 1597] ... total at Woman Hard to Please ... 5 shillings


    A woman looks deeply unimpressed by her
    rescuer in Paolo Uccello's St George and
    the Dragon
    (c.1470)
    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.

    The company has waited only a week to bring back A Woman Hard to Please despite its tiny audience last time. Yet today's audience is exactly the same size. It may be time to ease up on staging this play.

    What's next?


    There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 17 April was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 18th. See you then!

    Henslowe links



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    Thursday, 15 April 2021

    15 April, 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: 15 | tt at v playes in one | 01 | 08
    In modern English: 15th [April, 1597] ... total at Five Plays in One ... £1 and 8 shilling [i.e. 28 shillings]

    The number 5 in a
    column of figures
    in Henslowe's Diary
    Today, the Admiral's Men 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 second outing for Five Plays in One and it has not improved on its disappointing premiere. Word of mouth does not seem to be helping its prospects greatly. 

    Henslowe links


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    Wednesday, 14 April 2021

    14 April, 1597 - Captain Thomas Stukeley

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

    Henslowe writes: 14 | tt at stewtley ... | 00 | 17  
    In modern English: 14th [April, 1597] ... Received at Stukeley ... 17 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.

    This is the first performance of Stukeley for a month; the company is performing it less often than some of its other plays. The wait has not done anything for its box office, which has slumped after its recent improvement.

    Henslowe links



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    Tuesday, 13 April 2021

    13 April, 1597 - Time's Triumph and Fortune's

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

    Henslowe writes: 13 | tt at times triumpe and fortus | 01| 05

    In modern English: 13th [April, 1597] | total at Time's Triumph and Fortune's | £1 and 5 shillings [i.e. 25 shillings]

    Today, the Admiral's Men performed a play that we have not seen before at the Rose! Time's Triumph and Fortune's is not marked as a new play, so it must be an old one from the archives. But this is another of those strange days when a play is performed only once and never repeated.  

    Father Time in a detail from Poussin's
    A Dance to the Music of Time (1634-6)
    The title is strange too; it's not even clear if it is complete. It could mean 'The Triumph of Time and of Fortune'. Or there might be a word missing; in his catalogue of British drama, Martin Wiggins wonders whether it is related to a mysterious lost play called The Second Part of Fortune's Tennis of which no first part is been recorded; Time's Triumph and Fortune's Tennis certainly sounds right. However, Wiggins continues that such a title would be illogical, because if Time triumphs, it must be because its implacable inevitability defeats the temporary reversals of fortune; he thus proposes that Time's Triumph and Fortune's Fall would be more logical as well as alliterative. Logic and Renaissance drama don't always mix, however...

    For some reason, the scholarship on this lost play makes no mention of Robert Greene's prose romance Pandosto, or, the Triumph of Time (1588), a tale of two friends torn apart by jealousy and a daughter separated from her father, which Shakespeare transformed into The Winter's Tale around 1610. Could there be a connection? 

    Whatever its subject matter, Time's Triumph and Fortune's has received an unspectacular audience on this, its one appearance, and will never be seen again. 


    FURTHER READING


    Time's Triumph and Fortune's information


    • Andrew Gurr, Shakespeare's Opposites: The Admiral's Company, 1594-1625 (Cambridge University Press, 2009), 228.
    • Roslyn L. Knutson, "Time's Triumph and Fortune's", Lost Plays Database (2019), accessed April 2021. 
    • Martin Wiggins, British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue, vol. 3 (Oxford University Press, 2013), entry 1022.


    Henslowe links



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    Monday, 12 April 2021

    12 April, 1597 - Alexander and Lodowick

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

    Henslowe writes: 12 | tt at elexsander & lodwicke ... | 00 | 14

    In modern English: 12th [April, 1597] ... total at Alexander and Lodowick ... 14 shillings

    A very generic illustration accompanying the
    printed text of the ballad of The Two Faithful
    Friends: The Pleasant History of Alexander
    and Lodowick
    Today, the Admiral's Men revived Alexander and Lodowick, a lost play about two friends who swap places. You can read more about this play in the entry for 14 January

    The company has revived Alexander and Lodwick after a week. This has been one of its more solidly successful plays in the current repertory, but today's box office looks like a turn toward the doldrums.

    Henslowe links



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    Sunday, 11 April 2021

    11 April, 1597 - Belin Dun

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

    Henslowe writes: Aprell 159711 | 11 | tt at belendon | 01 | 00

    In modern English: 11th April, 1597 ... total at Belin Dun ... £1 [i.e. 20 shillings]

    A highwayman portrayed in Richard
    Head's The English Rogue (1666)
    Today, the Admiral's Men performed Belin Dun, their lost play about the notorious robber who terrorized the highways around Dunstable during the reign of King Henry I; you can read more about this play in the entry for 10 June, 1594.

    The company has waited nearly a fortnight to try Belin Dun again after its surprise return over Easter. The results are solid but do not suggest overwhelming joy. 


    Henslowe links



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    Thursday, 8 April 2021

    8 April, 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: 8 | tt at womon hard to pleasse | 00 | 05 

    In  modern English: 8th [April, 1597] ... total at Woman Hard to Please ... 5 shillings


    A woman looks deeply unimpressed by her
    rescuer in Paolo Uccello's St George and
    the Dragon
    (c.1470)
    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.

    Today's performance attracted only a tiny audience and is one of several such disasters this week. Perhaps people are staying away having visiting the theatres a lot during Easter Week.

    What's next?


    For unknown reasons, Henslowe records no performances for the next few days. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 11th. See you then!

    Henslowe links



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    Wednesday, 7 April 2021

    7 April, 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: 7 | ne | tt at v playes in one | 02 | 01
    In modern English: 7th [April, 1597] ... total at Five Plays in One ... £2 and 1 shilling [i.e. 41 shillings].

    The number 5 in a
    column of figures
    in Henslowe's Diary
    Today, the Admiral's Men performed a new play! Unfortunately, it is yet another lost play, and its title tells us very little indeed, except that it was probably a collection of one-act plays, perhaps linked by some kind of narrative device. 

    We have already encountered a lost play of this kind at the Rose, back in 1592, entitled Four Plays in One. And one theory about the lost Seven Days of the Week, is that it too was an anthology show.  We know of other lost plays of this kind, too. Thomas Middleton's one-act Yorkshire Tragedy (1607) was once part of an otherwise lost Four Plays in One. The only text of this form to survive in full is Four Plays, or Moral Representations, in One, written around 1614 by John Fletcher and his collaborators. 

    Rosyln L. Knutson's entry on Five Plays in One for the Lost Plays Database describes how early theatre historians were over-imaginative in assuming that the playlets were on Classical subjects. In truth, we know nothing at all about their subject matter. All we know is their number. 

    In terms of box office, Five Plays in One has not had an auspicious debut: the audience is small for a premiere, and it will need good word of mouth to be a success. 

    FURTHER READING


    Five Plays in One information


    Henslowe links


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    Tuesday, 6 April 2021

    6 April, 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:  6 |  tt at what wilbe & shalbe ... | 00 | 07
    In modern English: 6th [April, 1597]  ... total at What Will Be and Shall Be ... 7 shillings 

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

    This play has not been seen at the Rose since its re-opening a month ago. The box office continues to be dreadful; perhaps this one will be for the chop soon.


    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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    Monday, 5 April 2021

    5 April, 1597 - Alexander and Lodowick

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

    Henslowe writes: 5 | tt at elexsander & lodwicke ... | 01 | 02

    In modern English: 5th [April, 1597] ... total at Alexander and Lodowick ... £1 and 2 shillings [i.e. 22 shillings]

    A very generic illustration accompanying the
    printed text of the ballad of The Two Faithful
    Friends: The Pleasant History of Alexander
    and Lodowick
    Today, the Admiral's Men revived Alexander and Lodowick, a lost play about two friends who swap places. You can read more about this play in the entry for 14 January

    The company has returned the two friends to the stage a week after their popular Easter Week performance. Today's performance is less successful, but solid.

    Henslowe links



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    Sunday, 4 April 2021

    4 April, 1597 - Guido

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

    Henslowe writes: 4 | tt at gvido | 01 | 08

    In modern English: 4th [April, 1597] ... total at Guido ... £1 and 8 shillings [i.e. 28 shilings]

    Guido Cavalcanti, one
    of the possible subjects
    of this play, in a painting
    by Cristofano dell'Altissimo 
    Today, the Admiral's Men performed Guido, an enigmatic lost play that might have been about the poet Guido Cavalcanti. You can read more about this play in the entry for 19 March.

    The company has returned Guido to the stage five days after its triumphant success during Easter Week. It is still doing very well, with a the theatre nearly half full. The play may be shaping up to be a solid success.


    Henslowe links



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    Friday, 2 April 2021

    2 April, 1597 - Vortigern

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

    Henslowe writes: 2 | tt at valteger ... | 00 | 04 
    In modern English: 2 [April, 1597] ... Received at Vortigern ... 4 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

    After yesterday's sparsely attended performance of The Blind Beggar, even fewer people have shown up to Vortigern. The Rose seems to be in a slump following the highs of Easter Week. 

    It's possible that this is the last performance of Vortigern to be recorded in Henslowe's Diary, although it may reappear in the summer under a different title; watch this space...

    What's next?


    There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 3 April was a Sunday in 1597 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 4th for a week that will include a new play! 


    Henslowe links



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    Thursday, 1 April 2021

    1 April, 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: Aprelle 15971 | tt at blinde beger ... | 00 | 05

    In modern English: 1st April, 1597 ... Received at Blind Beggar ... 5 shillings

    Beggars in Alexandria; an undated photograph
    from Brooklyn Museum's Lantern Slide Collection
    Today, for the last time on record, the Admiral's Men revived The Blind Beggar of Alexandria, George Chapman's comedy about a master of disguise. You can read more about this play in the entry for 12 February, 1596.

    The Blind Beggar of Alexandria was once immensely popular, but today's takings are dismal, representing an almost empty theatre. The Admiral's Men seem to have decided that this play has run its course, because this is its last appearance in Henslowe's list of performances. 

    That doesn't mean that all is over for the blind beggar, however. Next year, in 1598, the playtext will be published for readers to enjoy. And in 1601, the Admiral's Men will restage it in their new playhouse, the Fortune; Henslowe will record the purchasing of new costumes for it, made by "Radford, the little tailor". 

    For now, though, we must say farewell to this manic comedy and wait to see what will replace it...

    Henslowe links



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