Showing posts with label Fortunatus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fortunatus. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 May 2020

26 May, 1596 - Fortunatus

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

Henslowe writes: ye 24 of maye 15956 ... R at ffortunatus ... xiiijs 

In modern English: [26th] May, 1596 ... Received at Fortunatus ... 14 shillings

Fortunatus receives the magic purse from
Lady Fortune (from the 1509 novel)
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Fortunatus, which was probably the first of a two-part play, and was the precursor of Thomas Dekker's Old Fortunatus; it told the story of a man who miraculously acquires infinite wealth. You can read more about it in the entry for 3rd February.

The players have waited two weeks to revive Fortunatus, and the box office continues to decline gradually.


Henslowe links



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Did I make a mistake? Do you have a question? Have you anything to add? Please post a comment below!

Monday, 11 May 2020

11 May, 1596 - Fortunatus

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

Henslowe writes: ye 11 of maye 15956 ... R at fortunatus ... xviijs 

In modern English: 11th May, 1596 ... Received at Fortunatus ... 18 shillings

Fortunatus receives the magic purse from
Lady Fortune (from the 1509 novel)
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Fortunatus, which was probably the first of a two-part play, and was the precursor of Thomas Dekker's Old Fortunatus; it told the story of a man who miraculously acquires infinite wealth. You can read more about it in the entry for 3rd February.

The players have waited three weeks to revive Fortunatus, and there has been no change to the box office.


Henslowe links



Comments?


Did I make a mistake? Do you have a question? Have you anything to add? Please post a comment below!

Tuesday, 14 April 2020

14 April, 1596 - Fortunatus

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

Henslowe writes: ye 14 of aprell 1596 ... R at fortunatus ... xviijs 

In modern English: 14th April, 1596 ... Received at Fortunatus ... 18 shillings

Fortunatus receives the magic purse from
Lady Fortune (from the 1509 novel)
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Fortunatus, which was probably the first of a two-part play, and was the precursor of Thomas Dekker's Old Fortunatus; it told the story of a man who miraculously acquires infinite wealth. You can read more about it in the entry for 3rd February.

We are still in the holiday season of Easter Week, but London's theatregoers show little interest in Fortunatus, resulting in a very disappointing box office.


Henslowe links



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Did I make a mistake? Do you have a question? Have you anything to add? Please post a comment below!

Friday, 21 February 2020

21 February, 1596 - Fortunatus

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

Henslowe writes: ye 20 of febreary 1595 ... R at ffortunatus ... xxijs 

In modern English: [21st] February, [1596] ... Received at Fortunatus ... 22 shillings

Fortunatus receives the magic purse from
Lady Fortune (from the 1509 novel)
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Fortunatus, which was probably the first of a two-part play, and was the precursor of Thomas Dekker's Old Fortunatus; it told the story of a man who miraculously acquires infinite wealth. You can read more about it in the entry for 3rd February.

The players have returned to Fortunatus after a week and a half, but its box office has halved, dropping from very good to not very good.


What's next?



There will be no blog entry tomorrow because 22nd February was a Sunday in 1596 and the players did not perform. Henslowe's Diary ... as a Blog! will thus return on the 23rd for some festivity during the last week of performances before Lent. See you then!


Henslowe links



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Monday, 10 February 2020

10 February, 1596 - Fortunatus

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

Henslowe writes: ye 10 of febreary 1595 ... R at forteunatus ... xxxxs 

In modern English: 10th February, [1596] ... Received at Fortunatus ... 40 shillings

Fortunatus receives the magic purse from
Lady Fortune (from the 1509 novel)
Today, the Admiral's Men revived Fortunatus, which was probably the first of a two-part play, and was the precursor of Thomas Dekker's Old Fortunatus; it told the story of a man who miraculously acquires infinite wealth. You can read more about it in the entry for 3rd February.

When Henslowe first recorded this play last week, he called it The First Part of Fortunatus, but now he just calls it Fortunatus, and no second part will ever be mentioned in his Diary. The players have brought the play back to the Rose swiftly, and  is has received comfortably high box office, suggesting that returning this old play to the stage was a good idea.


Henslowe links



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Monday, 3 February 2020

3 February, 1596 - Fortunatus

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

Henslowe writes: ye 3 of febreary 1595 ... R at the 1 p of forteunatus ... iijll 

In modern English: 3rd February, [1596] ... Received at The First Part of Fortunatus ... £3

Today, the Admiral's Men performed a play not previously been recorded at the Rose. The First Part of Fortunatus is best described as half-lost, because it may still survive today but in truncated form. Whatever, its exact nature, it retold the German legend of Fortunatus, a man who acquires infinite wealth but lives to regret it. It is a cautionary tale against selling one's soul for temporary pleasure, very much in the manner of Dr Faustus.

Is this a lost play?


There are lots of puzzles about this play, and it's best to approach them in chronological order.
  1. In 1509, an anonymous German prose novel called Fortunatus first told the story in print.
  2. Today's 1596 diary entry is the first evidence for the existence of The First Part of Fortunatus. Henslowe does not mark it "ne", which suggests that it was an old play newly revived.
  3. There is no actual evidence for the existence of a second part (except for the very fact that Henslowe called the other play The First Part - but he only calls it that in the very first diary entry; the rest he simply calls it Fortunatus).
  4. In 1599, Henslowe paid the playwright Thomas Dekker  £6 for “a book called The Whole History of Fortunatus". This appears to be a new play or a revision of the old one(s).
  5. On 20 February, 1600, a publisher registered his intention to publish "a comedy called Old Fortunatus in his New Livery". This, one assumes, was Dekker's play.
  6. Dekker's play was published the same year under the title The Pleasant Comedy of Old Fortunatus.
The mystery is whether Dekker wrote a whole new play about Fortunatus, or whether he took an old (two-part?) play from the Rose and transformed it into a new one, thus preserving elements of the original text. The second theory seems more likely because Dekker's play falls neatly into two halves, the first ending with Fortunatus's death, the second being about his sons.


The story


Fortunatus receives the magic purse from
Lady Fortune (from the 1509 novel)
If The First Part of Fortunatus did indeed tell the story of Fortunatus up to his death, then it would have begun with Fortunatus as an old man who meets a mysterious woman named Fortune in a wood. Fortune offers him a choice of six gifts: wisdom, strength, health, beauty, long life, or riches. Fortunatus chooses riches and is given a magic purse that never runs out of money. As you may predict, this was the wrong choice.



Fortnatus then goes on an epic journey around the world, having many adventures. Ultimately, he ends up in Babylon, where the Sultan shows him a magic hat that can take its wearer anywhere in the world; Fortunatus steals it.


Fortunatus steals the magic hat from the Sultan
of Babylon (from the 1509 novel)
Fortunatus has had a great deal of fun with his magical gift, but, just like Dr Faustus before him, death approaches and he realizes that he made the wrong choice, Fortunatus returns to Fortune and asks her to take back the purse in return for bestowing wisdom on his sons so that they will not make the same mistakes. But Fortune refuses, and when Fortunatus dies, his sons inherit the magic hat and purse.

Whether or not this is exactly what was staged at the Rose today, the Fortunatus play was a great success, filling the theatre with playgoers!


FURTHER READING


The First Part of Fortunatus information

  • Cyrus Hoy, Introductions, Notes, and Commentaries to Texts in 'The Dramatic Works of Thomas Dekker', vol. 1 (Cambridge University Press, 1980), 71-3
  • David McInnis, "Fortunatus, Part 1", Lost Plays Database (2011)
  • Martin Wiggins, British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue, vol. 3 (Oxford University Press, 2013), entry 843


Henslowe links



Comments?


Did I make a mistake? Do you have a question? Have you anything to add? Please post a comment below!