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  • | [[Barnardo and Fiammetta ]]||[[1595]]||[[:category:Admiral's|Admiral's]] | [[Bellendon|Bellendon, or Belin Dun]]||[[1594]]||[[:category:Admiral's|Admiral's]]
    4 KB (654 words) - 16:22, 7 December 2022
  • ...agedy)]]||[[1602]]||[[Middleton, Thomas|Middleton]]||[[:category:Admiral's|Admiral's]] ...lizabeth)]] & [[:category:Sussex's|Sussex's]], later [[:category:Admiral's|Admiral's]]
    6 KB (847 words) - 11:39, 9 January 2023
  • |company=Pembroke's, later Admiral's ...s that the book, i.e., "The Cobbler" had recently been in the repertory of Pembroke's men.
    6 KB (793 words) - 15:46, 3 October 2022
  • |company=Admiral's ...e opinion that [[Burbon (i.e. Bourbon?)|"Burbon"]] had made its debut with Pembroke's men, who had most recently been playing at the Swan (#1076).
    4 KB (604 words) - 11:36, 3 October 2022
  • ...r. Its staging in proximity to the Admiral's acquisition of old plays from Pembroke's men invites consideration that this play too had belonged to that company.< [[category:Secondhand plays]][[category:Pembroke's]]
    6 KB (947 words) - 14:27, 24 August 2022
  • ...t a copy of " a booke Called the fow''er'' sones of Aymon," offered to the Admiral's men as an option for performance at the [[:category:Fortune|Fortune]] withi A decade later, in ''An Apology for Actors'' (1612), Thomas Heywood wrote about the perfor
    9 KB (1,457 words) - 16:12, 20 October 2020
  • ...thinking thereby to accommodate assignments either to the Admiral's men or Pembroke's men. ...a contrarian argument that "Dead Man's Fortune" belonged to [[:Pembroke's|Pembroke's]] men in 1592-3. Knutson agrees with McMillin. The most stable fact in any
    20 KB (3,201 words) - 15:08, 18 April 2022
  • "Martin Swarte, his Life and Death" was performed by the Admiral's men at the Rose playhouse; Henslowe's enigmatic "ne" indicates that the pla ...1597 given the influx of players and playbooks from the recently disbanded Pembroke's men; one issue he considers is what companies might have done with incoming
    13 KB (1,982 words) - 15:59, 14 February 2024
  • ...ds another pair of plays on the inventory list to the group migrating from Pembroke's: [[Hardicanute (Canute)|"Hardicanewtes"]] and [[Burbon (i.e. Bourbon?)|"Bo ...use Cranmer's Catholic enemies a good deal of snobbishly malicious glee in later years: starting within a few months of his becoming Archbishop, the simple
    16 KB (2,528 words) - 11:37, 30 September 2022
  • |company=Admiral's Hadsor, in this letter and in his later ''Discourse'', was operating as a "legal representative in England" for the
    21 KB (3,135 words) - 17:33, 4 October 2022
  • |company=Admiral's The Admiral's men played "Alexander and Lodowick" at the Rose playhouse from January thro
    22 KB (3,083 words) - 11:48, 19 May 2023
  • ====Bond, William Bird (Borne) with the Admiral's men in Philip Henslowe's diary==== ...m Bird ("borne"), who is here contracting with Philip Henslowe to join the Admiral's men (as witnessed by Edward Alleyn and a man named Robsone). It sets the te
    40 KB (6,428 words) - 20:58, 10 March 2021
  • ...Greg opined that it and "Hester and Ahasuerus" had previously belonged to Pembroke's men ([http://www.archive.org/stream/henslowesdiary02hensuoft#page/105/mode/ ...s, however, the counsellor will have concealed himself in the chamber, and later will reveal to Feng whatever he discovers. The Queen knows no more of this
    44 KB (7,026 words) - 17:40, 11 October 2020
  • ...ngton. Because it does not appear in Henslowe's records after 10 June (the Admiral's men are believed to return to the Rose by 15 June), many theater historians ...meditations thereupon, diuine and morall'' in 1621. Though obviously much later than ''Hester and Ahasuerus'', Quarles's poem is rich in the kind of charac
    33 KB (5,301 words) - 13:32, 4 October 2022