Category:Thomas Downton: Difference between revisions
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Thomas Downtown was a player with a lengthy career with the | Thomas Downtown was a player with a lengthy theatrical career. His early career brought him into the circle of professionals at the Rose playhouse (perhaps initially as a member of Strange's men), and he joined the Admiral's men in 1594. He moved to Pembroke's men c. 1596, but returned to the Admiral's when Pembroke's broke with Francis Langley and the Swan playhouse in late summer 1597. As Philip Henslowe's records of business at the Rose demonstrate, Downton was active in financial and theatrical transactions. He remained with the company through its changes of patronage (Prince Henry's men, Palsgrave's men). Also, he changed residences from St. Saviour's to St. Giles Cripplegate when the company left the Rose for the Fortune playhouse in 1600 (Nungezer, pp. 117-19). | ||
Aspects of his personal life are also well documented. Apparently by his wife Ann ("Annes"), who died in 1618 (Eccles, p. 46), Downton (tagged as a "musycyon") was the father of Christopher, christened on 27 December 1592; Thomas, 25 May 1600 (tagged "baseborne"), Francis, 18 April 1597, and Thomas, 11 July 1621 (Nungezer, p. 119). After Ann's death, Downton married Jane Easton, by which means he acquired the Red Cross tavern, which he ran until his death in 1625 (Eccles, p. 46). In his will, dated 5 August 1625, Downton reveals a family conflict, in that he gives his son "Thomas" his "librarie of books both of Devinitie & humainitie" except for those his wife might like to have (Honigmann and Brock, p. 146). He adds, "because my sonn hath bin a desperat sonn to me I giue a desperate legacy ffyfty pownd''es'' of | |||
====Works Cited==== | |||
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Eccles, Mark. "Elizabethan Actors I: A-D," ''Notes and Queries'' 236.1 (1991): 38-48.</div> | |||
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Honigmann, E. A. J. and Susan Brock. ''Playhouse Wills 1558-1642''. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1993.</div> | |||
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Nungezer, Edwin. ''A Dictionary of Actors''. New York: Greenwood Press, 1968 (orig. Yale University Press, 1929).</div> | |||
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Revision as of 14:47, 22 February 2022
Thomas Downtown was a player with a lengthy theatrical career. His early career brought him into the circle of professionals at the Rose playhouse (perhaps initially as a member of Strange's men), and he joined the Admiral's men in 1594. He moved to Pembroke's men c. 1596, but returned to the Admiral's when Pembroke's broke with Francis Langley and the Swan playhouse in late summer 1597. As Philip Henslowe's records of business at the Rose demonstrate, Downton was active in financial and theatrical transactions. He remained with the company through its changes of patronage (Prince Henry's men, Palsgrave's men). Also, he changed residences from St. Saviour's to St. Giles Cripplegate when the company left the Rose for the Fortune playhouse in 1600 (Nungezer, pp. 117-19).
Aspects of his personal life are also well documented. Apparently by his wife Ann ("Annes"), who died in 1618 (Eccles, p. 46), Downton (tagged as a "musycyon") was the father of Christopher, christened on 27 December 1592; Thomas, 25 May 1600 (tagged "baseborne"), Francis, 18 April 1597, and Thomas, 11 July 1621 (Nungezer, p. 119). After Ann's death, Downton married Jane Easton, by which means he acquired the Red Cross tavern, which he ran until his death in 1625 (Eccles, p. 46). In his will, dated 5 August 1625, Downton reveals a family conflict, in that he gives his son "Thomas" his "librarie of books both of Devinitie & humainitie" except for those his wife might like to have (Honigmann and Brock, p. 146). He adds, "because my sonn hath bin a desperat sonn to me I giue a desperate legacy ffyfty powndes of
Works Cited
Pages in category "Thomas Downton"
The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.