Agamemnon
Thomas Dekker, Henry Chettle (1599)
Historical Records
Payments to Playwrights (Henslowe's Diary)
F. 63 (Greg, I.109)
- lent vnto mr dickers & mr chettell the 26 of
- maye 1599 in earneste of a Boocke called [troylles
- & creseda] ʌ the tragede of Agamemnon the some of ………… xxxs
- Lent vnto Robarte shawe the 30 of maye
- 1599 in fulle payment of ther Boocke called
- the tragedie of Agamemnone the some of….iijll vs
- to mr dickers & hary chettell
Payments, Miscellaneous (Henslowe's Diary)
- pd vnto the mr of Revelles man for lycensynge
- of a Boocke called the tragedie of agamemnon
- the 3 of June 1599 ………… vijs
Theatrical Provenance
The Admiral's men acquired "Agamemnon" when they were playing at the Rose, but plans to build the Fortune were already underway. Depending on when the play was debuted as well as how long a run it enjoyed, it might have remained in the company's repertory into September 1600, by which time the move to the Fortune had been accomplished.
Probable Genre(s)
Harbage calls "Agamemnon" a classical legend; Wiggins tags it a tragedy (#1186), as does Henslowe.
Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues
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References to the Play
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Critical Commentary
Greg (II, 260) was inclined to lump "Agamemnon" with another lost play in May 1599, "Orestes' Furies", which neither Malone, Collier, nor Fleay had previously done. He mused that the 5s. paid Chettle for the play about Orestes would more nearly bring payments to Dekker for "Agamemnon" up to the usual £6 fee (II, 202 #174). Chambers claims to agree with Greg but observes contradictorily that the two titles "point to two plays by Chettle and Dekker rather than one" (ES, 2.169n).
Gurr uses the titles interchangeably: the index item for "Agamemnon" sends the reader to "Orestes Furies", to which entry he attaches "or the Tragedy of Agamemnon" (314); the appendix similarly lumps the plays (244, #125). However, in one context Gurr calls the play "Agamemnon" (29) and in another, Chettle and Dekker's "Orestes Furies" (105).
Wiggins both subsumes "Orestes' Furies" into "Agamemnon," subordinating the plot line of the son's madness to the narrative of the father's return from Troy. pPersuaded in part by the timeline of the two stories, Wiggins also opines that Dekker's workload in 1599-1600 was too heavy for yet another full-length play, even if co-authored (#1186).
For What It's Worth
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Works Cited
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