French Doctor
Historical Records
Performance Records (Henslowe's Diary)
F. 10 (Greg, I.19)
ye 18 of octobʒ 1594 Res at the frenshe docter xxijs
ye 28 of octobʒ 1594 Res at the frenshe docter xvs ye 18 of novmbʒ 1594 Res at the frenshe docter xxvijs
ye 3 of Jenewary 1594 Res at the frenshe docter xxjs ye 30 of Jenewary 1594 Res at the frenshe docter xviijs ye 7 of febreary 1594 Res at the frenshe docter xxjs
ye 24 of febreary 1594 Res at the frensh doctor xxxxxiiijs ye easter mondaye 1595 Res at the ffrenshe doctor liijs ye 3 of may 1595 Res at the frenshe docter xjs
ye 2[3]4 of maye 1595 Res at the frenshe docter xxijs
ye 19 of septmbʒ 1595 Res at the frenshe doctor xvjs
ye 4 of July 1596 Res at frenshe dacter xiiijs
ye 29 of octobʒ 1596 Res at the frenshe docter xvs ye 9 of novmbʒ 1596 Res at the frenshe docter xiiijs
Payments to Edward Alleyn for Playbooks
F. 96 (Greg. I.153)
- pd at the apoyntment of the companye the }
- 18 of Janewary 1601 vnto E Alleyn for iij boockes }
- wch were played called the french docter the } vjli
- massaker of france & the nvtte the some of }
Theatrical Provenance
The Admiral's men brought "The French Doctor" to the stage of the Rose in October 1594 and continued it into the autumn season of 1596-7. However, any clarity about its pre-October provenance is complicated by the fact that Henslowe did not mark the play "ne" at its debut in his records (autumn, 1594). Theater historians consequently assume that the play was in revival.
But where had it been when new, and with which company?
Harbage, under the heading "1590, Addenda," listed "The French Doctor" with more than several dozen plays that appear in Henslowe's diary in playlists for Strange's men (1592-3) and the Admiral's men (1594-5) without that distinguishing "ne" (Harbage includes also "Hester and Ahasuerus"). He thus implied a pre-1590 debut for each item, though he assigned each to the company that performed it in Henslowe's 1592-4 records.
Wiggins, Catalogue focuses on Edward Alleyn as the key to the pre-1594 provenance of "The French Doctor" (#833; see also #785 for a broader treatment of the Admiral's non-"ne" plays in 1594-5). Offering several scenarios for the stage life and company/player ownership of "The French Doctor" before October 1594, he is comfortable only with the conclusion that the play had been in Alleyn's hands for some time before its sale to the Admiral's men in 1602.
See Critical Commentary for more on issues of provenance.)
Probable Genre(s)
Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues
See Critical Commentary for scholarly thinking on plays and narratives related to "The French Doctor" if its title is a mask for some other play.
References to the Play
None known.
Critical Commentary
Collier, seeking an extant play that featured a French doctor, associated The Wisdom of Doctor Dodypol with "The French Doctor" (p. 43, n1).
Fleay, BCED followed Collier's logic to a different play, suggesting that "The French Doctor" was "[p]robably" Thomas Dekker's lost "Jew of Venice" (I, Dekker, #3; II, Anon., #137). Pursuing the Dekker connection, Fleay suggested further a connection with the German play, The Righteous Judgment of a Girl Graduate, or The Jew of Venice."
Greg II added "The Venetian Comedy," a play sharing the 1594-5 repertory of the Admiral's men with "The French Doctor," to the brew of plays in some way duplicating one another (p. 170, #57). Influenced (apparently) by Fleay's linking of "The French Doctor" with Dekker's "Jew of Venice," Greg offered this explanation: "If then VC ["the Venetian Comedy"] and FD ["The French Doctor"] were identical, they must have contained the story of the Jew of Venice, and were presumably the same as Dekker JV ["Jew of Venice"]."
Knutson applies the concept of duplication to plays "with similar characters or with similar titles" (Repertory, 49). She sees these duplications not as "mistakes in the diary for one seminal text and/or versions, revisions, or thefts of a single text" (as Fleay's duplications imply), but as evidence that companies copied "the subject matter and genre of popular offerings" in their own repertory and that of their competitors (Repertory, 50). As an example, she examines the scheduling of two plays staged by the Admiral's men along with "The French Doctor": "The Wise Man of West Chester" and Marlowe's Doctor Faustus in 1594-5 when the three appear "to have formed a trio ... in the sense that one play or another was offered in twenty-eight of the thirty-two weeks" from late September 1594 through June 1595 ("Marlowe Reruns, 37). To this confluence, she adds closely related scheduling in October 1596 ("The French Doctor," Doctor Faustus) and the revivals of friar/doctor plays in 1602-3, now including a "Friar Bacon."
Gurr tentatively assigns "the French Doctor" a date of 1593 (210); commenting on its age, he observes that the "relatively small initial taking also suggest that it was not new" (210, n26).
Wiggins, Catalogue #833, questions the genre of the play; he points out that, based on doctor characters generally, this French doctor "may have been either a comic figure or a poisoner."
For What It's Worth
Although an old play in October 1594, “The French Doctor” continued to have significant commercial value.
1. Its receipts for the dozen performances in the 1594-5 season averaged a respectable 26s per show.
2. Its receipts for two shows in the 1595-6 season and two more at the start of the 1596-7 season dropped to an average of 15s, but the very fact that it continued to be staged suggests another category of value: playability. That is, after having been retired in September 1595, it could be revived months later (July 1596) for a single show.
3. Its commercial value was further demonstrated in the autumn of 1596. The season at the Rose started late: October 27 (compared to June 15 in 1594 and August 25 in 1595). Further, the Admiral’s men did not introduce a “ne” play for more than a month (“Valteger,” December 4; comparatively, in June 1594 and August 1595, they had a new play up in about a week). The company therefore was relying on nine plays from its old repertory to begin its season, one of which was “The French Doctor.”
4. Five years later (January 1602), "The French Doctor" was still a valuable enough property for the Admiral's men to buy it from Edward Alleyn, along with another old play (“Crack Me This Nut,” which also had last been on stage in 1596-7) and even older but more recently revived Massacre at Paris (c. November 1601).
Works Cited
Site created and maintained by Roslyn L. Knutson, Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; updated 17 June 2019.