Category:Richard Burbage
Richard Burbage, son of James Burbage and younger brother of Cuthbert Burbage, was the leading player of the Chamberlain's men as constituted in 1594; at his father's death (February 1597), Richard became a leading businessman with the company as well, having the Globe playhouse and later also Blackfriars Playhouse under his and his brother Cuthbert's control.
Player
Richard Burbage first appears in records connected with the theatrical world of London in a lawsuit in the Court of Chancery in 1589-90 concerning business at the Shoreditch playhouse, the Theater.
brawl at the Theater, 1590
differences of opinion about his company affiliation, 1591-94; anecdote about playing Richard III (John Manningham)
June 1594-98
Christmas, 1598-Sept 1619
other: character with Kempe in 2 Return from Parnasus; apears as self in Induction to The Malcontent 1604 (with Condell and Lowin; 1618, pageant celebrating the announcement of Prince Henry as Prince of Wales
Businessman
Berry,"The Theatre," pp. 320-387; "The Curtain," pp. 404-18; "The first Globe," pp. 493-500; "The second Blackfriars," pp. 501-30.
Theater
Curtain
Pembroke's men??
Blackfriars
Globe
2nd Blackfriars
Family
St. Leonard's Shoreditch
- Julia (?Juliet), christened 2 January 1603; buried 12 September 1608
- Frances, christened 16 September 1604; buried 16 September 1604
- Anne, christened 8 August 1607
- Richard, buried 16 August 1607
- Winifred, christened 10 October 1613; buried 16 October 1616
- Julia, christened 27 December 1614; buried 15 August 1615
- William, christened 6 November 1616
- Sara, christened 5 August 1619; buried 29 April 1625
- Richard (himself) buried 16 March 1619
Numerous elegies and elegiac references followed Richard Burbage's death for years afterwards; the most succinct: "Exit Burbage" (Nungezer, p. 73)
Closeness with brother Cuthbert: bought houses together in 1608, also 1617 (Eccles, 43)
Roles
Presumably, Burbage was the lead adult male player in the Chamberlain's men after its formation by June 1594 as well as in the King's men; a list of those roles being lengthy, the focus here is on his roles in lost plays.
- ?Urganda ?King Egereon, ?Eschines, "The Dead Man's Fortune" (Guesses: Greg, "Urganda," pp. 102-3, note to ll. 34-6; McMillin, King Egereon, p. 239; Bradley, Eschines, p. 97).
- King Gorboduc ("Envy"), Tereus ("Lechery"), "The Second Part of the Seven Deadly Sins"
Works Cited