Almanac, The
Historical Records
Revels Accounts
1611-12.
The, names, of the Playes And by what Cumpaney Played them hearafter ffollowethe: As Allso what Maskes, and Triumphes att the Tilte waere presented before the kinges Matie in this year. 1612 |
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[…] | |||
The Queens players: | St: Iohn: Night A play Called the City Gallant | ||
The princes players: | The: Sunday, ffollowinge A Play called the Almanak | ||
The Kings Players: | On neweres, Night A Play Called the Twinnes Tragedie | ||
And Ruing [sic] att the Ring. | |||
- (National Archives, AO 3/908/14, fols. 1v, 2r; qtd. Streitberger 48.)
Audit Accounts
- To Edward Iuby for himselfe and his fellowes the Princes highnes servauntes vpon the lyke warraunte dated at whithall xviij° die Iunij 1612 for presenting twoe severall playes before his Maty viz’ one vpon the xxviijth of December last and the other vpon the xxixth of the same at xxty Nobles for each play and five Nobles for a rewarde of each playe… xxli
- (National Archives, 1/389/49, fol. 267b; qtd. Cook and Wilson 53.)
Theatrical Provenance
Performed by the Prince's Men at Whitehall on 29 December 1611.
Probable Genre(s)
Comedy (?) (Harbage).
Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues
See Critical Commentary below.
References to the Play
None known.
Critical Commentary
Identification with No Wit, No Help Like a Woman's
Eccles proposed that the play performed in 1611 should be identified with Thomas Middleton's No Wit, No Help Like a Woman's (published in 1657) based on the quotations from Thomas Bretnor's 1611 almanac by the character Weatherwise: "The Almanac, then[,] is an apt title for No Wit, since Weatherwise, the chief humorist, either reads from or refers to the almanac in six out of the eleven scenes and in the epilogue" (297). Since the identification would have implications for the dating of Middleton's play, Eccles proposes that the Prince's Men premiered Middleton's play at the Fortune, the same venue at which the same company had performed The Roaring Girl in April 1611.
Jowett, writing in 1991, endorsed Eccles's claims, adding: "An almanac figures more conspicuously in No Wit than in any other extant play of the period" (191). However, while defending the Middletonian authority of the title No Wit/Help Like a Woman's, he later concedes that "The Almanac is a comparatively poor description of the play as a whole" and, despite Weatherwise's "striking and substantial dramatic role, he is not central to the play's structure" (193). To account for this, he proposes that the 1611 court performance of No Wit may have been "an adaptation that highlighted Weatherwise" and was renamed accordingly (194), citing the use of the title The Mayor of Quinsborough for Hengist, referring to the lead character of the comic subplot. He also points to the play's incorporation of almanac imagery throughout.
Jowett adopted "The Almanac" as a subtitle for his edition of No Wit for the Oxford Middleton and proposes that the epilogue, in which Weatherwise consults his almanac, "might hypothetically have been added for the court performance where the play was called The Almanac" (782).
Kok proposes that Middleton's allusion to Edward Pond in the play would have had a topical resonance if No Wit were the play that was performed at court in December 1611.
Wiggins, British Drama, accepts the identification of "The Almanac" with No Wit.
For What It's Worth
Information welcome.
Works Cited
Site created and maintained by Misha Teramura, University of Toronto; updated 14 May 2021.