Two Shapes
Thomas Dekker, Michael Drayton, Thomas Middleton, Anthony Munday and John Webster (1602)
Historical records
File:Two shapes.jpg See the relevant MS entry in the Henslowe-Alleyn Digitisation Project site here. |
- Lent vnto Thomas downton the 29 of maye
- 1602 to paye Thomas dickers drayton mydellton
- & webester & mondaye in fulle paymente for
- ther playe called too shapes the some of iijll
Note on the title
Greg notes that the title is not in Henslowe's hand, and may be Downton's (Greg I, 233). The second word of the title has occasioned some uncertainty. Malone recorded it as "The Two Harpies" and Collier as "too harpes", noting that the second word might also be hapes, or hopes. However, Greg and Foakes read it as "Two Shapes": Greg explained, "There can be no question as to the letters hapes, but there is something before them. This looks at first sight like a c, but I am convinced on examination that it is really an s, of which the tail is almost invisible" (Greg I, 233, Foakes 202).
Theatrical provenance
The payment to Thomas Downton indicates that the play was written for the Admiral's Men.
Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues
None known.
Probable Genre(s)
Unknown.
Critical Commentary
W.W. Greg identified this play with the lost Caesar's Fall, recorded in the diary one week earlier. Henslowe had paid out £5 for Caesar's Fall and attributed it to Munday, Drayton, Webster and "the Rest", with Middleton's name noted above the words "the Rest". Dekker's name does not appear in the Caesar's Fall record, but Greg argued that the close correspondence between the dramatists and the payments make this identification "beyond doubt" (Greg II, 222). Subsequent commentators have followed suit.
Doris Feldman and Kurt Tetzeli von Rosador (who follow Greg in assuming that Two Shapes was about Julius Caesar) argue that the word "shape" probably refers to disguises (OED, 7); they note that Middleton commonly associates the word with duplicity and suggest that it refers to Caesar's legendary ability to dissimulate (329).
References to the Play
None known.
For What It's Worth
While the word "shapes" could certainly refer to disguises, it may be worth noting that it could also refer to ghosts (OED, 6.c.). If the play was about Julius Caesar, the title may thus refer to spectral versions of Caesar and/or other characters, perhaps inspired by the ghost in Shakespeare's play.
Works Cited
Site created and maintained by David Nicol, Dalhousie University; updated 15 May, 2011.