Jealous Comedy, The: Difference between revisions

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== Critical Commentary ==
== Critical Commentary ==


[[WorksCited|Greg II]] puzzled over the solo performance of "The Jealous Comedy" and suggested that its continuation might be concealed in the two performances of "The Comedy of Cosmo," which followed  at intervals that mirror the timing of second and third performances of a given play (12 January, 25 January).  
[[WorksCited|Malone]] bracketed the title of "The Jealous Comedy" with the name, "Julian of Brentford." [[WorksCited|Collier]] took him to task for the assumption thereby built in of a specific narrative (Collier also pointed out Malone's misreading, and thus misspelling, of "gelyous"); Collier's opinion was that Malone's implied source, Julian of Brentford's Testament, was "very far-fetched" because it was a "piece of scurrility and indecency [that] could by no possibility be formed into a play" (p. 29, n.4). Collier took the opportunity further to slam Henslowe for his spelling, one of several reasons Collier referred to him frequently as an "ignorant old manager" (p. 29, n.4). Here, Collier corrected Henslowe's "gelyous" to ''Julius'' but did not identify the character more fully.
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[[WorksCited|Fleay, ''BCED'' (2.298, #118)]] kept Malone's "Brentford" implication alive by referencing Shakespeare's ''Merry Wives of Windsor.'' [[WorksCited|Greg II (#24, p. 156)]] dismissed that link as "rather slender." Instead, he puzzled over the solo performance of "The Jealous Comedy" and suggested that its continuation might be concealed in the two performances of "The Comedy of Cosmo," which followed  at intervals that mirror the timing of second and third performances of a given play (12 January, 25 January).  
 


[[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'']] finds Greg's reasoning appealing but nevertheless itemizes "The Jealous Comedy" and "The Comedy of Cosmo" separately.
[[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'']] finds Greg's reasoning appealing but nevertheless itemizes "The Jealous Comedy" and "The Comedy of Cosmo" separately.
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[[WorksCited|Manley and MacLean]], separating "The Jealous Comedy" from "The Comedy of Cosmo," group it with other plays they consider generic hybrids "based on erotic rivalry and incorporating the melodramatic potential of jealousy and betrayal" (177). In this category also they put ''A Knack to Know a Knave'' and ''Fair Em.'' They suggest also that Strange's men might have been looking back to the precedent of the Queen's men and ''Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay,'' in which "Prince Edward observes through Bacon's magic glass his proxy suitor Lacy wooing Margaret of Fressingfield for himself" (179). They draw an additional comparison with ''The Massacre at Paris,'' which was soon to be in Strange's men's own repertory (January 30); they are thinking of "the Guise's discovery of his wife's secret affair with Mugeron," a moment they characterize as "a creepy theatrical coup" (179).
[[WorksCited|Manley and MacLean]], separating "The Jealous Comedy" from "The Comedy of Cosmo," group it with other plays they consider generic hybrids "based on erotic rivalry and incorporating the melodramatic potential of jealousy and betrayal" (177). In this category also they put ''A Knack to Know a Knave'' and ''Fair Em.'' They suggest also that Strange's men might have been looking back to the precedent of the Queen's men and ''Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay,'' in which "Prince Edward observes through Bacon's magic glass his proxy suitor Lacy wooing Margaret of Fressingfield for himself" (179). They draw an additional comparison with ''The Massacre at Paris,'' which was soon to be in Strange's men's own repertory (January 30); they are thinking of "the Guise's discovery of his wife's secret affair with Mugeron," a moment they characterize as "a creepy theatrical coup" (179).

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Historical Records

Performance Records

Playlists in Philip Henslowe's diary


One record of performance survives in Henslowe’s accounts for early 1592 (new style):

Fol. 8 (Greg I, 15)
ne . . . . Rd at the gelyous comodey the 5 of Jenewary 1592 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xxxxiiijs



Theatrical Provenance


When Lord Strange's men returned to the Rose playhouse at Christmastide 1592-3, "The Jealous Comedy" was their sixth offering and the only one to be marked "ne" until The Massacre at Paris was entered at its first performance on the 30th.

Probable Genre(s)

Comedy

Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

Information welcome.

References to the Play

Information welcome.

Critical Commentary

Malone bracketed the title of "The Jealous Comedy" with the name, "Julian of Brentford." Collier took him to task for the assumption thereby built in of a specific narrative (Collier also pointed out Malone's misreading, and thus misspelling, of "gelyous"); Collier's opinion was that Malone's implied source, Julian of Brentford's Testament, was "very far-fetched" because it was a "piece of scurrility and indecency [that] could by no possibility be formed into a play" (p. 29, n.4). Collier took the opportunity further to slam Henslowe for his spelling, one of several reasons Collier referred to him frequently as an "ignorant old manager" (p. 29, n.4). Here, Collier corrected Henslowe's "gelyous" to Julius but did not identify the character more fully.


Fleay, BCED (2.298, #118) kept Malone's "Brentford" implication alive by referencing Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor. Greg II (#24, p. 156) dismissed that link as "rather slender." Instead, he puzzled over the solo performance of "The Jealous Comedy" and suggested that its continuation might be concealed in the two performances of "The Comedy of Cosmo," which followed at intervals that mirror the timing of second and third performances of a given play (12 January, 25 January).


Wiggins, Catalogue finds Greg's reasoning appealing but nevertheless itemizes "The Jealous Comedy" and "The Comedy of Cosmo" separately.


Manley and MacLean, separating "The Jealous Comedy" from "The Comedy of Cosmo," group it with other plays they consider generic hybrids "based on erotic rivalry and incorporating the melodramatic potential of jealousy and betrayal" (177). In this category also they put A Knack to Know a Knave and Fair Em. They suggest also that Strange's men might have been looking back to the precedent of the Queen's men and Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay, in which "Prince Edward observes through Bacon's magic glass his proxy suitor Lacy wooing Margaret of Fressingfield for himself" (179). They draw an additional comparison with The Massacre at Paris, which was soon to be in Strange's men's own repertory (January 30); they are thinking of "the Guise's discovery of his wife's secret affair with Mugeron," a moment they characterize as "a creepy theatrical coup" (179).

For What It's Worth

The propinquity of early modern comedies to offer comedic plots based on jealousy means that "The Jealous Comedy" could be lumped with an extant play. Fleay, BCED thought that the text of The Merry Wives of Windsor was "just what we might expect in an alteration of the old Gelyous Comedy, hurriedly made by command" (II.184-5 #19).


Works Cited


Site created and maintained by Roslyn L. Knutson, Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; 6 July 2020.