Osric: Difference between revisions

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== For What It's Worth ==
== For What It's Worth ==
As [[WorksCited|Wiggins]] points out, "Osric" belongs to the set of apparently old plays brought to the stage briefly by the Admiral's men without a hint of their previous stage lives (''Catalogue'', #785, #953, #973, and #1022). As he observes ruefully, "no single hypothesis [on their provenance] will necessarily cover them all" (#867).
As [[WorksCited|Wiggins]] points out, "Osric" belongs to the set of apparently old plays brought to the stage briefly by the Admiral's men without a hint of their previous stage lives (''Catalogue'', "The Grecian Comedy," #785; "Martin Swart," #953; "Diocletian," #973, and "Time's Triumph," #1022). As he observes ruefully, "no single hypothesis [on their provenance] will necessarily cover them all" (#867).


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Revision as of 16:06, 12 October 2020

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Historical Records

Performance Records

Playlists in Philip Henslowe's diary


Fol. 26 (Greg 1.51):

ffebreary
1597
Candelmaseday
|3| tt at oserycke. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 01|09|03-02-01
Shrove mvnday |7| —— tt at oserycke. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 00|14|07-16-00




Theatrical Provenance

There is no doubt that a play Henslowe called "Osric" belonged to the Admiral's men during the late winter of 1597, but there is also no evidence to mark its introduction to the stage and identify its initial company owners. This title disappears from theater records after its brief appearance in February 1597.


Probable Genre(s)

History


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

No one has identified an historical or literary character who is persuasively the Osric for whom the play was named; consequently no source material has been suggested as the basis of the dramatic narrative. Wiggins considers several Anglo-Saxon kings, but acknowledges that "the relative dearth of specific narrative about them" is a problem (Catalogue, #867)


References to the Play

Information welcome.


Critical Commentary

Without a plausible historical or literary character named "Osric," scholars have been inclined to identify the play with another title. Fleay suggested A Knack to Know a Knave, which contains a character named Osric (BCED, 2.301 [#147]). Gurr, following threads spun by Greg II, #101, p. 182; #265, p. 230, lumps it with another lost play, "Marshall Osric," written for Worcester's company in 1602 by Thomas Heywood and Wentworth Smith with the conjecture that the latter was "a rewrite" of the 1597 Admiral's play (p. 227, #64, n.63).

For What It's Worth

As Wiggins points out, "Osric" belongs to the set of apparently old plays brought to the stage briefly by the Admiral's men without a hint of their previous stage lives (Catalogue, "The Grecian Comedy," #785; "Martin Swart," #953; "Diocletian," #973, and "Time's Triumph," #1022). As he observes ruefully, "no single hypothesis [on their provenance] will necessarily cover them all" (#867).



Works Cited

Gurr, Andrew. Shakespeare's Opposites: The Admiral's Company 1594-1625. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.




Site created and maintained by Roslyn L. Knutson, Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; 19 November 2019.