Philemon and Philecia: Difference between revisions

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[[category:Feuillerat]][[category:Update]][[category:Roslyn L. Knutson]]
[[category:Feuillerat]][[category:Update]][[category:Roslyn L. Knutson]][[category:Props]]

Revision as of 12:22, 13 February 2023

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Historical Records

Government Documents

Accounts of the Office of the Revels



     Philemon & philecia play by the Erle of Lecesters men    }     ij.Throughly fur-
Playes Playde at}     on Shrove Mundaye nighte                                                                }     nished garnished
Hampton Coorte}                                                                                                                              }      &fytted with the
as followeth.     Percius & Anthomiris playde by Munkesters Children on}    store of thoffice
    Shrovetwesdaye at Nighte.                                                                }    and provisions fol-
                                                                                                                              }    lowing


Theatrical Provenance

No provenance is known for "Philemon and Philecia" beyond its one court performance, but it is safe to assume the play was part of the active repertory performed by Leicester's men in the London area and in the provinces for at least a year on either side of the court appearance.


Probable Genre(s)

Romance


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

No storyline has been suggested for this play, but Wiggins, Catalogue #558, by citing the items belowe, implies that the staging called for several "houses with painted cloths" (Feuillerat, pp. 218, 221, respectively):

The Carpenter         Rowland Robynson for iij Elme boordes & vij Ledges for }    iij s viijd
            the frames for the players & for Nayles &c.                               }


Canvas at shrovetyde Herevnto is to be Added A peece of Canvas conteyning xl   }
forgotten before.                 ells which was brought into thoffice by Mris Danes seruaunt}
                at xijd the ell it was for the howses made for the players          }    xls
                                then



References to the Play

None known.

Critical Commentary

None known.

For What It's Worth

John Astington discusses stage "houses" provided for revels at court as follows:

"Theatre historians have made various guesses about what these [players' houses] may have been, what they looked like, and how the actors used them in putting on their plays, but, without either plans or drawings of these structures, guesses are as far as one can go. It is possible that they were dispersed along the upstage edge of the platform rather like the system of 'mansions' in medieval French staging, so that as characters in a play conventionally moved from place to place they would station themselves in front of different schematic frameworks (fn Chambers, ES, 3.1-21). My own guess about the early Elizabethan 'houses' is that collectively they probably were not much different from what is later called the tiring house: that is, that they were a series of curtained or painted points of entry to the stage, with space at the rear which constituted the Elizabethan 'wings' and dressing room in one" (p. 102).

Works Cited

Site created and maintained by Roslyn L. Knutson; Last updated by Rlknutson on 28 February 2023 18:23:31