Play of the Saxons: Difference between revisions

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==Theatrical Provenance==
==Theatrical Provenance==


Performed by an unknown company at Bristol. Powell names the player in the role of Vice as one "Kendall", which may refer to William Kendall (Admiral's/Palsgrave's company) or Richard Kendall (King's Revels company). Wiggins (1817) notes that the Palsgrave's Men visited Bristol for the only time in [https://archive.org/stream/bristolREED00pilkuoft#page/n296/mode/1up late 1617], and tentatively suggests this as the most likely auspices of the performance in question.
Performed by an unknown company at Bristol. Powell names the player in the role of Vice as one "Kendall", which may refer to William Kendall (Admiral's/Palsgrave's company) or Richard Kendall (King's Revels company). Wiggins (1817) notes that the Palsgrave's Men visited Bristol for the only time in [https://archive.org/stream/bristolREED00pilkuoft#page/n296/mode/1up late 1617], and tentatively suggests this as the most likely auspices of the performance in question. This would make the anecdote an old one, being recollected some three or four years later. The alternative is that the anecdote was recent, in which case it may derive instead (as Wiggins suggests) from a performance by Lady Elizabeth's Men in Bristol between 30 September and 25 December 1620. (But in that case, the identity of Kendall remains unsolved).
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==Probable Genre(s)==
==Probable Genre(s)==



Revision as of 19:40, 16 March 2017

Anon. (1617?)
NB. "Play of the Saxons" is a recent assignation (from Wiggins 1817) for this untitled play. The name is used here for convenience.

Historical Records

Philip Powell of Brecon's commonplace book (Cardiff County Library MS 3.42)

In his entry for 25 March 1620 (i.e. 1621) -- 26 March 1621, Philip Powell records the following anecdote about a playgoer responding to a line delivered by a player:

1620 ii

on Kendal a foole in a stage play in Bristoll being m˹e˺erie acctinge the part of the vize, spake extempore as foloweth, in dispraise of the noble Brittans,
if thou art a Brittane borne, it fitts thee to were ye horne
Iohn Brittan a prentiz of on Thomas Dean of Bristoll his re-ply to Kendall: twise: as foloweth:
A Brittans name I truly beare, I leaue the horne for the ˹^to were:˺
the horne becomes the saxons best
I kisd thy wife supose the rest:
...

[Marginal note: "(R) Kendall the Saxon put to silence:"]

(Cardiff County Library MS 3.42, p.139; REED Bristol 215)


Theatrical Provenance

Performed by an unknown company at Bristol. Powell names the player in the role of Vice as one "Kendall", which may refer to William Kendall (Admiral's/Palsgrave's company) or Richard Kendall (King's Revels company). Wiggins (1817) notes that the Palsgrave's Men visited Bristol for the only time in late 1617, and tentatively suggests this as the most likely auspices of the performance in question. This would make the anecdote an old one, being recollected some three or four years later. The alternative is that the anecdote was recent, in which case it may derive instead (as Wiggins suggests) from a performance by Lady Elizabeth's Men in Bristol between 30 September and 25 December 1620. (But in that case, the identity of Kendall remains unsolved).


Probable Genre(s)

History (?) (Wiggins)


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

Inasmuch as it cannot be said with any certainty whether Kendall's character literally had a horned Saxon helmet or whether he was simply referring to one, we technically can't be sure that the play even featured Saxons and Britons. It may simply have been a throwaway line from an otherwise unrelated play, rather than being a play concerned with the Saxon invasion (though this, too, does remain a possibility). The presence of a Vice character complicates any straightforward identification of the play as 'history'.


References to the Play

Only Powell's anecdote (see Historical Records above.


Critical Commentary

Wiggins (1817) appears to be the only scholar to comment on this play since the relevant excerpt from Powell's commonplace book was published in REED: Bristol.


For What It's Worth

Wiggins notes that William Kendall "seems to have been known for his facility with witty improvisation... If he was the Kendall performing at Bristol, then part of the point of the anecdote is that he was bested in his own speciality by a member of the audience" (1817).


Works Cited

Pilkinton, Mark C. REED: Bristol. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1997. Internet Archive




Site created and maintained by David McInnis, University of Melbourne; updated 17 March 2017.