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  • <div style="text-align: center;">See also: <br>[[Magdalen Men at Christ Church, Oxford]] | [[Magdalen, Oxford]] | [[Oxford]] | [[Queens�
    376 bytes (51 words) - 23:39, 2 March 2010
  • <div style="text-align: center;">See also: <br>[[Magdalen Men at Christ Church, Oxford]] | [[Magdalen, Oxford]] | [[Oxford]] | [[Queens�
    383 bytes (52 words) - 23:29, 2 March 2010
  • :[[Magdalen Men at Christ Church, Oxford]] :[[I Ogilby’s Men, Dublin]]
    686 bytes (110 words) - 00:14, 18 October 2009
  • ...berlain’s]]<br>[[Chapel / Chapel at Court]]<br>[[Chester]]<br>[[Cholmley’s Men / Strollers in Yorkshire]]<br>[[Christ Church, Oxford]]<br>[[Clare Hall, Ca ...by’s Men, Dublin]]<br>[[Oxford]]<br>[[Oxford Boys at Court]]<br>[[Oxford’s Men]]<br>-<br>-<br>-<br>-<br>-<br>-<br>-<br>
    3 KB (481 words) - 19:09, 7 March 2010
  • | [[Anon.]]||[[Ajax Flagellifer (Oxford)]]||[[:category:Magdalen Men|Magdalen Men]] at [[Christ Church, Oxford]]
    1 KB (139 words) - 22:20, 16 May 2018
  • | [[George Scanderbeg]]||[[1601]]||[[:category:Oxford's|Oxford's Men]]
    3 KB (562 words) - 11:02, 15 April 2022
  • | [[General, The]]||[[1638]]||[[Anon.]]||[[I Ogilby’s Men, Dublin]] ...601]]||[[Anon.]] ([[Marlowe, Christopher|Marlowe]]?)||[[:category:Oxford's|Oxford's]]
    4 KB (634 words) - 11:00, 15 April 2022
  • | [[Agamemnon and Ulysses]]||[[1584]]||[[Anon.]]||[[:category:Oxford's Boys|Oxford's Boys]] ...ellifer (Oxford)]]||[[1605]]||[[Anon.]]||[[:category:Magdalen Men|Magdalen Men]]
    6 KB (868 words) - 11:07, 5 December 2022
  • ...'' was also the last performance by [[:Category:Ogilby's (Dublin)|Ogilby's Men]] at the Werburgh Street Theatre in Dublin. It is possible that Burnell's e
    2 KB (311 words) - 21:56, 3 March 2021
  • :[[Cholmley’s Men / Strollers in Yorkshire]]
    742 bytes (107 words) - 00:17, 18 October 2009
  • ...court in 1612 by the Duke of York's Men (later called Prince Charles's (I) Men). ...ve been performed by Christopher Beeston's then company, Queen Henrietta's Men, who were then playing at the Phoenix in Drury Lane. The "alterations" made
    3 KB (493 words) - 11:40, 26 August 2022
  • ...an affray at Norwich]]||[[1583]]||[[:category:Queen's (Elizabeth)|Queen's Men]] at the Red Lion ([[:category:Norwich|Norwich]])
    6 KB (885 words) - 14:21, 13 January 2023
  • Performed by the Prince's Men at Whitehall on 29 December 1611. ...ions for the dating of Middleton's play, Eccles proposes that the Prince's Men premiered Middleton's play at the Fortune, the same venue at which the same
    6 KB (885 words) - 13:43, 6 August 2022
  • :[[Prince’s Men]]
    787 bytes (122 words) - 00:15, 18 October 2009
  • ===King's Men repertory list (1641)=== ...berlain) required the Stationers' Company to forbid the printing of King's Men plays without the company's consent (the desire to protect their plays havi
    6 KB (913 words) - 15:58, 10 December 2021
  • ...at Norwich]]||[[1583]]||[[Anon.]]||[[:category:Queen's (Elizabeth)|Queen's Men]] at the Red Lion ([[:category:Norwich|Norwich]])
    11 KB (1,401 words) - 14:19, 13 January 2023
  • Admiral's Men at the Rose. The play is not marked with Henslowe's enigmatic "ne," so it ...play" (i.e., Shakespeare's "Contention") "never belonged to the Admiral's men" and "such a miswriting is impossible" (#61, p. 172).
    5 KB (734 words) - 13:38, 4 October 2022
  • ...re under the patronage of Charles Howard. If the company, now the Prince's Men, retained its connection with the Howard family, they may have been asked t
    3 KB (471 words) - 16:16, 30 September 2020
  • ...bage]] differentiates between I Ogilby's Men (Werburgh St) and II Ogilby's Men (Smock Alley).
    5 KB (792 words) - 15:22, 25 March 2024
  • Of men that come to see and taste our Playes; Some things of price, which all men doe not buy;
    6 KB (907 words) - 11:39, 5 March 2021
  • The King's Men have the best claim, because they were the company who performed the one ex ...viving collaboration ''The Witches of Lancashire'', written for the King's Men. Fleay, in his ''Biographical Chronicle of English Drama'', 1.41, argued t
    6 KB (886 words) - 14:02, 10 December 2021
  • ...involved a range of companies including the King's Men, Queen Henrietta's Men, and Beeston's Boys. His surviving work tends towards the derivative and r
    6 KB (804 words) - 15:50, 10 December 2021
  • ...ermany'', Smith alludes to another play written by himself, for the King's Men: ...the play was produced whilst the company was still the Lord Chamberlain's Men (Wiggins 1361). This in turn makes a date of c.1602 likely, and therefore t
    5 KB (835 words) - 15:52, 5 October 2020
  • The play was acquired on July 19 1598 by the Admiral’s Men for performance at the Rose. ...e narrative (with reference to [[Valentine and Orson (Queen's)|the Queen's Men's play]]) as follows (#842):
    5 KB (795 words) - 14:36, 13 October 2022
  • ...e. I have given elsewhere (p. 19) my reasons for ascribing it to Strange's men at the Curtain probably in 1590. ...arlton or any other Queen's Men, and lists actors connected with Strange's Men in the 1590s. … The Tarlton ''Sins'' play (which was never said to be in
    8 KB (1,277 words) - 12:18, 10 February 2022
  • ...: ''Protogenes can know Apelles by his line though he se him not, and wise men can consider by the penn the aucthoritie of the writer thoughe they know hi ...to Gosson was published, and Wilson was a principal actor with Leicester's men from 1572-1583. Gosson's own lost play, "[[Catiline's Conspiracies]]", was
    6 KB (928 words) - 13:03, 8 December 2022
  • (Narratives by Cambridge Men) ::in the actinge thereof they brought in 5. or 6. men almost naked w''h''ich
    5 KB (836 words) - 11:24, 7 July 2022
  • The Admiral's Men paid William Haughton 10s. on 27 May 1600 for "Judas" but there are no furt ...ays on Bible subjects would appeal to their clientele" (28); the Admiral's Men, in contrast, were "catering to the more old-fashioned Puritans" (28-29), a
    8 KB (1,220 words) - 13:02, 29 December 2020
  • ...nt to Thomas Downton indicates that the play was written for the Admiral's Men. In his study of the Admiral's Men, Andrew Gurr drops "Two Shapes" from Appendix I ("The Plays"), adding a not
    5 KB (832 words) - 15:42, 3 October 2020
  • :Geue me good Fortune all men sayes, and throw me in the seas. (sig. D1r) ...oeth to the Wall'' (S.R. 23 October 1600) attributes that play to Oxford's Men (note the similarly proverbial title).
    8 KB (1,237 words) - 15:29, 10 December 2021
  • | Manley, Lawrence and Sally-Beth MacLean. ''Lord Strange's Men and Their Plays''. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2014.
    9 KB (1,213 words) - 23:38, 16 February 2022
  • ...o endow it with larger reuenew, and to increase the foundation, hauing set men at worke vpon it, and riding one day out at the North-Gate at Oxford, he sp
    9 KB (1,372 words) - 15:41, 4 March 2021
  • Performed by the Admiral's Men as a 'ne' play at the Rose in September 1594, receiving three subsequent pe ...urce of the play or repeat Collier's nonce assignment to the Chamberlain's men (2.303 #156). [[WorksCited|Greg II]] also ignores Collier's odd company ass
    14 KB (2,129 words) - 12:53, 15 September 2022
  • Henslowe's diary attributes this play to the Admiral's Men. They would have performed it at the Fortune (Wiggins 4:382). Furthermore, they note that the Admiral's Men themselves had already produced a two-part anonymous "'''Caesar and Pompey'
    6 KB (969 words) - 14:04, 6 August 2022
  • Part 1 was performed as new by the Admiral's Men at the Rose on Friday 8 November 1594. Afterwards, three more performances Part 2 was performed as new by the Admiral's Men at the Rose on Wednesday 18 June 1595 and staged again on 26 June 1595, the
    9 KB (1,453 words) - 11:19, 15 September 2022
  • ...he Duke of York's Men]], later [[Prince Charles's (I)|Prince Charles's (I) Men]]
    2 KB (383 words) - 16:04, 16 March 2018
  • | men for to by tafetie & tynsell to macke a payer||} ...heading&nbsp;“''The Enventary of all the aparell for my'' Lord Admeralles men, ''tacken the ''10 ''of Marche ''1598. —''Leaft above in the tier-house i
    7 KB (1,043 words) - 14:21, 4 October 2022
  • ...f the Knight in the Burnyng Rock" was performed for the court by Warwick's men at Whitehall on Shrove Sunday (1 March) 1579.
    3 KB (503 words) - 14:42, 15 February 2023
  •            Their own sad Tragedy, for want of men            And for a time hope to converse with men,
    6 KB (817 words) - 11:42, 5 March 2021
  • ...Werburgh Street Theatre (Dublin) by [[:Category:Ogilby's (Dublin)|Ogilby's Men]] between 1636-1640. [[Category:Ogilby's (Dublin)|Ogilby’s Men]]
    6 KB (995 words) - 15:10, 25 March 2024
  • ::[[David McInnis]], " '2 Fortune's Tennis' and the Admiral's Men", 105-26. ::[[Lawrence Manley]], "Lost Plays and the Repertory of the Strange's Men", 163-86.
    12 KB (1,694 words) - 09:49, 17 February 2024
  • The Admiral's Men purchased ''Sir John Oldcastle'' in two parts starting on 16 October 1599 d In August 1602 Worcester's Men paid Thomas Dekker 40s. "for new a dicyons in owldcastelle" ([[WorksCited|G
    12 KB (1,753 words) - 11:46, 4 August 2022
  • ...he Drake-Hawkins expedition of 1595 suffered every kind of bad luck” (both men died during this fateful voyage to the West Indies) and that a “non-extan
    5 KB (694 words) - 10:47, 20 September 2022
  • ...1598, it follows that it most probably belonged to the Lord Chamberlain’s Men’. The Admiral’s and the Chamberlain’s were not the only companies in ...Alice Perrers, whose story had previously been dramatised by the Admiral's men).
    4 KB (630 words) - 21:23, 11 March 2024
  • ...uary 1598 (i.e. 1599) Michael Drayton promised to deliver to the Admiral's men within two or three days his play of "Willm longsword," having been advance ...samund]]" was certainly completed by Philip Massinger for Prince Charles's men playing at the Red Bull in 1639, its licence recorded by Herbert: "Massinge
    8 KB (1,259 words) - 16:50, 25 November 2020
  • ...marred by an affray at Norwich]]||[[:category:Queen's (Elizabeth)|Queen's Men]] at the Red Lion ([[:category:Norwich|Norwich]])
    1 KB (147 words) - 20:17, 9 May 2018
  • ===King's Men repertory list (1641)=== ...berlain) required the Stationers' Company to forbid the printing of King's Men plays without the company's consent (the desire to protect their plays havi
    12 KB (1,945 words) - 12:14, 8 February 2023
  • Performed as a new play by Strange’s Men at the Rose on 23 May 1592. Despite the high takings, no further performanc ...med by the Admiral’s Men' (c.1587-89; perhaps revived by the Chamberlain's Men at Newington in 1594) and perhaps other Danish-themed plays such as '[[Cutl
    8 KB (1,157 words) - 10:43, 15 September 2022
  • ...presumably it would have been performed by the Lord Chamberlain's / King's men if it were actually by Shakespeare.
    5 KB (749 words) - 15:30, 10 December 2021
  • ...protection. Heywood had written ''A Challenge for Beauty'' for the King’s Men in 1634-5, and collaborated with Richard Brome on ''The Late Lancashire Wit
    5 KB (820 words) - 15:48, 10 December 2021
  • | men the 18 of July||<nowiki>|19|</nowiki>|||||——||||tt at Joronymo. . . . . ...been considered a revival of ''The Spanish Tragedy,'' played by Strange's men with its apparent prequel ("[[Spanish Comedy of Don Horatio, The|The Spanis
    12 KB (1,549 words) - 11:03, 26 August 2022
  • ...rst in the pairing. However, in December 1592-January 1593, when Strange's men returned to the Rose, ''The Spanish Tragedy'' received two performances wit ...ymo'' that Jonson acted at the Curtain in 1598 as one of the Chamberlain's men. ... By Jonson it was probably taken to the Chapel children, and I have no
    12 KB (1,719 words) - 10:24, 15 September 2022
  • ...mber Accounts for the 1611-12 season do not record a payment to the King's Men for any performance that took place on 1 January, one of several discrepanc ...[[Nobleman, The|"'''The Nobleman'''"]], which was also part of the King's Men's repertory.
    15 KB (2,220 words) - 15:56, 10 December 2021
  • ...lda'', a Davenport play which certainly was performed by Queen Henrietta's Men.
    6 KB (1,043 words) - 14:38, 17 October 2020
  • Presumably performed by the Admiral's Men at the Rose in 1599.
    8 KB (1,121 words) - 11:27, 4 August 2022
  • |company=Leicester's Men .../q>, list a payment of £13.6.8d (fee) and £6.13.4d (reward) to Leicester’s Men for their court performances of ''Predor and Lucia'' and ''Mamillia'':
    14 KB (2,180 words) - 13:04, 28 February 2023
  • :The Admiral's men anticipated a new play called "The World Runs on Wheels" in January of 1599 ...its the publication of ''All Fools'' to Chapman's fear "that the Admiral's men would publish the earlier and inferior version" (1.p. 58 #10).
    7 KB (1,053 words) - 19:45, 13 March 2024
  • ...ctober), so this attribution appears sound. By early autumn 1601, Oxford's Men had amalgamated with Worcester's and were most likely at the Boar's Head Th ...e dates would suit very well, for a play performed by the Earl of Oxford's men could not be later than 1588; and Harvey would be likely to know of such pl
    13 KB (1,929 words) - 15:29, 10 December 2021
  • ...orks Cited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'' #536)]] "tentatively" excludes Lincoln's men and the Children of Windsor because properties assigned to them by the Reve
    11 KB (1,873 words) - 11:01, 10 February 2023
  • ...le, "''The Enventary tacken of all the properties for my'' Lord Admeralles men, ''the'' 10 ''of Marche'' 1598" is the following [http://www.archive.org/st ...et" was performed at the Rose playhouse [[category:Rose]] by the Admiral's men, 14 August 1594 to 5 February 1595. It is not marked "ne." It was apparentl
    14 KB (1,998 words) - 12:38, 15 September 2022
  • ...he name of god Amen begninge the 27 of desembʒ 1593 the earle of susex his men”: Only one known performance, by Sussex’s Men as an old play, 18 January 1593/4, probably at the Rose, as part of the com
    6 KB (949 words) - 10:20, 15 September 2022
  • ...en by some company which was occupying the Curtain since the Chamberlain's men had left it, or even by Shakespeare's company at the Globe." (155) ===Oxford's Men?===
    16 KB (2,446 words) - 14:37, 14 November 2020
  • ...f " a booke Called the fow''er'' sones of Aymon," offered to the Admiral's men as an option for performance at the [[:category:Fortune|Fortune]] within th ...pit|Cockpit]] as well as [[:category:Prince Charles's (I)|Prince Charles's men]] at the [[:category:Red Bull|Red Bull]]. Unwilling to identify the play as
    9 KB (1,457 words) - 16:12, 20 October 2020
  • ...ces at the Rose theatre where it was performed as an old play by Strange’s Men (Harbage has "Strange's and Admiral's"). ...’s account of the “cannibals that each other eat, / The Anthropophagi, and men whose heads / Do grow beneath their shoulders” is a typical example [''Ot
    8 KB (1,265 words) - 10:30, 15 September 2022
  • The King's Men have the best claim, because they were the company who performed the one ex ...ollaboration, <i>The Witches of Lancashire</i>, was written for the King's Men at the Globe in summer 1634. Bentley therefore estimates the date of this
    8 KB (1,251 words) - 15:54, 10 December 2021
  • The Admiral's men performed "Seven Days of the Week" at the Rose playhouse from August 1595 t ...part. That reading is consistent with another opinion, that the Admiral's men did not schedule the "Week" plays in as tight a "consecutive" pattern as th
    14 KB (1,883 words) - 12:39, 20 September 2022
  • ...'Critical Commentary''']] below), it was first staged by Queen Henrietta's Men (as per the 1653 title-page). Morley (265) dates the play to c.1633-4, whe ...rformed respectively by the King's Revels Company and by Queen Henrietta's Men (which had merged with the former). That Glapthorne's ''Revenge for Honour'
    11 KB (1,669 words) - 15:27, 10 December 2021
  • ...o" was performed at the Rose [[category:Rose]] playhouse by Lord Strange's men[[category:Strange's]] in 1592 from 2 February through 13 June; it continue ...ckdates to 1591 the plays not marked "ne" in Henslowe's list for Strange's men in the spring of 1592, assigns "Muly Mulocco" to 1592 because its 14 perfor
    17 KB (2,539 words) - 10:49, 15 September 2022
  • :desembʒ 1593 the earle of susex his men ...d taking only 11 shillings. The other plays acted in this run by Sussex's Men were:
    11 KB (1,707 words) - 12:31, 20 January 2022
  • ...been associated with the company who produced the lost play: the Admiral's men. ...rgeants, e.g.: "Serieants are the cunning pilots that in all stormes bring men safely to these hauens of peace and contemplation: the compasse they saile
    7 KB (1,101 words) - 10:16, 21 September 2022
  • ...William Haughton]], and the company was probably the [[Admiral’s|Admiral’s Men]].
    8 KB (1,175 words) - 15:26, 18 December 2020
  • ...neous possibilities in Henslowe's ''Diary'' might prefer the Chamberlain's Men as the more likely performers. In any event, it is unclear from Nicolson's
    9 KB (1,350 words) - 16:12, 30 September 2020
  • ...l to ''Love's Labour's Lost''. If the play did belong to the Chamberlain's Men, it would have been staged at the Theater [[category:Theater]] (built by Ja
    10 KB (1,478 words) - 12:51, 7 March 2023
  • ...of the scene-stealing role, this play appears to have been in the Queen's Men's repertory in the 1580s, probably c.1585 at the earliest (Peacham would ha ...st play, “[[Crack Me This Nut]]” ([[1595]], [[:category:Admiral's|Admiral' men]]):
    11 KB (1,805 words) - 17:36, 25 January 2021
  • '''Henry Herbert, Court Plays acted by the King's Men, 1638-9''' ...character [see below]), it belonged to the repertory of the Chamberlain's Men in their first year at the Globe, 1599-1600.
    20 KB (3,020 words) - 13:30, 25 December 2020
  • (Narratives by Cambridge Men) ...nd with (his) furious bellow; he calls upon the Furies; he curses gods and men; he breathes nothing but threats and vengeance. But wrath indeed (is) vain
    6 KB (932 words) - 21:41, 27 March 2017
  • ...here came forth of another door at the farthest end of the stage," two old men, one dressed in blue as a sergeant at arms (the End of the World), and the ...o Caroline periods. As such, he was witness to the moral behavior of great men as well as his own. Pearlman suggests that Willis's life experience influen
    8 KB (1,208 words) - 14:40, 8 December 2020
  • ''The booke of the Inventary of the goods of my'' Lord Admeralles men, ''taken the '' 10 ''of Marche in the yeare'' 1598. [[WorksCited|Greg, ''Pa ''The Enventorey of all the aparell of the'' Lord Admeralles men, ''taken the'' 13''th of Marche'' 1598, ''as followeth'': [[WorksCited|Greg
    17 KB (2,388 words) - 14:37, 4 October 2022
  • ...nd of its repertory life" compared with other plays performed by Strange's Men that also were not marked "ne" (see a discussion of the problem of non-ne p
    8 KB (1,254 words) - 10:26, 15 September 2022
  • :Then began the Trumpets to sounde, and the Dutch men to carouse, to the health of hir Maiestie, the welfare of my Lord, and to t ...eans that any payments that would have indicated the return of Leicester's men to the Continent are lost (491).
    15 KB (2,259 words) - 13:01, 1 December 2022
  • "Martin Swarte, his Life and Death" was performed by the Admiral's men at the Rose playhouse; Henslowe's enigmatic "ne" indicates that the play wa ...hen this also points to a revival of the play, presumably by the Admiral’s Men at the Fortune, since Ford was only eleven years of age when the play is re
    13 KB (1,982 words) - 15:59, 14 February 2024
  • ...h of which "appear to be revisions of old plays performed by the Admiral's men" (II, 257).
    13 KB (1,882 words) - 13:10, 21 December 2022
  • ...he names of the plays acted at Court under Tarleton himself by the Queen's men in 1585, viz., Five Plays in One for the first part (four sin plays and ind ...ut how Strange's players would have gotten Tarlton's play from the Queen's men but answered himself by citing a few other Queen's plays he believed they h
    12 KB (1,881 words) - 17:40, 25 January 2021
  • ...he names of the plays acted at Court under Tarleton himself by the Queen's men in 1585, viz., Five Plays in One for the first part (four sin plays and ind ...ut how Strange's players would have gotten Tarlton's play from the Queen's men but answered himself by citing a few other Queen's plays he believed they h
    12 KB (1,923 words) - 17:46, 25 January 2021
  • ===King's Men repertory list (1641)=== ...ust. "The Louesick maid" appears in a list of plays over which the King's Men claim ownership.
    9 KB (1,468 words) - 15:48, 10 December 2021
  • ...ater over Malone and Fleay's lumping of titles by querying why "the King's men in 1624 would have needed to make use of such an old and obscure piece" and
    10 KB (1,571 words) - 13:27, 29 July 2022
  • Perhaps performed by Lady Elizabeth's Men (see '''Critical Commentary''' below). ..." referred to the actor Robert Dawes, who was a member of Lady Elizabeth's Men in 1614.
    4 KB (561 words) - 12:44, 4 July 2018
  • ...rformed in the Great Hall at Hampton Court on 1 January 1604 by the King's Men for their new patron and his heir, James I and Prince Henry. Carleton provi ...n and his customers in tales of Kentish folklore. One explains why Kentish men are call "Long-tails," and it goes back to their hiding short swords under
    12 KB (1,909 words) - 11:55, 31 March 2022
  • Men; whom of late, from out y<sup>e</sup> Northern sands<br /> This masque possibly involves a shipwreck as the prologue mentions men "the sea belcht up."
    3 KB (511 words) - 00:01, 7 June 2015
  • The play was acted by Lord Strange’s Men at the Rose. :Hath with hym lad, for that men sholde it see.
    9 KB (1,437 words) - 10:29, 15 September 2022
  • ===''Men-miracles. With other poems'' (1646)=== ...ous poems by the Christ Church student, Martin Lluelyn, published in his ''Men-miracles'' (1646), refer to his composition of a play in 1640:
    7 KB (1,234 words) - 18:41, 10 March 2015
  • ...be gouerned by a woman, altered hir apparayle so[m]ewhat to the fashion of men, and tooke on hir the person of hir sonne, to whome she was both in stature ...line while accomplishing many great deeds worthy of even the most powerful men. […] It was almost as if she wanted to show that spirit, not sex, was nee
    13 KB (1,947 words) - 11:19, 20 September 2022
  • ...involved a range of companies including the King's Men, Queen Henrietta's Men, and Beeston's Boys. His surviving work tends towards the derivative and re
    10 KB (1,555 words) - 15:57, 10 December 2021
  • The play is the first “ne” offering by the Admiral’s Men on their return to the Rose in June of 1594 from the 10-day run at Newingto [[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'' #958]] suggests several notable men named "Galeazzo" who might have starred in this play, but he shows no enthu
    10 KB (1,459 words) - 11:28, 15 September 2022
  • The Admiral's men made four payments "in earneste" for the play in September 1599 apparently ...King of Scots" in terms of repertorial competition with the Chamberlain's men, located across the street on Maid Lane at the newly-built Globe. She cites
    10 KB (1,566 words) - 11:40, 4 August 2022
  • ...l of a wall and a payre of staires, & great presse of the multitude, thrée men were slaine (1130, [http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?cc=
    6 KB (996 words) - 19:20, 9 January 2019
  • ...mains overwhemingly likely" that the play was staged by the Lord Admiral's Men at the Rose in 1598 (Wiggins, 1137). However, '''Wiggins''' also adds that ...ngly, as [[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'' (1145)]] notes, the Admiral's Men also produced "[[Jugurtha, King of Numidia]]" only two years later.
    10 KB (1,511 words) - 12:06, 4 August 2022
  • ...edy'', and thus presumably all of the "foure Plaies in one," to the King's Men at the Globe, although there are some grounds for disputing this (Wiggins 2
    6 KB (927 words) - 12:50, 4 July 2018
  • This plot, for a revival of Part 1 by the Admiral's Men in 1602, was transcribed by Steevens and printed by Isaac Reed in the "Vari ...by noting that the two-part ''Tamburlaine'' had belonged to the Admiral's men "with whom Henslowe was certainly connected" (p. 25, n.3). [[WorksCited|Fle
    14 KB (2,053 words) - 10:27, 21 September 2022
  • Performed at the Rose by the Admiral's men in the spring to summer of 1598.
    16 KB (2,451 words) - 14:35, 4 October 2022
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