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  • 2 KB (372 words) - 19:15, 13 March 2024
  • ...whether there is any foundation for this severe allegation. Lorenzo jokes about the letter’s style but admits the allegations are true. He then reminds A ...us: the Melbourne Manuscript preserves ambiguous but illuminating evidence about a rarely witnessed stage in the production of early modern dramatic texts,
    22 KB (3,395 words) - 07:13, 2 October 2022

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  • #REDIRECT [[About Us]]
    22 bytes (3 words) - 02:00, 9 May 2018
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Back to [[AboutUs | About Us]]</div>
    277 bytes (40 words) - 20:24, 16 November 2009
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Back to [[AboutUs | About Us]]</div>
    453 bytes (66 words) - 00:43, 11 March 2014
  • ...such documents are playlists compiled by stationers or others knowledgable about holdings in personal or institutional libraries. This page provides access
    2 KB (299 words) - 10:16, 11 November 2019
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Back to [[AboutUs | About Us]]</div>
    479 bytes (68 words) - 20:37, 16 November 2009
  • ...Richard II'' at the Globe. He died in 1605, leaving a will full of details about his professional and personal connections.
    374 bytes (61 words) - 11:38, 24 January 2012
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Back to [[AboutUs | About Us]]</div>
    547 bytes (79 words) - 00:40, 11 March 2014
  • ...ve. You can replame this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...eppard might have known it". He also observes that "Davenport was thinking about pirates when he wrote ''A New Trick to Cheat the Devil''", which seems to h
    2 KB (253 words) - 07:40, 4 June 2019
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Back to [[AboutUs | About Us]]</div>
    625 bytes (96 words) - 21:52, 3 December 2014
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Back to [[AboutUs | About Us]]</div>
    668 bytes (102 words) - 10:25, 6 August 2020
  • ....125]). He then asked, "Can it be that this title was discarded for ''Look About You'' (''LAY'')," which he had already "attributed to [Anthony] Wadson." In ...ve a care"), but saw nothing that suggested the several instances of "look about you" in the text of ''LAY'' had been edited from "bear a brain." He conside
    5 KB (771 words) - 16:57, 3 August 2022
  • | [[Anon.]] ([[Webster, John|Webster]]? [[Shirley, James|Shirley]]?)||[[Play about the Duke of Florence (BL Add MS 88878)]]||[[:category:Unknown|Unknown]]
    1,019 bytes (105 words) - 05:10, 12 October 2019
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    531 bytes (71 words) - 05:48, 16 August 2019
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    536 bytes (71 words) - 05:47, 16 August 2019
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    545 bytes (71 words) - 05:48, 16 August 2019
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    525 bytes (70 words) - 07:13, 13 September 2019
  • ...25). See pp. 51-77 for Gurr's detailed discussion of "Disguises" as ''Look About You''. ...''Catalogue'' #1010]] rejects the identification of "Disguises" as ''Look About You,'' a play he considers "almost certainly later than the ''Robin Hood''
    6 KB (830 words) - 15:48, 20 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    541 bytes (71 words) - 07:23, 27 August 2019
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    554 bytes (73 words) - 10:17, 23 August 2021
  • |[[Play about the Duke of Florence (BL Add MS 88878)]]
    1 KB (132 words) - 01:10, 17 May 2018
  • |[[Play about the Duke of Florence (BL Add MS 88878)]]
    985 bytes (131 words) - 09:14, 3 March 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    781 bytes (96 words) - 13:28, 6 August 2022
  • :If, as several scholars propose (see below), the play was about Rhodri Mawr, King of Gwynedd, [[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'' (#1077)]] ...ed|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'' (#1077)]] proposes that the play could have been about Roderic, the last Visigothic king of Spain; he suggests the following sourc
    4 KB (588 words) - 16:54, 4 October 2022
  • ...t Plays Database'' is a wiki-style forum for scholars to share information about lost plays in England, 1570-1642. Its purpose is to add lost plays to schol
    1 KB (192 words) - 05:47, 27 August 2018
  • About Ten; before the heat of the Day.
    1 KB (222 words) - 17:22, 13 February 2011
  • ...at the Rose in 1598, but the absence of payments in full raise a question about whether the play was completed. [[WorksCited|Malone]] makes no comment about "'Tis No Deceit to Deceive the Deceiver" (p. 311); [[WorksCited|Collier]] m
    3 KB (394 words) - 11:29, 29 July 2022
  • Chalmers's comment about the identity of "young Johnson" - almost certainly, it is now thought, a gu Ronald Bayne, writing about ''A Fault in Friendship'', assumed that both of these identifications were
    4 KB (574 words) - 08:20, 17 June 2016
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...y spent 32s. might be for "an unnamed play from Herford's Men, or … a play about the earl, the queen's cousin" (266, n135).
    3 KB (403 words) - 13:09, 29 July 2022
  • [[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'' #1139]] opines that play might have been about humours; he bases this on the "hot anger" of the title that, in its turn to ...te of Jonson's payment for "Hot Anger Soon Cold" was "as nearly as may be" about a month before Jonson killed Gabriel Spenser with a rapier in a duel on 22
    3 KB (437 words) - 12:20, 4 August 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...ng court performances generally, '''Astington''' points out the following: about painted cloths:
    8 KB (1,273 words) - 13:23, 28 February 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...oes not comment on this play (p. 299); [[WorksCited|Collier]] says nothing about its possible storyline or source (p. 85). [[WorksCited|Fleay, ''BCED'']] pr
    6 KB (683 words) - 14:32, 24 August 2022
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Questions about citing the database can be directed to the editors at:<br>
    2 KB (251 words) - 08:20, 12 May 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...[[WorksCited|Greg II (#81, p. 177 )]], nor '''Gurr''' has hazarded a guess about the story line of this play. Fleay does mention a play associated with [[Sh
    4 KB (487 words) - 15:15, 20 September 2022
  • ...out this play. His focus is primarily Lluelyn's degree play and conjecture about a broader, informal tradition at Oxford which might form a context for it,
    3 KB (475 words) - 18:31, 10 March 2015
  • If the play was about the Jack Cade rebellion (see below), its closest dramatic analogue might be ...himself 'Captaine ''Mend-all''' (138). Nicol thus argues that the play was about the conflict between Cade and King Henry VI, who had a reputation as a peac
    4 KB (651 words) - 16:57, 4 October 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...rksCited|Fleay, ''BCED'' (2. #174, p. 304]] ignores Collier's false claims about "Barnardo and Fiammetta" and a companion forgery, as does [[WorksCited|Greg
    5 KB (753 words) - 09:59, 16 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    1 KB (166 words) - 13:43, 28 February 2023
  • ...is Atalanta, Plautus’s Menechmus about the harlot Erotes, and Oedipus even about his mother, Jocasta; and Julius Caesar so in love with power that for the s ...er the Great" in North's Plutarch relates one of the more famous anecdotes about the two men:
    8 KB (1,288 words) - 20:10, 2 June 2015
  • ...ve. You can replame this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    1 KB (154 words) - 12:21, 29 July 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...tettin-Pomerania saw on 13 September was yet another in a cluster of plays about military sieges (as Steggle suggests, pp. 113-16).
    5 KB (727 words) - 14:14, 16 February 2024
  • To express an interest in contributing to the ''LPD'', please email the [[About Us|editors]] at [mailto:lostplays@folger.edu lostplays@folger.edu] with the Any questions should be directed to the [[About Us|editors]] at: [mailto:lostplays@folger.edu lostplays@folger.edu]
    7 KB (1,113 words) - 17:11, 7 January 2019
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> :'''Sharpe''', in the following comment, seems to accept Fleay's claim about the absorption of the "Troy" play into the "Ages" plays of Thomas Heywood:
    6 KB (904 words) - 11:59, 26 September 2022
  • ...D'']] had previously done. He mused that the 5s. paid Chettle for the play about Orestes would more nearly bring payments to Dekker for "Agamemnon" up to th ...s up on an observation first made by [[WorksCited|Greg II]] (#174, p. 202) about a "striking" prevalence of Greek story materials to argue that the play/s
    5 KB (778 words) - 13:15, 16 February 2024
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    2 KB (208 words) - 14:20, 15 February 2023
  • ...ve. You can replame this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    1 KB (171 words) - 16:16, 3 October 2020
  • ...be guessed about this play's subject matter is that it was likely a comedy about love and marriage.
    3 KB (493 words) - 11:40, 26 August 2022
  • ...y of the Rape of the Sabine Women, but it doesn't follow that the play was about that story.
    1 KB (198 words) - 15:50, 10 December 2021
  • <div style="text-align: center;">Back to [[AboutUs | About Us]]</div>
    2 KB (310 words) - 22:01, 14 September 2014
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    2 KB (299 words) - 10:25, 5 January 2022
  • ...ck at this play when he gave Benedick a jest in ''Much Ado About Nothing'' about fetching a hair from the Great Cham's beard. ...adding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Knutson, Roslyn L. "What's So Special About 1594." ''Shakespeare Quarterly'' 61.4 (2010): 449-467.</div>
    5 KB (717 words) - 10:21, 15 September 2022
  • live like a Prince here; and that the very contrivances about your House, tell who's the Master of it.<br>
    2 KB (311 words) - 17:21, 13 February 2011
  • | ||||To haue the gouernaunce about principalytie||
    2 KB (326 words) - 23:20, 3 February 2016
  • ...led dean thereof an. 1635. The said ''Pastoral'' is not printed, but goes about in MS. from hand to hand. ...obvious similarity between Wood's description of a St John's College play about Stonehenge, and the play in the British Library manuscript. W. W. Greg pro
    4 KB (604 words) - 13:37, 3 June 2018
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> '''Gurr''' has nothing to say about "The Mack" beyond its having received one performance marked "ne" in Henslo
    4 KB (653 words) - 12:10, 22 September 2022
  • ...least four tragedies, two of them operas. In default of further evidence about the "real" Duchesses of Fernandina, there is a possibility that Glapthorne' ...s leading characters in Webster's ''The White Devil''. If this suggestion about the play's subject-matter were tenable, then ''The Duchess of Fernandina''
    7 KB (1,037 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...s entangled the play with another Admiral's product—"[[Bristow Tragedy]]"— about which very little is known except its author (John Day) and dates of purcha
    4 KB (609 words) - 10:19, 23 August 2021
  • [[WorksCited|Malone]] has no comment to make about this title, but he does read the spelling as "times triumph and foztus" (p. [[WorksCited|Greg II]] rejects all of Fleay's supposes about what other play "Times Triumph" might be. He reads Henslowe's "& fortus" to
    4 KB (578 words) - 10:05, 26 May 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    2 KB (312 words) - 17:36, 13 February 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> [[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'']] makes the only plausible observation about the Admiral's "[[Burbon (i.e. Bourbon?)|Burbon]]," which is that it belonge
    4 KB (604 words) - 11:36, 3 October 2022
  • | ||||The reede blood so ronneth downe about my hede
    2 KB (415 words) - 21:32, 3 February 2016
  • ...the Robin Hood play in Dec-Jan 1600-1. However, Greg was enthusiastic only about two tracts published in 1595: "The Estate of English Fugitiues vnder the ki [[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'']], however, endorses Greg's suggestion about the Lewkenor tracts, which he labels the probable sources of the lost play.
    5 KB (692 words) - 17:25, 18 December 2020
  • * Since the ballad sung at the Curtain (see above) is about "riotous drinkers", Bentley suggests that the play was "a roistering, possi * Alternatively, Wiggins suggests, the play could have been more about the claret than the moon. He notes that calling for alcohol for the Man in
    5 KB (735 words) - 17:12, 15 May 2020
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...xon kings but acknowledges that "the relative dearth of specific narrative about them" is a problem: Osric of Deira, A.D. 625-35; Osric of Northumberland, A
    4 KB (593 words) - 14:29, 24 August 2022
  • Whilst the play was evidently about what we would now call a dentist, the fact of its being a comedy is rather ...get an Angell of you, Bee it, said Scogin. Scogin did knit a strong threed about the tooth-drawers tooth, and gaue it a great twitch. Oh, said the tooth-dra
    8 KB (1,337 words) - 11:31, 8 August 2022
  • ...rical Records." However, given that these references are the only evidence about the play (unless a Plot of three-sevenths of it survives), it seems appropr ...edition of Henslowe's ''Diary'', [[WorksCited|Greg II]] agreed with Fleay about the splintering of "Seven Deadly Sins" into the Queen's two plays ([http://
    8 KB (1,277 words) - 12:18, 10 February 2022
  • No information about the theatrical provenance of this play is available. It was evidently stage ...s King Henry VI (see, for example, Loades 49). The play thus may have been about events during the Wars of the Roses. This possibility is given further cred
    4 KB (714 words) - 21:16, 1 August 2012
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    2 KB (334 words) - 11:05, 11 August 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...ffered for the narrative matter of this play, but no one has found a story about the town of Bristol (or a man named Bristow) that seems plausible as the so
    5 KB (713 words) - 12:09, 1 August 2022
  • :Received of Mr. Lowens for my paines about Messinger's play called The King and the Subject, 2 June 1638, 1''l.''0.0. ...e Tyrant" and labels it scholars' favorite choice. He provides information about the registration of "The Tyrant" at Stationers' Hall to Humphrey Moseley on
    5 KB (813 words) - 14:10, 13 April 2016
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    4 KB (669 words) - 13:21, 28 February 2023
  • ...in his propriety: And to the end that any other Companies of Actors in or about London shall not p<sup>r</sup>sume to act any of them to y<sup>e</sup> prei
    2 KB (386 words) - 00:59, 3 November 2012
  • ...g another, possibly stronger, argument to the one Wiggins already advanced about ''Telomo'' and ''Ptolemy'' being not one and the same play" (12). ...; finally, "while we know little about Leicester’s Men’s repertory, a play about Ajax would not sit very comfortably among the other play titles we know, wh
    11 KB (1,666 words) - 13:31, 4 October 2018
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    2 KB (301 words) - 15:51, 24 February 2023
  • ...Alleyn in 1601-2 (Greg, II.119; Chambers, 1.372). They were less specific about plays for which payments higher than £2 but lower that £5 were made. ''Kn
    5 KB (745 words) - 15:17, 27 November 2020
  • ...es'', which "does not relate to anything in the likely narrative of a play about Caesar", and the fact that Henslowe's payments for ''Two Shapes'' and ''Cae ...urt Tetzeli von Rosador (who follow Greg in assuming that "Two Shapes" was about Julius Caesar) argue that the word "shape" probably refers to disguises (OE
    5 KB (832 words) - 15:42, 3 October 2020
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    9 KB (1,529 words) - 13:48, 15 February 2023
  • ...Admiral's Men in 1602. Basically, the Proud Woman story is a tragic one; about a beautiful woman; set in Antwerp. It thus fits with the title and known g If the suggestion made above is tenable, then we can say a little more about the genre of ''The Fair Star of Antwerp'', which would, for instance, neces
    5 KB (828 words) - 04:41, 25 September 2019
  • ...f James I in the spring of 1603; the royal patent is dated 19 May 1603. At about this time, the ban on performances that had been imposed by the privy counc The great oddity about this play is that the King's players put it on during their second year as
    5 KB (766 words) - 14:40, 14 April 2023
  • ...ts meaning would be straightforward. It could have been a lost Latin play about an alchemist, or indeed merely Erasmus's colloquy of that name, which could
    2 KB (325 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> Currently in EEBO TCP, the only substantial narratives about a tinker (one who mends pots, kettles, etc.) are from writers associated wi
    10 KB (1,626 words) - 11:48, 26 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (391 words) - 14:52, 27 March 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (392 words) - 14:51, 27 March 2023
  • ...properties (while he is writing about costumes and properties rather than about the "Book", Henslowe inadvertently starts referring to the play as "The Thr There is no further information extant about this play.
    15 KB (2,487 words) - 16:06, 8 August 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...ks_Cited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'']] (#1309) assumes that an Elizabethan play about the Henrican court would not have represented Henry VIII, but may have repr
    6 KB (857 words) - 17:03, 4 October 2022
  • ...tigernhomepage.htm Vermaat]), provides a substantial amount of information about Vortigern and his times. ...sidered "Vortigern" to be the "henges" on 22 June 1597, but he was dubious about its having a connection to the much later play, ''Hengist King of Kent'' by
    9 KB (1,274 words) - 14:16, 4 October 2022
  • ...s from the Elizabethan Playhouse'' (109-13). He raised a valuable question about how Strange's players would have gotten Tarlton's play from the Queen's men ...-part play had an induction of some length, which joined to seven playlets about the sins would make eight units in all, divided into five and three for the
    12 KB (1,881 words) - 17:40, 25 January 2021
  • ...inctive about Richard’s funeral, though he did leave detailed instructions about what was to be done with his body, specifying distinct final resting paces
    9 KB (1,326 words) - 14:42, 4 October 2022
  • ...eadstrong by reason of his ambition; he growes iealous of his actions, and about the end of the yeare [1614] concludes his ruine and death. The commandement ...fell to worke, and casting themselues vpon him, they put a coad [sc. cord] about his necke, and sought to strangle him; but seeing that the fatnesse of his
    10 KB (1,597 words) - 15:34, 1 May 2019
  • ...s from the Elizabethan Playhouse'' (109-13). He raised a valuable question about how Strange's players would have gotten Tarlton's play from the Queen's men ...-part play had an induction of some length, which joined to seven playlets about the sins would make eight units in all, divided into five and three for the
    12 KB (1,923 words) - 17:46, 25 January 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...bly not a play." However, upon receiving being notified by Bradley D. Cook about the information in Corser's edition, he could confirm that "it definitely '
    6 KB (869 words) - 12:28, 16 July 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (431 words) - 13:06, 28 February 2023
  • ...nitent Sinner'', by R. Willis (London 1639). In the book Willis reminisces about "a stage play which I saw when I was a child," being taken by his father to ...nce of seeing a play, Willis "reinterpreted a play about works into a play about grace" (367). Pearlman suggests that Willis's recall of the play is "layere
    8 KB (1,208 words) - 14:40, 8 December 2020
  • '''Knutson''' (p. 162) and '''Gurr''' (p. 105) concur that nothing about the 15s. payment to Chettle and Haughton suggests that the play was complet
    3 KB (385 words) - 12:05, 4 August 2022
  • ...s lost play dealing with the Antony and Cleopatra story, were written just about the turn of the century’ (Rees, 177). ...cularly Cecil (Bullough, II. 5-7). Rebholz suggests that the same concerns about the ability of Greville’s readers to interpret his works as topical alleg
    5 KB (854 words) - 11:17, 8 July 2013
  • ...players' visit to Oxford (366n), '''Elliott''' is the only critic to write about this play. He observes that there seems to have been "an informal tradition ...te>These poems, then, record a rite of passage enacted by an undergraduate about to receive his B.A. before two men who had been heads of is house since he
    7 KB (1,234 words) - 18:41, 10 March 2015
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (441 words) - 13:27, 28 February 2023
  • | Looke about you. | Moch adoe about nothing.
    8 KB (977 words) - 17:48, 30 August 2018
  • ...oduction for some time. Sussex's players gave performances at the Rose for about seven weeks, 27 Dec 1593 through 6 Feb 1594, during which time they offered ...adding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Knutson, Roslyn L. "What's So Special about 1594." ''Shakespeare Quarterly'' 61.4 (2010): 449-67.</div>
    6 KB (922 words) - 10:22, 15 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> The scholarly commentary on "Jerusalem" is a product of guesswork about its subject matter:
    6 KB (917 words) - 10:25, 15 September 2022
  • <blockquote>The date assigned by the catalogue to the manuscript, 'about 1600', is also incorrect; for the author's marginal note, 'Speede in Greece ...of < 1627 in this entry is chosen on the basis of this prudent observation about Speed's publication, and is thus preferred to the Folger catalogue's arbitr
    11 KB (1,599 words) - 19:41, 13 March 2024
  • ...s 1904 it was still causing W. W. [[WorksCited|Greg I]] needless suspicion about the genuineness of the 1570 poem itself (xxxvi-xxxviii). The forgery is st
    3 KB (422 words) - 13:02, 9 March 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (431 words) - 16:52, 11 August 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...are duplicates), Robin Hood grew restless after a couple of weeks messing about in the forest without challenging entertainment, so he set off looking for
    6 KB (999 words) - 15:25, 15 September 2022
  • ...to France, in which the arrogant king specifically orders that the verses about ‘’deposuit potentes’’ be removed from his copy of the bible.
    6 KB (1,035 words) - 10:23, 11 November 2019
  • ...o a song by Robert Jones, published in 1609; the second stanza of his song about Robin Hood and his romance with Maid Marian reads: ...spent much of his youth at the family’s home in Clifton, Nottinghamshire, about twenty miles south of Robin Hood’s legendary territory of Sherwood Forest
    6 KB (955 words) - 09:18, 29 May 2020
  • <br>...The same daye after supper about 9. of the Clock they began to act the ...mblematic Elizabethan one for the comedy [''Vertumnus'']. What was similar about them was the really crucial innovation, the use of perspective for both. (3
    6 KB (932 words) - 21:41, 27 March 2017
  • '''Bentley''' was sceptical about the reliability of Warburton's list as evidence, but confident that Moseley ...hn and Matilda material, which, if correct, may invalidate the supposition about the Admiral's play (317).
    10 KB (1,571 words) - 13:27, 29 July 2022
  • [[WorksCited|Greg, II]] has nothing to suggest about the content and genre of the play (#111 p. 185). ...']] mentions but puts little stock as theatrical subject matter in a story about threats to Queen Elizabeth that were prompted by the discovery of "wax effi
    6 KB (947 words) - 14:27, 24 August 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    10 KB (1,607 words) - 12:21, 27 February 2023
  • ...lder friend and fellow gossip, John Chamberlain, the following information about goings-on at the court of the new king, James: "On New Year's night we had ...eia'' (1598) (p. vi). It is reasonable to assume that the general folklore about Robin was much older than that. Collier describes but does not reprint two
    12 KB (1,909 words) - 11:55, 31 March 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...berlain's/King's men in the prologue of ''The Malcontent'' as being a joke about the 1605 ''The First Part of Jeronimo''; rather, he thinks it was a referen
    12 KB (1,719 words) - 10:24, 15 September 2022
  • ...ingsgate," 1521 (Greg notes a 1535 printing but made no further conjecture about a narrative connection). ...fayre" and the groom as "London Stone/ curtes and gente." The speaker asks about impediments to the marriage, and London Stone repeats rumors ("euyll tunges
    10 KB (1,531 words) - 13:21, 6 August 2022
  • ...k," so to speak; however, there isn't an obvious rollover to the new title about fools, which implies considerable foolery given the preponderance of real f
    7 KB (1,053 words) - 19:45, 13 March 2024
  • Thomas Gainsford appears to allude to a stage play about Perkin Warbeck that predates John Ford's treatment of the subject matter:
    3 KB (452 words) - 18:09, 4 October 2022
  • ...es'', which "does not relate to anything in the likely narrative of a play about Caesar", and the fact that Henslowe's payments for ''Two Shapes'' and ''Cae ...ect to the ''de casibus'' pattern, to the inevitable rise and fall brought about either by a turn of blind Fortune’s wheel or the retribution of the gods.
    6 KB (969 words) - 14:04, 6 August 2022
  • ...plays (''Vertumnus'' and ''The Queen's Arcadia''), and what is conjectured about ''[[Ajax Flagellifer]]'', Boas and Greg deduce that most of the property li
    5 KB (836 words) - 11:24, 7 July 2022
  • ...avorably to their classical counterparts. He wrote the following paragraph about Shakespeare: ...//www.library.illinois.edu/rbx/collections/reproduction-services Inquiries about further use])
    10 KB (1,478 words) - 12:51, 7 March 2023
  • ...f account of Wright's life, dated the performance of "The Reformation" to "about 1631" (603)
    3 KB (396 words) - 12:32, 25 September 2020
  • ...shire. While this work was not in fact a drama, there was enough confusion about its contents that Swinburne, writing around 1874, could describe it as a "n ...ly possibility again involves Swinburne, who wrote to Collins asking about about "the ''other'' comedy attributed to C.T. by Lowndes, with the charming titl
    12 KB (1,945 words) - 12:14, 8 February 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    4 KB (557 words) - 14:45, 27 March 2023
  • ...miles south of the border with Scotland, while Clifton is in the midlands about a hundred miles further south, making Bateman of Kendal perhaps a likelier ...licencing on 28 March (F.45, Greg I.85; see also F.44-F44v, Greg I.83-84). About three months later, ''Black Bateman of the North, Part I ''appears to have
    13 KB (2,048 words) - 12:15, 11 August 2022
  • If you have any comments or question about these terms & conditions please contact us at [mailto:dmg@folger.edu dmg@f
    4 KB (627 words) - 18:34, 30 May 2018
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    10 KB (1,650 words) - 13:03, 28 February 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (484 words) - 13:34, 4 October 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    10 KB (1,662 words) - 13:03, 28 February 2023
  • ...f Amyntas." Some ambiguities of phrasing in the latter raise uncertainties about whether it was prepared to accompany Digby's full translation of Tasso's pl
    7 KB (1,092 words) - 16:09, 26 May 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    4 KB (533 words) - 13:26, 28 February 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (535 words) - 14:27, 28 February 2023
  • ...rase "madman's morris" is common enough in the period, but offers "no clue about any likely narrative for the play".
    4 KB (539 words) - 14:46, 11 August 2022
  • :about their neckes of black gold Tyncell having truncheons in their handes <br /> ...o de Mendoza, the Spanish ambassador in London, writes to Gabriel de Zayas about a series of state issues and international intrigues. Mendoza mentions in p
    15 KB (2,315 words) - 22:50, 15 April 2018
  • ...Henslowe "would then have bought the play twice over" within the space of about a month). The "nearest long-shot" he offers is ''Philomela'', which he note
    4 KB (675 words) - 16:09, 14 May 2018
  • ...served as the basis for John Pickering's ''Horestes'' (1567). Information about Orestes could also have been gleaned from many other classical works, such ...ght have expected some kind of Oresteian echo or trace in his unaided play about a son avenging his father's death, ''The Tragedy of Hoffman'' (1602)" (41n)
    8 KB (1,121 words) - 11:27, 4 August 2022
  • ...d Gisippus]], whose story Elyot gives in full (ff.136<sup>v</sup>-152) and about whom a lost play of [[1577]] concerned itself. ...On the other hand, it is interesting in that very little seems to be known about any English circulation of this particular pseudo-Petrarchan text. In Folge
    11 KB (1,731 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • ...ing a very rich man, and lying upon his death-bed, called his three sonnes about him, who with teares, and on their knees craved his blessing, and to the el ...(1892). The marginalia largely consists of Hazlitt’s private speculations about certain titles, some of which were clearly intended as notes for a revised
    11 KB (1,805 words) - 17:36, 25 January 2021
  • ...94 and continued it into the autumn season of 1596-7. However, any clarity about its pre-October provenance is complicated by the fact that Henslowe did not ...-play doctors "have a medicine that will bring the dead to life; they brag about their achievements, travels, or high fees; they use an often preposterous m
    12 KB (1,661 words) - 10:03, 15 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (453 words) - 10:27, 15 September 2022
  • Much about this play can be learned from its possible sources. Wiggins (183) cautiousl Also this play, if it indeed is about a queen of Ethiopia, would fall within the scope of Alden T. Vaughan and Vi
    9 KB (1,405 words) - 11:08, 17 December 2019
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    4 KB (648 words) - 14:46, 27 March 2023
  • ...ful discussion of how this particular record relates to what else is known about Jacobean dramatic censorship. No record is known of action being taken aga Is it worth pointing out the possibility that this lost play about a pair of brothers could be connected to '''''The [[Younger Brother]]''''',
    7 KB (1,080 words) - 11:26, 8 August 2022
  • Bentley speculates further about the title as it appears in the Revels list (“the Cittye: . . .”) but do
    3 KB (498 words) - 00:46, 18 September 2015
  • ...br>Cross mee no Tapster durst at any rate,<br>Lest I should break his Jugs about his pate.<br>'Tis knowne the service that I did at'' Bulloigne,<br>''Beatin
    3 KB (621 words) - 11:41, 18 March 2012
  • ...main themes. The fact that he likens those plays to his own speaks volumes about his endorsement of them and his dramatic tastes.
    7 KB (1,165 words) - 11:58, 24 July 2015
  • :[[WorksCited|Malone]] misdirected scholarly opinion about the collaborative team on "Richard II, King of Scots" by reading Henslowe's ...9), '''Shapiro''' offers the context of growing anxiety in England in 1599 about the succession of James to the English throne. He points to Scotland's dubi
    10 KB (1,566 words) - 11:40, 4 August 2022
  • ...ected to be - broken. Roman history offers various possible source stories about members of the order who underwent entombment, whether justly or unjustly a ...tage, on the pattern of Brooke's play and of most of the classical stories about Vestal Virgins.
    10 KB (1,555 words) - 15:57, 10 December 2021
  • ...adding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Knutson, Roslyn L. "What's So Special About 1594?" ''Shakespeare Quarterly'' 61.4 (2010): 449-467.</div>
    4 KB (523 words) - 13:20, 4 October 2022
  • ...n 1620 was a revision that has now been lost (149). Part of his conjecture about a 1590s Guy of Warwick play involves recognition of how it would relate to ...tley''' (''JCS'', 3.251) argues that "Probably two and perhaps three plays about Guy of Warwick are covered by the above items" - the Taylor reference, the
    8 KB (1,230 words) - 15:30, 10 December 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (479 words) - 13:38, 6 August 2022
  • ...efore or after May 1641, though this detail is important for any inference about the nature of the lost play.
    4 KB (518 words) - 20:34, 1 August 2012
  • ...jecture that "earlier versions may have existed" (2.419 [Appendix C, #1]). About Dekker and Chettle's "Stepmother's Tragedy," he pointed out the lack of " e '''Knutson''' is not fastidious as Clark about the story connections between the ballad called "The Lady Isabella's Traged
    8 KB (1,258 words) - 11:47, 4 August 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    5 KB (557 words) - 11:27, 17 August 2022
  • Collier's guess that this might have been a play about Richard III was widely influential. ...Chichester, and links Richard the Confessor to other extant and lost plays about British saints including Rowley's ''A Shoemaker, a Gentleman'' and the anon
    11 KB (1,707 words) - 12:31, 20 January 2022
  • ...include an anecdote about his falling in her lap while dancing and another about her seeing him swimming. Another source emphasizes her desire for him. The ...France. He too remembers the meeting at Windsor and adds a charming detail about his missing a step in the dance and falling into her lap. In a modesty trop
    12 KB (1,894 words) - 17:06, 4 October 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    4 KB (562 words) - 13:12, 16 February 2024
  • ...ggins, both #894 [for "Pope Joan" specifically] and #878 [for his argument about the repertorial age of non-"ne" plays in Strange's 1592 repertory]).
    4 KB (493 words) - 10:28, 15 September 2022
  • ...al time were in performance from 1590 to 1594 (p. 48). Being more specific about repertorial competition, she calls "Buckingham" a "possible spin-off" and n
    4 KB (535 words) - 10:23, 15 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (512 words) - 13:11, 29 July 2022
  • ...offers one possible explanation of the phrase, relating the following tale about Dowgate Wharf: In some respects, the story is a good fit to the fragmentary evidence about the phrase, since Overy/Overs is certainly associated with a 'devil'. Furt
    10 KB (1,642 words) - 15:26, 10 December 2021
  • ...is authority. Yet the anti-Catholicism of Gunpowder Treason Day (or a show about the rebellion), together with other holidays such as Elizabeth's Accession
    8 KB (1,229 words) - 12:44, 4 July 2018
  • ...in his propriety: And to the end that any other Companies of Actors in or about London shall not p<sup>r</sup>sume to act any of them to y<sup>e</sup> prei
    4 KB (583 words) - 23:36, 2 November 2012
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    3 KB (525 words) - 14:42, 5 October 2022
  • ...us something about taste, or the expectation of taste, at a certain date, about what characteristics of staging an intentioned playwright thought possible,
    15 KB (2,242 words) - 12:48, 4 July 2018
  • ...‘References to the Play’]] below), the play seems to be a domestic tragedy about a woman who murders her husband in order to pursue the affections of a youn ...eatning and menacing me. At which shrill and vexpected out-cry, the people about her, moou'd to a strange amazement, inquired the reason of her clamour, whe
    12 KB (1,984 words) - 10:14, 15 September 2022
  • ...as unlikely because whenever the Revels Office scribe was clearly confused about proper names, he left blanks rather than attempting to offer a solution. Wi
    4 KB (660 words) - 20:14, 21 March 2017
  • ...all critics have noted” (“The Metamorphoses" 21), Moseley again speculates about the lost play ''Sir John Mandeville'', suggesting that the play may have co
    8 KB (1,265 words) - 10:30, 15 September 2022
  • ...th [he] hast infected this glorious Island” (p. 15). Velvet Breeches brags about his favored status and thus reveals his exploitation of a corrupt socio-pol ...knaves, for a discarding card” (p. 36). There are the age-old complaints about tanners who quick-cure skins, butchers who dress old meat in fresh blood, v
    11 KB (1,692 words) - 21:43, 7 July 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    5 KB (645 words) - 15:28, 20 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    5 KB (581 words) - 14:25, 4 October 2022
  • ...s were available in Latin in Elizabethan London; Marlowe’s celebrated line about Helen of Troy’s face is thought to be a paraphrase of a macabre query in Although a few terse anecdotes about Pythagoras and his followers appear in scattered sources such as Plato and
    21 KB (3,085 words) - 14:50, 11 August 2022
  • ...that the title character of "Brandimer" is the giant by making an argument about theatricality across the repertories staged at the Rose and Fortune: he not
    4 KB (548 words) - 10:47, 15 September 2022
  • ...while noting the possibility that the slip of paper could have been "lying about for a number of years before he used it for his corrections or that it reco
    4 KB (561 words) - 12:44, 4 July 2018
  • ...emic by the Freemans' work, it is worth observing that Bentley's suspicion about the title-page was well-founded. The [http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/ ''Databas
    4 KB (588 words) - 11:52, 22 July 2012
  • ...ned La Boderie's prohibition, but also included new and offensive material about the French queen and Madame de Verneuil. La Boderie complained to Salisbury ...he afore-mentioned Ladies''', and for that reason I decided to say no more about it but simply consider what they did. When His aforesaid Majesty was here,
    19 KB (2,951 words) - 16:26, 1 July 2019
  • |[[Play about the Duke of Florence (BL Add MS 88878)]]
    6 KB (885 words) - 14:21, 13 January 2023
  • ...ell out with the players at the Fortune (which was the house I frequented) about a seat which they would not admit me to have, whereupon out of anger, and a
    4 KB (649 words) - 17:32, 7 January 2014
  • ...e narrative that called up the legend of ‘Irene’, a popular, western story about Sultan Mehmed II’s infatuation with a Christian captive following the fal ...-page’ is the most likely explanation is further supported by what we know about Carlell’s career, and the contextual information through which we can wit
    16 KB (2,487 words) - 05:03, 1 August 2018
  • ...he moment is that they sound French. There is surely more to be found out about them.
    4 KB (606 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • ...why a play about him should have been performed in Chester” (128). A play about a legendary English maritime commander would have been fitting for performa ...y of the known troupes’ repertories (though, given the paucity of evidence about those repertories, this in itself is hardly telling).
    14 KB (2,310 words) - 12:16, 14 May 2018
  • ...t being seen (sig.A4v). De Paris conversed with the jeweller for some time about the precious stones, before taking a pistol out of the chamber (in front of ...th the loot. Unfortunately he runs into Goussepin there, who had not known about the enterprise until he spied money falling out of the bulging bags of cash
    16 KB (2,651 words) - 15:31, 10 December 2021
  • ...'' (publ. 1657): "In the same year one thousand five hundred ninety seven, about the latter end of September, I passed into the Low-countreys, took and gave It is unknown which company would have performed the play about Turnholt. Gurr rules out the Admiral's men, since "[t]here is nothing in He
    16 KB (2,446 words) - 14:37, 14 November 2020
  • ...and the demon-fighting Saint Dunstan, whom Guilpin mentions in the epigram about Cutlack discussed below. Quoting the passage above from Camden, Sharpe fur ...on has been proposed again by Todd A. Borlik, in the course of an argument about the possible relationship between ''The Tempest'' and stories of Lincolnshi
    23 KB (3,381 words) - 10:05, 16 September 2022
  • ...tragedy with the lost early play referred to by Cary, and offers arguments about its likely date, which is, of course, constrained by the date of ''The Trag
    4 KB (585 words) - 14:21, 31 May 2023
  • ...ier (''The Weeding of Covent Garden''), and little can be said for certain about the date of the other lost play on the list, ''[[Christianetta, or Marriage
    4 KB (617 words) - 15:31, 10 December 2021
  • ...rt of a discourse about the wicked secrets of night-time, and specifically about the wickedness of the city at night" (93). ...that the robe may still be for ''Truth's Supplication'', since the date is about right.
    12 KB (1,833 words) - 11:51, 4 August 2022
  • '''Image:''' Add MS 88878, fols.1r-2v (Play about the Duke of Florence)<br> '''LPD entry:''' [[Play about the Duke of Florence (BL Add MS 88878)]]<br>
    12 KB (1,766 words) - 05:41, 8 June 2023
  • [[Works_Cited|'''Bentley''']], however, was more cautious about the link: "There is no way of knowing if this piece [in Henslowe's diary] h ...man 451–54.) It could be that the communication between Croker and Collier about the Massinger manuscript, which took place as Collier was finishing his edi
    13 KB (1,882 words) - 13:10, 21 December 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...e performances in 1594-5 as evidence that Henslowe was recording two plays about Godfrey in the Admiral's offerings starting in July 1594. However, the "pai
    11 KB (1,684 words) - 11:45, 15 September 2022
  • It is difficult to be precise about which "fair maid" the title might refer to: she must be unmarried and in (o
    4 KB (630 words) - 21:23, 11 March 2024
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    5 KB (675 words) - 10:20, 16 September 2022
  • ...nry IV'': it features a tapster speaking to two thieves (one named George) about a man carrying 300 marks to the king's exchequer, in direct imitation of th ...suggest a date-range narrower that [sic, than] 1586 (publication) through about 1620" (99). He further adds:
    13 KB (2,241 words) - 13:21, 23 December 2022
  • ...catalogues suggests that the play was a comedy and conjectures a date of "about 1615." Departing from theories that the play depicted the same historical G '''Hammond and Delvecchio''' (7) assume that the play was a tragedy about the Duke of Guise, although "it is conceivable that ''Guise'' may have been
    13 KB (1,913 words) - 14:22, 8 September 2020
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    4 KB (606 words) - 15:45, 3 October 2022
  • ...tes the title as "Tamburlane" (p. 292). [[WorksCited|Collier]], rarely shy about calling out Malone's perceived errors, notes the misspelling of ''Tamburlai [[Works Cited|Manley and Maclean]] conjecture at length about the likely content of the second part in particular:
    14 KB (2,053 words) - 10:27, 21 September 2022
  • '''Gurr''', making a point about how busy the schedule of playing was for Edward Alleyn, hints at a narrativ
    6 KB (800 words) - 15:20, 15 September 2022
  • A decade later, in ''An Apology for Actors'' (1612), Thomas Heywood wrote about the performance of a play with the same title acted (in English, presumably ...players in the 1610s-1630s. One thread of his argument is that "The jibes about the terrible tear-throats at the northern playhouses miss the point; it was
    9 KB (1,457 words) - 16:12, 20 October 2020
  • ...y." Chambers repeated an anecdote about the king's joking at a game of Maw about the trial of Sir Thomas Monson; he also quoted from a contemporary pamphlet
    13 KB (2,123 words) - 15:31, 15 September 2022
  • ...e in William Langland's ''Piers Plowman'' mentions the existence of "rymes about Robyn hood and Randolf Erl of Chestre" (V.395). Scholars have debated wheth ...ibed in Holinshed's ''Chronicles'' (329-30). The Admiral's Men play ''Look About You'' (which may also be by Munday), is also set in the Robin Hood era, and
    26 KB (4,388 words) - 18:14, 4 October 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    5 KB (703 words) - 11:56, 20 September 2022
  • ...agedies. They are specifically about treason against one's own state, not about conspiracies against private people; nor meddling in the affairs of foreign ...ld add extra spice to the satirical potential of this play too. The story about Laud has been most fully documented by '''Norrie''', who shows that it is r
    12 KB (1,911 words) - 16:28, 10 October 2020
  • ...ed nobleman in which "poor Amintas" apologises for the entertainment he is about to offer with the aid of his "silly" shepherd boys.
    5 KB (732 words) - 05:03, 1 August 2018
  • For Norbert F. O'Donnell, Jonson's comment about Oedipus' sons suggests that Goffe adapted Seneca's ''Phoenissae''. O'Donnel
    5 KB (707 words) - 05:01, 1 August 2018
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...nt,'' in which (speaking as themselves) Henry Condell and William Sly joke about their having taken another company's play (i.e., ''The Malcontent'') as pay
    12 KB (1,549 words) - 11:03, 26 August 2022
  • :J have occasion to be absent about the plott of the Jndyes therfre pray delyer it to will hamton sadler ...how he might best preserve their success, and they respond with complaints about the lack of a standardized cloth measure, the unwillingness of people to ac
    14 KB (2,248 words) - 12:57, 4 July 2018
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    6 KB (903 words) - 15:51, 15 September 2022
  • ...t#page/213/mode/1up (#205, p. 213)]. Beyond clarifying that Fleay's phrase about a shrew play as a misplaced tag from "The Devil and his Dame," Greg does no
    5 KB (736 words) - 13:31, 19 December 2020
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...nus+and+brennus&view=theater Greg] (Θ 32) includes minor chronicle details about the characters, only citing Brennus as “the Gaulish chieftan who sacked R
    10 KB (1,475 words) - 13:47, 22 March 2023
  • ...committed there" (p. 159, n.3). [[WorksCited|Greg II]] agreed with Collier about the name of the town but was “not aware of any record thereof,” althoug ...hat is thought to have been seen in this manner, it is presently whispered about that he will not recover, for that such, or such an one, who has watched St
    18 KB (2,825 words) - 11:25, 8 August 2022
  • ...and we were all deeply moved they had acted it so well. There is no doubt about it, they really are good actors. ...ne of the German plays "may have been the play, or the model for the play 'about the rich man and Lazarus'" performed in 1608. (While Murad does not say so
    13 KB (1,906 words) - 14:09, 13 December 2020
  • ...to her father (the bounty of a noble mind). The story was not necessarily about Mahomet II. Another Sultan---Solyman the Magnificent--was involved, accordi
    5 KB (729 words) - 10:54, 27 March 2023
  • ...adding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Knutson, Roslyn L. "What's So Special About 1594?" ''Shakespeare Quarterly'' 61.4 (2010): 449-467.</div>
    5 KB (711 words) - 10:21, 15 September 2022
  • ...it "likely that both companies were offering the public a Theseus play at about the same time" (119). Thompson, drawing a parallel with the two ''Troilus'' ...retter argues that Shakespeare's ''The Merchant of Venice'' and ''Much Ado About Nothing'' offer "a critique of the kind of triumphalist male friendship tha
    14 KB (2,129 words) - 12:53, 15 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    6 KB (910 words) - 17:14, 3 August 2022
  • ...on to perform. They listed their repertoire of ten plays, including a play about Romeo and Juliet, and one described as 'vonn Annabella eines hertzogen toch ...lingen list, which is also Robert Browne’s company; and that the two plays about a daughter called Annabella are in fact different descriptions of the same
    17 KB (2,714 words) - 14:32, 6 December 2020
  • ...ve. You can replame this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> Despite Fleay's off-the-cuff suggestion and Greg's dismissal, something about ''The Christmas Prince'' apparently influenced opinion on "Seven Days of th
    14 KB (1,883 words) - 12:39, 20 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    6 KB (894 words) - 12:23, 15 September 2022
  • ...ans ... thresh out" that question (320). However, footnoting his statement about Buc's authority on Tilney's authorship, Greg pointed to the uncertain date :[[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'']] finds Buc "less than certain" about the identity of the 1595 ''Locrine'' as the play he remembers (and worked o
    14 KB (2,180 words) - 19:25, 27 October 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    5 KB (689 words) - 10:20, 15 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    7 KB (1,044 words) - 13:46, 27 March 2023
  • The allusion in ''The Trimming of Thomas Nashe'' has been known about since at least the nineteenth century, although often misattributed to Gabr Little is known about the life of Robert Mills. He matriculated in Lent Term 1582/3 as a pension
    19 KB (2,991 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • ...lly think of in connection with Brome; and supplies what evidence there is about Brome's career at this point, noting Alexander Brome's allusion to the play
    9 KB (1,468 words) - 15:48, 10 December 2021
  • ...furiating Caganus and causing him to slaughter the Christian prisoners. At about this time, Mauritius reportedly experienced a number of quasi-supernatural '''Beckerman''' agreed with Greg about the limited value of attending to the plot, noting that it “exists only i
    13 KB (1,986 words) - 15:14, 25 February 2022
  • ...ving character to a symbol and figure used by many a writer to tell truths about the Church which it might have been dangerous to tell openly.” (59) ...usiak''' puts "Friar Fox and Gillian of Brentford" in the context of plays about friars. He cites Henslowe's inventories, which have various sets of friars'
    10 KB (1,531 words) - 11:27, 13 November 2020
  • ...by 1589, and the association (in that poem) with ''Tamburlaine'' and plays about "Mahomet" and "Tom Stukely" at "theatres" with "proud tragedians" implies a ...gins''' (#808) notes that Peele's "poem cannot refer to the extant MS play about him [i.e. Charlemagne], which dates from the 1610s or early 1620s". Consequ
    10 KB (1,656 words) - 13:26, 26 December 2022
  • The historical records suggest this was a topical play about the Gunpowder Plot of November 1605, in which Catholic conspirators (chiefl
    5 KB (808 words) - 20:50, 22 October 2015
  • ...ruly people hauing obserued him present, after the Play was ended, flocked about him … [and] began in a confused manner to assault him” (''A briefe desc ...pened to be in Parliament time, and at that instant of time when they were about the Remonstrance against the Duke. (630)
    13 KB (2,076 words) - 20:43, 1 August 2012
  • ...arked, as "Of the roughly 3000 total lines of print [...], more than half (about 1600) are marked with pencilled vertical lines, with Jonson's distinctive f ...lio edition of his ''Workes'', Jonson may have become increasingly dubious about the accuracy or justice of More's account of Richard" and decided not to pu
    20 KB (3,115 words) - 22:44, 16 May 2018
  • ...n'' from Shakespeare’s play, claiming “it is much more likely to have been about the two Roman emperors, who were the subject of a romance with that name” ...nd Vespasian" in its specific entry (2.298 #114), but he produces a theory about it in the context of ''Titus Andronicus''. Mulling over the means by which
    18 KB (2,663 words) - 10:42, 15 September 2022
  • ...years old, recalled that Hobbes's "conversation about those times was much about Ben: Jonson," who was "his loving and familiar friend and acquaintance" (Cl :they that go about by disobedience, to doe no more than reforme the Commonwealth, shall find t
    16 KB (2,468 words) - 04:03, 21 June 2019
  • .... The Erell of Arundell oxford and others. Crossing the king in his humor. about the duke of Erland and Bushy wer glad to fly and Raise an hoste of men. and ...ely more recent), and ''The Winter's Tale'' (new) raises further questions about the carry-over of offerings from Blackfriars the previous winter (88). She
    14 KB (2,208 words) - 17:48, 4 October 2022
  • ...aw crosses on their garments and tables; the Delphic Temple also, was much about this time overthrown with thunder and earthquakes, as ''Iulian'' was sendin ...the bloud of christians to his Gods, if he prevailed against the Persians. About this time also ''Apollo's'' Temple at Rome was burned down.
    15 KB (2,374 words) - 10:09, 21 September 2022
  • ...vawted, and within it the maskers seated w:<sup>th</sup> stores of lights about the''m'', and it was no ill shew. they were brought in by the fower seasons ...January); the 1615 edition repeats the dating error and adds the comments about the masquing ladies, perhaps confusing the wedding masque with the ''The Ma
    16 KB (2,541 words) - 13:01, 4 July 2018
  • Conjectures about the narrative of the play are embedded in guesswork by F. G. Fleay and W. W
    6 KB (946 words) - 20:48, 5 September 2016
  • The presiding critical question about "The Wise Man of West Chester" is whether its title is merely a variant of ...petition among the professional companies" (4). She also raises a question about the title of "Wise Man": namely, if the Admiral's players had Munday's pla
    24 KB (3,452 words) - 16:11, 15 September 2022
  • ...e play premiered) suffered from mental illness, and there are many legends about his behaviour. These include his concealed love for a noblewoman named Leon ...eferences in Eliot, Harington and Scoloker, and on later facts and legends about Tasso's madness (see above), [[WorksCited|Wiggins, ''Catalogue'' (#963)]] c
    14 KB (2,193 words) - 15:46, 15 September 2022
  • ...script is written on both sides of a fairly large sheet of paper measuring about 28 by 17.6 cm.
    5 KB (808 words) - 09:34, 27 August 2018
  • ...the mid-1590s; that the presence of players' names raises fresh questions about the company affiliations of ''Sir Thomas More'' and ''John of Bordeaux''; a :'''Stern''' emphasizes the difficulty of making generalizations about the "shared theatrical origin" of the surviving Plots (203). She uses the n
    17 KB (2,558 words) - 10:18, 26 May 2023
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail --> ...y of the Herculean character. See [[WorksCited|Wiggins]] below for guesses about the content of the plays based in part on Heywood's comments in the essay.
    14 KB (2,028 words) - 10:52, 19 September 2022
  • :Two Arrant ''Thieues'' we euer beare about vs
    5 KB (781 words) - 08:05, 2 October 2014
  • ...) -- 26 March 1621, Philip Powell of Brecon records the following anecdote about a playgoer responding to a line delivered by a player:<br>
    6 KB (921 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • ...ere best to worke to get his suite, and who were most in credit and fauour about the king, that he might seeke to them to furder his attempt. ''Philino'' pe
    5 KB (776 words) - 11:12, 7 August 2021
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    8 KB (1,108 words) - 11:53, 15 September 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    5 KB (792 words) - 15:22, 25 March 2024
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    7 KB (950 words) - 13:36, 4 October 2022
  • ...h provides some indication of what his contemporaries found most memorable about his life: ...the poets prefacing a New England tract, we know Smith had mixed feelings about the play. His pride as a martial man was gratified, yet he knew that he had
    11 KB (1,747 words) - 23:25, 1 August 2012
  • :[[WorksCited|Malone]] has nothing to say about "The Fount(ain) of New Fashions" except to prefer "Fountain" to "Fount" (p.
    6 KB (912 words) - 15:34, 5 October 2022
  • ...e and Eleanor Cobham. But it is, perhaps, enough to suggest that any play about a witch based in Westminster might, for early modern audiences, have been c
    5 KB (836 words) - 05:02, 1 August 2018
  • ...records for the proceeding involving Sir John Yorke of Nidderdale, brought about by the evidence of William Stubbs, Puritan minister of Pateley Bridge (Bodd ...olthwayt [or Gowthwaite Hall, Nidderdale] and in other places in Yorkshire about Christmas 1609, by a travelling company of local players. If we are to acce
    11 KB (1,712 words) - 12:27, 20 January 2022
  • ...ve. You can replace this comment and the line below if you'd like to write about the probable genres in more detail -->
    6 KB (838 words) - 12:13, 20 September 2022
  • ...-master is one of the characters in the drama, and his intervention brings about the catastrophe.
    6 KB (927 words) - 12:50, 4 July 2018
  • ...gests a wider narrative context in the Admiral's repertory including plays about the early legendary history of Britain's Trojan kings (e.g. [[Conquest_of_B '''Evidence about Casting'''
    28 KB (4,231 words) - 11:49, 4 August 2022
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