14 December 1685

Event Information
Theatre: Whitehall or St. James's
Theatrical Season: 1684-1685
Volume: 1
Comments: The United Company. This performance is on the L. C. list, 5@147, p. 68. See also Nicoll, Restoration Drama, p. 350. This play was also reprinted in 1686. Memoirs of the Life of William Wycherley, Esq; With a Character of his Writings [by George, Lord Lansdowne, but part possibly by Charles Gildon (1718)], pp. 7-8: [After the death of Wycherley's wife, he was committed to Newgate for debt.] From hence he remov'd himself by a Habeas Corpus to the Fleet, where he continued seven Years in a close Imprisonment, almost forgot by his old Friends, till in the Reign of King James the Second, some of them bespeaking the Plain-Dealer, got the King to the Play, who declaring his Approbation of the Poet's Performance, they improv'd his liking so far as to get him to deliver him from his long Confinement. But here the Modesty of the Man did him a considerable Prejudice, for instead of giving in a full List of his Debts, he only mention'd those, the discharge of which wou'd set him at Liberty, which was done with this additional Bounty, that the same King allow'd him Two hundred Pounds a Years as long as he Reign'd; and this was the reason that made Mr Wycherley always a Jacobite

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  • Original Data

    Source: London Stage Information Bank

    *p(natcourt The Plain Dealer. *c(natcourt The <i>United Company</i>. This performance is on the <i>L. C. list</i>, 5@147, p. 68. See also <i>Nicoll, Restoration Drama</i>, p. 350. This play was also reprinted in 1686. <i>Memoirs of the Life of William Wycherley, Esq; With a Character of his Writings</i> [by $George, Lord Lansdowne=, but part possibly by $Charles Gildon= (1718)], pp. 7-8: [After the death of $Wycherley='s wife, he was committed to <i>Newgate</i> for debt.] From hence he remov'd himself by a Habeas Corpus to the <i>Fleet</i>, where he continued seven Years in a close Imprisonment, almost forgot by his old Friends, till in the Reign of King <i>James the Second</i>, some of them bespeaking the <i>Plain-Dealer</i>, got the $King= to the Play, who declaring his Approbation of the Poet's Performance, they improv'd his liking so far as to get him to deliver him from his long Confinement. But here the Modesty of the Man did him a considerable Prejudice, for instead of giving in a full List of his Debts, he only mention'd those, the discharge of which wou'd set him at Liberty, which was done with this additional Bounty, that the same King allow'd him Two hundred Pounds a Years as long as he Reign'd; and this was the reason that made Mr Wycherley always a <i>Jacobite</i>.
  • Cleaned Data

    *p1685 12 14 atcourt The Plain Dealer.*c1685 12 14 atcourt The <i>United Company</i>. This performance is on the <i>L. C. list</i>, 5@147, p. 68. See also <i>Nicoll, Restoration Drama</i>, p. 350. This play was also reprinted in 1686. <i>Memoirs of the Life of William Wycherley, Esq; With a Character of his Writings</i> [by $George, Lord Lansdowne=, but part possibly by $Charles Gildon= (1718)], pp. 7-8: [After the death of $Wycherley='s wife, he was committed to <i>Newgate</i> for debt.] From hence he remov'd himself by a Habeas Corpus to the <i>Fleet</i>, where he continued seven Years in a close Imprisonment, almost forgot by his old Friends, till in the Reign of King <i>James the Second</i>, some of them bespeaking the <i>Plain-Dealer</i>, got the $King= to the Play, who declaring his Approbation of the Poet's Performance, they improv'd his liking so far as to get him to deliver him from his long Confinement. But here the Modesty of the Man did him a considerable Prejudice, for instead of giving in a full List of his Debts, he only mention'd those, the discharge of which wou'd set him at Liberty, which was done with this additional Bounty, that the same King allow'd him Two hundred Pounds a Years as long as he Reign'd; and this was the reason that made Mr Wycherley always a <i>Jacobite</i>.
  • Parsed Data

    Event: 1596 | 16851214 | atcourt | The <i>United Company</i>. This performance is on the <i>L. C. list</i>, 5@147, p. 68. See also <i>Nicoll, Restoration Drama</i>, p. 350. This play was also reprinted in 1686. <i>Memoirs of the Life of William Wycherley, Esq; With a Character of his Writings</i> [by $George, Lord Lansdowne=, but part possibly by $Charles Gildon= (1718)], pp. 7-8: [After the death of $Wycherley='s wife, he was committed to <i>Newgate</i> for debt.] From hence he remov'd himself by a Habeas Corpus to the <i>Fleet</i>, where he continued seven Years in a close Imprisonment, almost forgot by his old Friends, till in the Reign of King <i>James the Second</i>, some of them bespeaking the <i>Plain-Dealer</i>, got the $King= to the Play, who declaring his Approbation of the Poet's Performance, they improv'd his liking so far as to get him to deliver him from his long Confinement. But here the Modesty of the Man did him a considerable Prejudice, for instead of giving in a full List of his Debts, he only mention'd those, the discharge of which wou'd set him at Liberty, which was done with this additional Bounty, that the same King allow'd him Two hundred Pounds a Years as long as he Reign'd; and this was the reason that made Mr Wycherley always a <i>Jacobite</i>
    Performance: 1600 | 1596 | p | The Plain Dealer

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