Event Comment: The 
Duke's Company.  
Pepys, Diary: To the Opera, and there saw 
Romeo and Juliet, the first time it was ever acted; but it is a play of itself the worst that ever I heard in my life, and the worst acted that ever I saw these people do, and I am resolved to go no more to see the first time of acting, for they were all of them out more or less.  
Downes (p. 22): Note, There being a Fight and Scuffle in this Play, between the House of Capulet, and House of Paris; 
Mrs Holden Acting his Wife, enter'd in a Hurry, Crying, O my Dear 
Count!  She Inadvertently left out, O, in the pronuntiation of the Word 
Count! giving it a Vehement Accent, put the House into such a Laughter, that London Bridge at low-water was silence to it.  This Tragedy of 
Romeo and Juliet, was made some time after into a Tragi-comedy, by 
Mr James Howard, he preserving 
Romeo and 
Juliet alive; so that when the Tragedy was Reviv'd again, twas Play'd Alternately, Tragical one Day, and Tragicomical another; for several Days together.  [No specific notices are known which would indicate when Howard's version appeared.
                   
                    
                      Performances
                      Mainpiece Title: Romeo And Juliet
Performance Comment: Downes (Roscius Anglicanus, p. 22): Romeo-Harris; Mercutio-Betterton; Paris-Price; Fryar-Richards; Sampson-Sandford; Gregory-Underhill; Juliet-Mrs Saunderson; Count Paris' Wife-Mrs Holden.  Spencer (Shakespeare Improved, p. 73) thinks that James Nokes acted the Nurse.