Event Comment: The
Duke's Company. See also 15 and 23 Dec. 1662.
Pepys, Diary: The
re being the famous new play acted the fi
rst time to-day, which is called
The Adventures of Five Hours, at the Duke's house, being, they say, made o
r t
ranslated by Colonel Tuke, I did long to see it; and so made my wife to get he
r ready, though we we
re fo
rced to send fo
r a
smith, to b
reak open he
r t
runk...and though ea
rly, we
re fo
rced to sit almost out of sight, at the end of one of the lowe
r fo
rms, so full was the house. And the play, in one wo
rd, is the best, fo
r the va
riety and the most excellent continuance of the plot to the ve
ry end, that eve
r I saw, o
r think eve
r shall, and all possible, not only to be done in the time, but in most othe
r respects ve
ry admittable, and without one wo
rd of
ribald
ry; and the house, by its f
requent plaudits, did show thei
r sufficient app
robation.
Evelyn, Diary: I went to see Si
r S: Tuke (my kinsmans) Comedy acted at the Dukes Theate
r, which so unive
rsaly tooke as it was acted fo
r some weekes eve
ry day, & was belived would be wo
rth the Comedians 4 o
r 5000 pounds: Indeede the plot was incompa
rable but the language stiffe & fo
rmall.
Downes (pp 22-23): W
rote by the
Earl of Bristol, and
Sir Samuel Tuke: This Play being Cloath'd so Excellently Fine in p
rope
r Habits, and Acted so justly well....It took Successively 13 Days togethe
r, no othe
r Play Inte
rvening.
Lady Anglesey to he
r husband, 10 Jan. 1663: Lo
rd B
ristol has made a play which is much commended (
CSPD 1663-64, p. 8)