SELECT * FROM london_stages WHERE MATCH('(@(authnameclean,perftitleclean,commentcclean,commentpclean) "Settle"/1) | (@(roleclean,performerclean) "Settle")') GROUP BY eventid ORDER BY weight() desc, eventdate asc OPTION field_weights=(perftitleclean=100, commentpclean=75, commentcclean=75, roleclean=100, performerclean=100, authnameclean=100), ranker=sph04

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We found 67 matches on Author, 40 matches on Event Comments, 5 matches on Performance Comments, 3 matches on Roles/Actors, and 0 matches on Performance Title.

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The City Ramble

Related Works
Related Work: The City Ramble; or, A Play-House Wedding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The City Ramble

Related Works
Related Work: The City Ramble; or, A Play-House Wedding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Philaster; Or, Love Lies A Bleeding

Related Works
Related Work: Philaster; or, Love Lies a Bleeding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Afterpiece Title: The Country Wake

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Philaster; Or, Love Lies A Bleeding

Related Works
Related Work: Philaster; or, Love Lies a Bleeding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The Comical History Of Don Quixote, Part Ii

Afterpiece Title: The City Ramble

Related Works
Related Work: The City Ramble; or, A Play-House Wedding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Dance: Express'd in the great Bills

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The Emperor Of The Moon

Afterpiece Title: The City Ramble

Related Works
Related Work: The City Ramble; or, A Play-House Wedding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Dance: Swedish Dal Karl and His Wife, as17150509; Harlequin and Two Punches-duPre, Moreau, Boval; Scaramouch-Thurmond Jr

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The Jew Of Venice

Afterpiece Title: The City Ramble

Related Works
Related Work: The City Ramble; or, A Play-House Wedding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Dance: delaGarde, Mrs Bullock; Scaramouch-a Gentleman for his Diversion

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The Anatomist; Or, The Sham Doctor

Afterpiece Title: The City Ramble

Related Works
Related Work: The City Ramble; or, A Play-House Wedding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Dance: Moreau, Thurmond Jr, Shaw, Mrs Schoolding, Mrs Cross

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Philaster; Or, Love Lies A Bleeding

Related Works
Related Work: Philaster; or, Love Lies a Bleeding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Philaster; Or, Love Lies A Bleeding

Related Works
Related Work: Philaster; or, Love Lies a Bleeding Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Afterpiece Title: Damon and Phillida

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Afterpiece Title: Damon and Phillida

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Afterpiece Title: The Humours of Harlequin

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Afterpiece Title: Damon and Phillida

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Afterpiece Title: The Humours of Harlequin

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Love And Revenge

Related Works
Related Work: Love and Revenge Author(s): Elkanah Settle

Afterpiece Title: Damon and Phillida

Dance: DDutch Skipper, Running Footman's Dance-Davenport

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Rule A Wife And Have A Wife

Afterpiece Title: The Rout

Event Comment: [Maria Macklin wrote her father (13 March 1773): Smith has rais'd such a fury in the Town, owing to Colman's having refus'd Mrs Yates to play for him, that last Saturday [6 March] being the fifth night of Alzuma, when the play ought to have begun, the Audience made a most violent noise, called for Colman, insisted that the play should not begin till he was found & the reasons given why Mrs Yates was not suffered to play for Smith. In vain did Bensley endeavor frequently to speak and tell them that Colman was not to be found. The still continued hissing and roaring, and this last till past seven o'clock. Dagge and Harris were behind in a dreadful consternation least the house should be demolished, of which indeed it was in some danger. At last they said something must be said to quiet them, when Smith in the confusion ran on and told them that the managers had consented Mrs Yates should play for him. Then they sent him off to tell them that his day must be settled whenever he thought proper, to give her time to come here. He went off and made them fix it for the 19th of April, went on and told them it was settled. They then insisted that Smith should tell them whether everything was settled to his entire satisfaction. He assured them it was. The play was then ordered to begin. I am told they have given him up his articles for three years, at his desire. Several Gentlemen went round into the Hall and sent for Smith, telling him his private quarrels with the managers were nothing to them. That if Mrs Yates play'd they should be glad to see her, but that as she was not in the company it was not right in him to disturb the play and hinder them from seeing it. He expostulated with them and told his story. The Town rings with this affair. Various are the opinions. Some think it is her plan to get once more upon the stage, and they say there is a most powerful Party making to oppose her & that she shall not play that night. Others say Colman is very wrong to hinder her. I find she entirely built upon your playing for me, and there has been a very impatient card in the Ledger to Colman insisting upon his telling the town why Mrs Yates was hindered to play, and why Mr Macklin had any more right to be suffered to come over so long unmolested to play for Miss Macklin? But that everybody sees thru'....Colman I am certain has not a thing against your playing for me. He seems rather to wish for your coming....I do not think the Yeats's will be engag'd tho' the Town rail much at Mrs Hartley & Miss Miller, and sure enough they are bitter bad....On Tuesday I shall send you the fate of Dr Goldsmith's Comedy, which comes out on Monday next. It is call'd the Mistakes of a Night....Foote's Rary Shew has been rehears'd three mornings but he got no money, so he shews off again at night instead-but it does not fill violently. Alonzo goes on but Barry is too ill to play. The great support of it is Mrs Barry's acting." (Harvard Theatre Collection, A.L.S.)] Receipts: #196 19s

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Alzuma

Afterpiece Title: Cross Purposes

Event Comment: [As afterpiece Public Advertiser announces The Rival Candidates, but see Hopkins Diary, 12 Oct.] The Managers met again to-day, but nothing settled. Hamlet was given out. I saw Mr Sheridan, he told me that Mr Lacy and he had agreed that no Play should be given out, nor any Bills put up, till they had settled this Affair, which was to be done to-Morrow at Mr Wallis's (the Attorney's) where they were all to dine. I waited on Mr Lacy, who agreed to the same, and no Bills or Paragraph were sent to the Papers. All the Business of the Theatre is at a Stand, and no Rehearsal called. Wed. 16th--Mr Sheridan, Dr Ford and Mr Linley dined today by Appointment with Mr Wallis where Mr Lacy was to have met them; about four o'clock he sent a verbal Message that he could not come to Dinner, but would wait upon them in the Evening, and about nine o'clock he came, and everything was settled to the Satisfaction (of them all) and a Paragraph sent to the Papers, and the Hypocrite and Christmas Tale was advertised for Friday, but no Play was to be done on Thursday--Covent Garden did not play on Friday (Hopkins Diary). Public Advertiser, 16 Oct., summarizes the proprietors' dispute: the Drury Lane patent had been purchased [in 1747] by David Garrick and James Lacy. On his death Lacy had devised his half-share to his son, Willoughby Lacy; on his retirement from the stage Garrick had sold his half-share to Sheridan, Ford and Linley. The original agreement between Garrick and Lacy, as recited in a document retained by the attorney Albany Wallis was that, in case of the sale of either share of the patent, or any part of either share, the seller was obligated to offer the first refusal to purchase to the other partner, and that this was to be done only when the theatre was closed for the summer. In selling one half of his share to Robert Langford and to Edward Thompson, Willoughby Lacy was--so argued his three partners--acting illegally: he had not offered to them the first refusal, and he was negotiating the sale at a time when the theatre was open. Public Advertiser, 17 Oct.. prints a statement from Lacy saying that he did not feel himself bound by the original agreement between his father and Garrick, but that, in the interest of the business of the theatre, he had asked Langford and Thompson to withdraw their claim to partnership, to which request they had acceded. Receipts: #130 9s. 6d

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The Committee; Or, The Faithful Irishman

Afterpiece Title: The Waterman

Event Comment: The Duke's Company. This play is on the L. C. list at Harvard. See VanLennep, "Plays on the English Stage", pp. 12-14. The play seems to be a translation by Shadwell of Moliere's Tartuffe. Elkanah Settle, in the Preface to his Ibrahim (licensed 4 May 1676) attacks Shadwell and refers to Shadwell's translation of Tartuffe into The Hypocrite, which, according to Settle, was acted six days

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The Hypocrite

Event Comment: The Duke's Company. The date of the first production is uncertain. The fact that the Epilogue suggests that it followed Settle's The Female Prelate is not a factor in the dating, as the Newdigate newsletters--see Wilson, Theatre Notes from the Newdigate Newsletters, p. 80--show that Settle's play was first acted on 31 May 1680, whereas Caesar Borgia was entered in the Term Catalogues, November 1679. Although the reference in the Epilogue to burning the Pope's Effigies" has been argued as referring to the Pope-burning procession of 17 Nov. 1679, the references in the Epilogue to Father Lewis, who was tried and convicted at York, 28 March 1679, suggest that it was written before his execution, 27 Aug. 1679. Hence the play may have been acted first some time in the late spring or the summer. A song, Blush not redder than the Morning, with music by Thomas Farmer, is in Choice Ayres and Songs, The Third Book, 1681

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Caesar Borgia, Son Of Pope Alexander The Sixth

Event Comment: See Nicoll (Restoration Drama, p. 277) and Hotson (Commonwealth and Restoration Stage, p. 114) for discussion of an order addressed to George Jolly forbidding him to act further until differences between him and Beeston are settled

Performances