SELECT * FROM london_stages WHERE MATCH('(@(authnameclean,perftitleclean,commentcclean,commentpclean) "Tate"/1) | (@(roleclean,performerclean) "Tate")') 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 337 matches on Author, 24 matches on Event Comments, 6 matches on Performance Comments, 6 matches on Roles/Actors, and 2 matches on Performance Title.

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: Harlequins Chaplet

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: The Picture of Paris

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: Oscar and Malvina

Music: As17911024

Event Comment: Mainpiece: [With alterations by John Philip Kemble] Not acted these 4 years. [In his prompt copy (1808) now in Harvard Theatre Collection Kemble's annotation lists the following as needed in the opening scene: 10 principals, Captain of the Guard, 3 Knights, 2 Pages, 2 Gentlemen with Crown, 2 Gentlemen with Map, Physician, Herald, 2 Ladies with Goneril, 2 Ladies with Regan, 2 Standard Bearers, 12 Guards. Nearly every scene opens or closes with drums and trumpets. In the storm scene, "Thunder and lightning; lamps down," i.e. the footlights lowered out of sight into a shallow trough. It is not unlikely that these arrangements were adhered to in this present revival.] "Kemble said that, however singular it might be, in Lear an audience quite unsettled him; the noise of the box-doors caught his ear, and routed all his meditated effects; and he found it absolutely impossible to do that at night which he had thrown out during the rehearsal in the morning" (Boaden, Siddons, II, 376). Receipts: #350 9s. 6d. (310.9.6; 38.12.0; 1.8.0)

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: The Deserter

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: Harlequins Chaplet

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: HARLEQUIN AND FAUSTUS

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: HARLEQUIN AND FAUSTUS

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: HARLEQUIN AND FAUSTUS

Performances

Mainpiece Title: British Fortitude And Hibernian Friendship

Afterpiece Title: KING LEAR

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: NETLEY ABBEY

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: Mago and Dago

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: Crotchet Lodge

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: Rosina

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: The Village Lawyer

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: The Doldrum

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: The Wicklow Mountains

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: Barataria or Sancho Turned Governor

Performances

Mainpiece Title: King Lear

Related Works
Related Work: The History of King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate
Related Work: King Lear Author(s): Nahum Tate

Afterpiece Title: The Naval Pillar

Dance: As17991007

Song: In afterpiece: As17991011

Event Comment: The United Company. Writing on 3 Jan. 1692@3, Anthony Wood states: A new comedie composed by Mr Tate, poet laureat, was acted before their majesties, M. 2 Jan. (Andrew Clark, The Life and Times of Anthony Wood [Oxford, 1894], III, 413). Since no new play by Tate is known to have been acted at this time, and since A Duke and No Duke was reprinted in 1693 (Term Catalogues, May 1693), and acted several times (Gentleman's Journal, January 1692@2, issued in March):A Duke and no Duke being often acted now, and scarce, is reprinted, with the addition of a curious Preface, by our Laureat, concerning Farce. [Possibly Wood was mistaken in thinking that A Duke and no Duke was a new play. It seems the one most likely to fit the circumstances of this period.

Performances

Mainpiece Title: A Duke And No Duke

Related Works
Related Work: A Duke and no Duke Author(s): Nahum Tate
Event Comment: Nahum Tate published a poem The Battle of the B@@d's in the Theatre Royal Dec. 3, 1680, in Poems Written on Several Occasions, 2d edition, 1684, pp. 153-54

Performances

Event Comment: The United Company. An order, 9 Feb. 1683@4, in L. C. 5@145, p. 14 (Nicoll, Restoration Drama, p. 356), and another, L. C. I, specify requirements for a play to be acted at Whitehall on 11 Feb. 1683@4, and name Valentinian as the drama. The first Prologue and the Epilogue Written by a Person of Quality were printed separately; Luttrell's copy (Bindley Collection, William Andrews Clark@Jr@Library) is dated 20 Feb. 1683@4. They are reprinted in Wiley, Rare Prologues and Epilogues, pp. 249-51. It is not certain on what date the first performance occurred, for premieres at court are quite rare in the Restoration period. In Nahum Tate's Poems by Several Hands (1685): Sir Francis Fane: A Masque Made at the Request of the Earl of Rochester, for the Tragedy of Vadentinian. Downes (p. 40): The well performance, and the vast Interest the Author made in Town, Crown'd the Play, with great Gain of Reputation; and Profit to the Actors. For an intended cast of Rochester's alteration of the play by John Fletcher, see the introductory note to the season of 1675-76. In A Pastoral in French by Lewis Grabu (published in 1684; advertised in the London Gazette, No. 1947, 17 July 1684) are two songs for this play for which Grabu apparently composed the music: Injurious charmer of my vanquished heart and Kindness hath resistless charms. In Choice Ayres and Songs, The Fourth Book, 1684, is: A new Song in the late reviv'd Play, call'd Valentinian: Where would coy Aminta run [the composer of the music not being indicated]

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Valentinian

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Concert

Performance Comment: A song, Celebrate this Festival the text by Nahum Tate, the music by Henry Purcell, is in Comes Amoris, 1693-.
Event Comment: Gentleman's Journal, November 1693: An Ode upon His Majesty's Birth-day, Set to Musick by Dr Staggins; and Perform'd before Their Majesties, Nov. 4. 1693. The Words by N. Tate, Servant to Their Majesties. [The Ode was published separately as a broadside in 1693. A song, Gallic force, in vain, set by Staggins and sung to the King on his birthday, is in Comes Amoris, The Fifth Book, 1694.

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Concert

Event Comment: Rich's Company. The date of the first production is not known, but A Comparison between the Two Stages (1702) (pp. 21-23) implies that this work preceded Rinaldo and Armida (performed at lif probably in November 1698). The Island Princess was not published until 1699 (the Masque being advertised in the Post Boy, 7-9 Feb. 1698@9, and the Opera in the Flying Post, 7-9 March 1698@9). A Comparison between the Two Stages (1702), pp. 21-22: Sullen: The old House have a Bawble offer'd 'em, made out of Fletcher's Island Princess, sometime after alter'd by Mr Tate, and now erected into an Opera by Motteux: The Actors labour at this like so many Galley Slaves at an Oar, they call in the Fiddle, the Voice, the Painter, and the Carpenter to help 'em; and what neither the Poet nor the Player cou'd do, the Mechanick must do for him:...but as I was saying-the Opera now possesses the Stage, and after a hard struggle, at length it prevail'd, and something more than Charges came in every Night: The Quality, who are always Lovers of good Musick, flock hither, and by almost a total revolt from the other House, give this new Life, and set it in some eminency above the New; this was a sad mortification to the old Stagers in Lincolns-Inn-fields. For a poem, The Confederates; or the first Happy Day of the Island Princess, see Poem on Affairs of State, 1703, II, 248-50

Performances

Mainpiece Title: The Island Princess Or The Generous Portuguese

Related Works
Related Work: The Island Princess Author(s): Nahum Tate
Event Comment: Luttrell, A Brief Relation, IV, 518-79: This day being the anniversary of the kings birth...there was also a fine ball at St. James to conclude the solemnity, where the king was present: their royal highnesses the prince and princesse dined with his majestie at Kensington, who all the while were diverted with a fine consort of musick; and Mr Tate, the poet laureat, presented the king with a curious ode

Performances

Mainpiece Title: Concert

Event Comment: Not Acted these Fifteen Years [but see dl, 5 Dec. 1712]. Written by Mr Tate, late Poet Laureat. With all the Decorations proper to the Play

Performances

Mainpiece Title: A Duke And No Duke

Related Works
Related Work: A Duke and no Duke Author(s): Nahum Tate

Music: Concerto on Little Flute-Baston

Dance: Boval, Miss Tenoe