Event Comment: The
King's Company. T
his performance is known through a document summarized in
The Theatrical Inquisitor and Monthly Mirror, July 1816, p. 25, and summarized in
Fitzgerald,
A New History, I, 145. Although t
his performance is the first certainly known, it is probably not the premiere, for the attendance (see below) was too small for the premiere of a new work by
John Dryden. Since the play was entered in the
Stationers' Register, January 1678, the first production was probably not long before t
his performance. The document in
The Theatrical Inquisitor gives t
his information:
The King's Box, no receipts;
Mr Hayles' boxes, #3 (probably 15 spectators);
Mr Mohun's boxes, #1 12s. (probably 8 spectators);
Mr Yeats' boxes, 12s. (probably 3 spectators);
James' boxes, #2 (probably 10 spectators).
Mr Kent's pitt, 82 spectators, and
Mr Britan's pitt, 35 spectators, a total of 117, paying #14 12s. 6d.
Mr Bracy's gallery, 42 spectators; and
Mr Johnson's gallery, 21 spectators; a total of 63 spectators, who paid #4 14s. 6d.
Mr Thomson's gallery, 33 spectators, paying #1 13s. The total attendance appears to have been 249; the receipts were #28 4s. The house rent came to #5 14s.
Downes (
Roscius Anglicanus, p. 11) gives a cast which is identical except for omissions