Event Comment: The United Company.  This play was in rehearsal before 
the death of 
Charles II-see 6 Feb. 1684@5-and was staged shortly after 
the playhouse reopened.  
Luttrell's date of acquisition of 
the separately-printed 
Prologue and 
Epilogue is 9 May 1685 (in possession of 
Pickering and Chatto, Ltd., 1938), and 
the play may have been first given on that date or during 
the week preceding Saturday 9 May 1685.  For 
Cibber's account of 
Mountfort as 
Sir Courtly, see 
Cibber, Apology, ed. 
Lowe, I, 129.  
The separately-printed Prologue and Epilogue are reprinted in 
Wiley, 
Rare Prologues and Epilogues, pp. 228-30.  A separately-printed 
Three New Songs in Sir Courtley Nice (1685) contains three songs, with 
the music by 
Samuel Ackroyde and an unknown composer.  In addition, two songs, 
As I grazed unaware and 
O be kind my dear be kind, both composed by 
R. King, are in 
The Theater of Music, Second Book, 1685.  
Downes (
Roscius Anglicanus, pp. 40-41): 
The first new Comedy after 
King James came to 
the Crown, was 
Sir Courtly Nice, wrote by 
Mr Crown:...
The Comedy being justly Acted, and 
the Characters in't new, Crown'd it with a general Applause: 
Sir Courtly was so nicely Perform'd, that not any succeeding, but Mr Cyber has Equall'd him.  Note, 
Mr Griffin so Excell'd in 
Surly, 
Sir Edward Belfond, 
The Plain Dealer, none succeeding in 
the 2 former have Equall'd him, except his Predecessor 
Mr Hart in 
the latter.  
The Lover's Session; In Imitation of Sir John Suckling's Session of Poets (in 
Poems on Affairs of State, II [1703], 162): @Montrath was in Foppery conceiv'd ano
ther@Of Whitehall true Breed, 
Sir Nices Twin Bro
ther:@None could tell, so alike all 
their Follies did seem,@Whe
ther he acted Mumford, or Mumford him.