Record of a loan from
Philip Henslowe
, ( c . 1555-1616, theatre manager and
entrepreneur)
to
Jonson
,
Henry Chettle
(d. 1607, dramatist and pamphleteer),
and
Thomas Dekker
, ( c . 1572-1632, playwright, poet, pamphleteer)
via
Thomas Downton
(d. 1625,
actor)
, 3 Sept.
1599 , in Henslowe's diary as a payment for
Robert
II
.
Eugene Giddens
[fol. 64]
Lent vnto
Thomas downton the 3 of
Septmber 1599 to lend vnto Thomas deckers Bengemen Johnson
hary Chettell & other Jentellman in earneste of A playe calle Robart the
second Kinge of scottes tragedie the some of
xxxxs
Bibliography
Henslowe's Diary, ed. Greg, 111
JAB, 5
H&S 11.308
Henslowe's Diary, 124
Henslowe Papers (facsimile)
Henslowe was originally a dyer by trade, and was unusual among theatre managers of the day in never having been an actor. He built the Rose Theatre in Southwark in 1587, presumably as an extension of his earlier financial enterprises, which included starch making and money-lending. His career as a theatre manager appears to have taken off in 1592, when his stepdaughter married Edward Alleyn the actor. Henslowe's primary connection to his theatres was financial and administrative rather than artistic; he took a percentage of the ticket sales, and his account books for 1593-1603 (known as his 'Diary') also record payments for licences, costumes, and to playwrights. His 'Inventory' (of costumes, properties etc.) of 1598 also survives.
The son of a London dyer, Chettle was initially apprenticed to Thomas East, a stationer, in 1577. He edited Robert Greene 's posthumous Greene's Groatsworth of Wit (1592). Although it is unclear when Chettle began to write plays, by 1598 Meres could include him among 'the best for comedy' in his Palladis Tamia . Entries relating to plays wholly or partly by him appear in Henslowe's diary on many occasions between Feb. 1598 and May 1603. The best-known of these plays is probably The Tragedy of Hoffman (1602).
Dekker's earliest surviving play is The Shoemaker's Holiday (1600), commissioned by Henslowe for the Rose the previous year. Many other plays by him, largely collaborative, appear in Henslowe's Diary, but the majority are lost. He and Marston took revenge on Jonson for Poetaster with Satiromastix , in 1602. He also wrote the greater part of James I's coronation entry, with Jonson , in 1604.
Strange's 1593; Admiral's 1594; Pembroke 's 1597; Admiral's-Prince Henry 's-Palsgrave's 1597-1618