Record of a loan from
Philip Henslowe
( c . 1555-1616, entrepreneur and
theatre-manager)
to
Jonson
, at the instigation of
Edward Alleyn
(1566-1626, actor, entrepreneur and
philanthropist)
, and
William Born
(or Bird, fl. 1597-1622, actor and
playwright),
22 June 1602 , in Henslowe's diary as a payment for
Richard Crookback
and additions to The Spanish Tragedy
.
Eugene Giddens
[fol. 106v]
++
Lent ʌ ⎡vnto bengemy
Johnsone⎤ at the Apoyntment of EAlleyn & william birde
the 22 of June 1602 in earneste of A Boocke called Richard crockback & for new
adicyons for Jeronymo the some of
xli
Bibliography
Henslowe's Diary, ed.
Greg, 168
JAB, 33
H&S 11.308
Henslowe's Diary, 203
Henslowe Papers (facsimile)
Edward Alleyn:Elizabethan Actor, Jacobean Gentleman, ed. Aileen Reid and Robert
Maniura (Dulwich, 1994), a catalogue for the exhibition marking the 375th
anniversary of the College's foundation, and especially the biographical essay
by S.P. Cerasano, 11-31
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.
Alleyn was born in the parish of St Botolph, Bishopsgate, on 1 Sept. 1566. He was well-established as an actor by 1592, and regarded as a leading actor (and even a celebrity) by the middle of the decade. He married Joan Woodward, step-daughter to Henslowe, in 1592. He seems increasingly to have become an entrepreneur rather than a player; in particular, he took a complete break from playing between 1597-1600, and seems to have ceased playing completely in about 1604: his last recorded role was as the Genius of the City in the Magnificent Entertainment for King James (1604), and Heywood's Apology for Actors ( c . 1608) describes him as recently retired. Alleyn founded Dulwich College, as the 'College of God's Gift', in 1619. He died in 1626.
Born joined Henslowe's Admiral's Men at the Rose following the Isle of Dogs affair in 1597; he appears in Henslowe's Diary on many subsequent occasions. The Admiral's Men were taken into the service of Prince Henry about Christmas 1603, and it was in this capacity that Born appeared in the Magnificent Entertainment (Mar. 1604) as 'Zeal'. He remained a member of the Palsgrave's Men (the successors to Prince Henry 's) until at least 1622, and he was one of the signatories when they leased the Fortune in Oct. 1618. As a writer, he collaborated with Rowley in the completion of Haughey's Judas (1601), and on 22 Nov. 1602 he and Rowley received £4 for additions to Marlowe's Doctor Faustus .