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may have used the theatre, though they were also acting at the Hope. A 1616 reference pictures the place as poorly furnished and suffering from rain damage. In 1621 the building's then-current landlord, Sir
Anthony Ashley, "turned out the players."
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and the aldermen; as such, it tended to attract the elements of society that had an interest in resisting authority. Like actors: there is a single reference to a theatre in
Whitefriars that was suppressed sometime in the reign of Queen
186:, the manager of the Queen's Revels company, lost his lease on the Whitefriars in 1614 and was unable to renew it. The combined company split again, and by October 1614 the Lady Elizabeth's Men were at the newly opened
90:, leased the mansion house of the old priory from Lord Buckhurst, for a term of seven years. They constructed what was then called a "private" theatre (as opposed to the large open-air "public" theatres like the
210:, which was located across Water Lane (now the southern end of Whitefriars St) from the Whitefriars, where the KPMG headquarters now stands. Salisbury Court was named after the medieval house and garden of the
214:, which stood on the east side of Water Lane. To add an element of posthumous confusion, the Salisbury Court Theatre was sometimes referred to as the Whitefriars in later years, as in the 1660s diary of
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In 1615 the Queen's Revels players moved to
Rosseter's short-lived Porter's Hall Theatre and then passed out of existence. After that point, the story of the Whitefriars Theatre grows obscure;
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London, in existence from 1608 to the 1620s — about which only limited and sometimes contradictory information survives.
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The
Whitefriars district was outside the medieval city walls of London to the west; it took its name from the priory of
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170:. The intention may have been for the combined company to use the Whitefriars as its winter playhouse and the
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94:) in the refectory or hall of the building. The new theatre was occupied at first by the
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monks ("white friars" due to their characteristic robes) that had existed there before
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during that company's brief life. In 1609 their place was taken by the
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The site of the
Whitefriars priory is now occupied by the offices of
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The
Children of the Queen's Revels: A Jacobean Theatre Repertory.
253:, "Playhouses and players," in Braunmuller and Hattaway, p. 30.
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The Queen's Revels
Children were joined in 1613 by the
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The
Cambridge Companion the English Renaissance Drama.
305:New Series 16 part 1 (March 1910), pp. 15–32.
22:The Whitefriars Theatre is shown to the west of
284:Braunmuller, A. R., and Michael Hattaway, eds.
86:and Thomas Woodford, nephew of the playwright,
65:of the city, beyond the direct control of the
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330:Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2005.
288:Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2003.
206:In 1629 the Whitefriars was replaced by the
61:. Until 1608 the Whitefriars district was a
398:Buildings and structures completed in 1608
314:4 Volumes, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1923.
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321:A Shakespeare Companion 1564–1964.
302:British Archaeological Association
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271:Clapham, p. 17 and fig. facing.
423:1608 establishments in England
100:Children of the Queen's Revels
59:Dissolution of the Monasteries
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262:Chambers, Vol. 2, pp. 515-17.
129:The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois
26:in this London street map.
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418:Theatres completed in 1608
174:as a summer venue, as the
408:Former theatres in London
323:Baltimore, Penguin, 1964.
294:, "The topography of the
347:Joseph Quincy Adams, Jr.
342:Shakespearean Playhouses
109:A Woman is a Weathercock
208:Salisbury Court Theatre
160:A Christian Turn'd Turk
413:17th century in London
403:1629 disestablishments
312:The Elizabethan Stage.
149:The Insatiate Countess
96:King's Revels Children
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190:south of the Thames.
134:Beaumont and Fletcher
102:; that company acted
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374:51.51333°N 0.10750°W
212:Bishops of Salisbury
195:Prince Charles's Men
168:Lady Elizabeth's Men
370: /
298:Priory of London,"
182:and the Globe. But
180:Blackfriars Theatre
35:Whitefriars Theatre
24:St Paul's Cathedral
379:51.51333; -0.10750
112:there, as well as
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351:Project Gutenberg
139:The Scornful Lady
37:was a theatre in
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300:Journal of the
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104:Nathan Field
88:Thomas Lodge
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223:Freshfields
202:Replacement
392:Categories
362:51°30′48″N
279:References
176:King's Men
114:Ben Jonson
67:Lord Mayor
55:Henry VIII
296:Carmelite
82:In 1608,
72:Elizabeth
51:Carmelite
365:0°6′27″W
106:'s play
45:Location
39:Jacobean
119:Epicene
78:Theatre
63:liberty
28:Enlarge
349:from
345:, by
229:Notes
92:Globe
153:and
33:The
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