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<div xml:id="CURT2_abstract">
<head>Abstract</head>

  <p>In <date when-custom="1577" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1577</date>, the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, the second purpose-built <ref target="LOND5.xml">London</ref> playhouse, arose in <ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref>, just north of the City of London.<note type="editorial" resp="PERS1.xml#JENS1">It was preceded by <ref target="JRST1.xml">John Rastell’s stage</ref> in <ref target="FINS3.xml">Finsbury</ref>, the <date when-custom="1567" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1567</date> <ref target="RELI2.xml">Red Lion</ref> in <ref target="STEP6.xml">Stepney</ref>, and the nearby <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref>, built in <date when-custom="1576" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1576</date>.</note> The <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, a polygonal amphitheatre, became a major venue for theatrical and other entertainments until at least <date when-custom="1622" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1622</date>. The building may have stood on the site until as late as <date when-custom="1698" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1698</date>. Most major playing companies, including the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name>, the <name ref="ORGS1.xml#QUEE5" type="org">Queen’s Men</name>, and <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#PRCH1">Prince Charles’s Men</name>, played there. It is the likely site for the premiere of <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">Shakespeare</name>’s plays <title level="m">Romeo and Juliet</title> and <title level="m">Henry V</title>.</p>
</div>
            <div xml:id="CURT2_neighbourhood"><head>The Neighbourhood and the Site</head>

              <p>Bounded by <ref target="MOOR1.xml">Moorfields</ref> to the south, <ref target="BISH3.xml">Bishopsgate Street</ref> to the east, and <ref target="FINS2.xml">Finsbury Fields</ref> to the west, <ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref> is located on the north side of the <ref target="LOND5.xml">City of London</ref>. It remained a collection of manors, farms, fields, and religious houses into the sixteenth century. The <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> was built on the south side of the current Hewett Street, near <ref target="BISH3.xml">Bishopsgate Street</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SURV8">Bird</ref>). In the <date notBefore-custom="1590" notAfter-custom="1599" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1590s</date>, <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">William Shakespeare</name> occupied a house nearby on <ref target="BISH3.xml">Bishopsgate Street</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#MAND1">Mander</ref>). The neighbourhood name references a polluted stream, sometimes called <ref target="SEWE1.xml">Sewersditch</ref>, which ran from <ref target="STLE1.xml">St. Leonard’s Church</ref> to <ref target="HOLY6.xml">Holy Well Lane</ref>, now known as High Street. <ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref> followed Roman roads near Kingsland Road<!--JT: not in IDs-->, a continuation of Ermine Street <!--JT: not in IDs-->, and <ref target="OLDS1.xml">Old Street</ref>, a continuation of <ref target="WATL1.xml">Waitling</ref> or <ref target="WATL1.xml">Watling Street</ref> (<ref type="mol:bibl" target="SHOR2.xml">Campbell</ref>). The majority of <ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref> occupants resided on or near <ref target="HOLY6.xml">Holy Well Lane</ref>.</p>

              <p><ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref> also had a well known nunnery, <ref target="HOLY7.xml">Holywell Priory</ref>, from the <date notBefore-custom="1200" notAfter-custom="1600" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">twelfth to sixteenth centuries</date> (<ref target="BIBL1.xml#BOWS4" type="bibl">Bowsher, <title level="a">Holywell Priory</title> 232</ref>). The Priory was the ninth richest in all of England (<ref target="BIBL1.xml#BULL3" type="bibl">Bull</ref>). Following the Reformation, the Priory was dissolved in <date when-custom="1539" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1539</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#MAND1">Mander</ref>). Later, the neighbourhood featured manor houses for the wealthy, such as Stratton House and Stone House (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BULL3">Bull</ref>)<!-- JT: neither houses in IDs-->. Recent research on the history of first purpose-built playhouse, the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref>, features useful new historical maps, as well as a schematic that shows the proximity of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> to the Priory and other important structures in the area.</p>

              <p>To the north, <ref target="STLE1.xml">St. Leonard’s Church</ref> still stands at the corner of <ref target="BISH3.xml">Bishopsgate Street</ref> and <ref target="OLDS1.xml">Old Street</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#MAND1">Mander</ref>). No firm date exists for the building of the original medieval church, but in engravings it appears to date from the <date notBefore-custom="1400" notAfter-custom="1500" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">fifteenth century</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SURV8">Bird</ref>). It featured a tower with up to five bells (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SURV8">Bird</ref>). James Bird points to <name ref="PERS1.xml#STOW6">John Stow</name> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SURV8">Bird 74</ref>), who says that between the north corner of the field west of the High Street and the church <quote>sometime stood a Crosse, now a Smithes Forge, dividing three wayes</quote><!--Find quote in Stow-->. The <date when-custom="1598" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1598</date> edition of <title level="m">A Survey</title> notes that the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> and the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref> were built nearby: <quote>neare thereunto are builded two publique houses for the acting and shewe of Comedies, Tragedies, and Histories, for recreation. Whereof the one is called the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Courtein</ref>, the other the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref>: both standing on the Southwest side towards the field</quote> (<ref type="mol:bibl" target="stow_1598_suburbs#stow_1598_suburbs_sig_Z7r.xml">Stow 1598, sig. Z7r</ref>; qtd in <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#COLL10">Collier 263-264</ref>). This reference to the two playhouses was removed from the <date when-custom="1603" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1603</date> edition of <title level="m">A Survey</title>.</p>

              <p>By the <date notBefore-custom="1590" notAfter-custom="1599" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1590s</date>, <ref target="STLE1.xml">St. Leonard’s Church</ref> has become associated with actors. Both <name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB2">Cuthbert Burbage</name> and <name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB1">Richard Burbage</name>, actors and sons of theatre owner (and builder of the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref>) <name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB3">James Burbage</name>, who was also manager of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, were buried there (<ref target="BIBL1.xml#SURV8" type="bibl">Bird</ref>). <ref target="STLE1.xml">St. Leonard’s</ref> is thus sometimes known as the <quote>actor’s church</quote> of <ref target="LOND5.xml">London</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#MAND1">Mander</ref>). The original church became structurally unsound in the early eighteenth century and was demolished in <date when-custom="1736" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1736</date>. It was rebuilt in the same location in <date when-custom="1740" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1740</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#THOR1">Thornbury</ref>).</p>

 <!--<p>The English nursery rhyme <title level="a">London Bells</title> (also known as <title level="a">Oranges and Lemons</title>) refers to <ref target="mol:STLE1">St. Leonard’s Church</ref> in <ref target="mol:SHOR1">Shoreditch</ref>:</p> 
<cit><quote><lg>
  <l>Two Sticks and an Apple,</l>
  <l>Ring the Bells at <ref target="mol:STMA51">Whitechappel</ref>.</l>
  <l>Old Father Bald Pate,</l>
  <l>Ring the Bells at Aldgate.</l>
  <l>Maids in white Aprons,</l>
  <l>Ring the Bells at St. Catharines.</l>
  <l>Orange and Lemons,</l>
  <l>Ring the Bells at <ref target="mol:STCL2">St. Clemens</ref>.</l>
  <l>When will you pay me?</l>
  <l>Ring the Bells at Old Bailey</l>
  <l>When I am rich,</l>
  <l>Ring the Bells at Fleetditch.</l>
  <l>When will that be?</l>
  <l>Ring the Bells at Stepney.</l>
  <l>When I am old,</l>
  <l>Ring the Great Bells at Paul’s.</l>
</lg>
</quote><bibl><ref type="bibl" target="mol:LOVE11">Lovechild sig. B5r-B6r</ref></bibl></cit>-->

              <p>After <date when-custom="1577" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1577</date>, vice and criminality, including prostitution, began to overtake the neighbourhood. As early as <date when-custom="1579" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1579</date>, moralists complained about the malign influence the theatres in <ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref> had on the public, with a character, Reason, in <name ref="PERS1.xml#TWYN1">Thomas Twyne</name>’s pamphlet <title level="m">Physic against Fortune</title>, a translation of Italian poet Petrarch’s <title level="m">De Remediis utriusque Fortunae</title>, noting that both the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref> and <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> were <quote>well knowen to be enimies to good manners; for looke who goeth there evyl returneth worse</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#TWYN2">Twyne sig. F4</ref><!--r/v?-->; qtd in <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CHAM1">Chambers 202</ref>). <name ref="PERS1.xml#NORT6">John Northbrooke</name> complained about the malign influence of playhouses on the title page of his <date when-custom="1578" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1578</date> <title level="m">Treatise</title> that attacks <quote>vaine Playes</quote> (Northbrooke; qtd. in <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BERR4">Berry 377</ref>).</p>

              <p>In <date when-custom="1584" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1584</date>, incidents at the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref> and the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> caused significant civil unrest. Correspondence between <name ref="PERS1.xml#ELIZ1">Queen Elizabeth I</name>’s Lord Chamberlain, <name ref="PERS1.xml#CECI1">William Cecil, Lord Burghley</name> and <name ref="PERS1.xml#FLEE9">William Fleetwood</name>, recorder of London, detail a near-riot on <date when-custom="1584-06-14" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">14 June 1584</date>. <name ref="PERS1.xml#FLEE9">Fleetwood</name> comments that <quote>very nere the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref> or <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curten</ref> at the tyme of the Playes</quote>, an apprentice sleeping in one of the nearby fields was pestered by a gentleman, which resulted in a fistfight. The following day, other apprentices threatened to riot and an unnamed number were arrested. <name ref="PERS1.xml#FLEE9">Fleetwood</name> ordered the arrest of the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref>’s owner, <name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB3">James Burbage</name>. <name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB3">Burbage</name>’s status as a member of the playing company sponsored by <name ref="PERS1.xml#CARE6">Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon</name> meant that he could refuse arrest, and he noted that he was <quote>my Lo of hunsdons man</quote>. <name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB3">Burbage</name> agreed to appear in court the next day (BL Lansdowne MS 41; qtd. in <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BERR4">Berry 345</ref>).</p>

              <p>One further reference to the dubious nature of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> and its environs comes from a <date when-custom="1613" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1613</date> satirical text by <name ref="PERS1.xml#WITH4">George Wither</name> that mentions derisively that a foolish young lover, Momus, <quote>can cull, / From plaies he heard at <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtaine</ref> or at the <ref target="REBU1.xml">Bull</ref>, / And yet is fine coy Mistress Marry-Muffe, / The soonest taken with such broken stuffe</quote>. Momus goes to <quote>the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtaine</ref>’ to pick up hints at fooling, and notes <gap reason="editorial"/> downe</quote> not quotations from the plays but <quote>that action <gap reason="editorial"/> that likes him best</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#WITH5">Wither sig. D3v</ref>; qtd. in <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CHAM1">Chambers 404</ref>).</p>

</div>

<div xml:id="CURT2_Architecture">
<head>Theatre Architecture</head>

  <p>Built by <name ref="PERS1.xml#LANM1">Henry Laneman</name> (also known as <name ref="PERS1.xml#LANM1">Henry Lanman</name>) in <date when-custom="1577" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1577</date>, the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> arose a mere 200 yards from its neighbour, the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref>, built the year before by <name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB3">James Burbage</name> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#GURR6">Gurr 31</ref>; <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BOWS6">Bowsher, <title level="m">Shakespeare’s London Theatreland</title> 55, 62</ref>). Very close geographically, they were perhaps even closer in design. No documentation exists for the specific design of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, but it may have copied its neighbour in at least some details if we accept Gurr’s narrative. A similar design may also have been used for the <ref target="ROSE6.xml">Rose</ref>, <ref target="SWAN1.xml">Swan</ref>, and <ref target="GLOB1.xml">Globe</ref> theatres (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#GURR6">Gurr 132</ref>). Details about the excavation of the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref> from the Museum of London Archeology provide important background, since the two playhouses were in such close proximity and had shared management (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BOWS6">Bowsher, <title level="m">Shakespeare’s London Theatreland</title> 63</ref>; see also <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#LAAR1">LAARC</ref> <ref target="https://web.archive.org/web/20180408131038/http://archive.museumoflondon.org.uk/laarc/catalogue/siteinfo.asp?id=17663&amp;code=CNU02">CNU02</ref>).</p>

  <p>The <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> was a polygonal amphitheatre, built of timber and finished with lime and plaster (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#ADAM13">Adams 77-78</ref>). It was probably the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> that <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">Shakespeare</name> describes as <quote>this unworthy Scaffold <gap reason="editorial"/> this Cock-pit <gap reason="editorial"/> this Woodden O’</quote> in the prologue to <title level="m">Henry V</title>, which seems to have been first performed there (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#STER2">Stern 15</ref>; <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SHAK16">Shakespeare</ref> <ref target="http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/doc/H5_FM/scene/Prologue/#tln-14">14-16</ref>). Its dimensions remain in question, although excavations are underway (see below, <ref target="CURT2.xml#CURT2_Archaeology">Excavation and Site</ref>). As a comparison, the <ref target="ROSE6.xml">Rose</ref>’s foundations, unearthed in <date when="1989">1989</date>, reveal a building about 22 metres in diameter (<ref type="mol:bibl" target="ROSE6.xml"><title level="a">The Rose</title></ref>). The <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref>, excavated in <date when="2011">2011</date>, was a 14-sided polygonal building with an almost identical diameter of about 22 metres (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BOWS6">Bowsher, <title level="m">Shakespeare’s London Theatreland</title> 58</ref>).</p>

  <p>The <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, modeled after these theatres, as well as popular animal baiting rings such as the <ref target="BEAR1.xml">Bear Garden</ref>, was a purpose-built, public theatre designed for plays. In a baiting house, animals such as bulls and bears occupied the ground floor yard and the spectators used the galleries. Playhouses used the yard to pack in patrons instead. In addition to the yard, the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> had three galleries, each of which had wooden steps for seating. The galleries and stage were covered by the roof, while the yard was open to the elements. A protected view was an advantage that cost viewers more: one penny was charged to enter the yard, and then an additional penny was collected to enter the galleries. A final penny gained a seat close to the stage and a cushion (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#GURR6">Gurr 17</ref>). A recent collaboration between media firm Cloak and Dagger Studios and Museum of London Archaeology produced a video animation, <title level="a">Shoreditch 1595</title>, which shows the current approximation of the appearance of an Elizabethan playhouse.
    <lb/>
    <media rend="youtubeEmbed" n="gO28x-9FwC8" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gO28x-9FwC8#t=24" mimeType="video/x-flv" width="560px" height="315px"><desc>Click here for video of <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Shoreditch Theatre</title>, by Museum of London Archaeology and Cloak and Dagger Studios.</desc></media></p>

<p>One likely image of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> has been identified. In <title level="a">The View of the Citty of London from the North towards the South</title>, a prominent building fitting the description of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> appears on the left half of the image. It is tall, has three upper levels, a loft at the top, staircases on the sides, and a flagpole. Depending on scholarly opinion of the date that <title level="m">The View</title> was engraved, the building is either the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref> or the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BERR4">Berry, <title level="a">The View of London</title> 196-97</ref>).</p>
  
  <figure type="rightFloat">
    <graphic url="graphics/website_images/view_london_berry.png"/>
    <figDesc style="display:block;"><title level="a">The View of the Cittye of London from the North towards the Sowth</title>, reprinted in <ref target="BIBL1.xml#BERR6" type="bibl">Berry, <title level="m">The First Public Playhouse</title></ref>.</figDesc>
    <!--Photoshop image to circle each theatre-->
  </figure>

  <p>Unlike its predecessor the <ref target="THEA2.xml">Theatre</ref> (whose timbers became the <ref target="GLOB1.xml">Globe</ref>), the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> had longevity. Records indicate the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> in use for performances by acting companies at least until <date when-custom="1625" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1625</date>, nearly 50 years after its construction (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#WICK1">Wickham 67</ref><!-- Cite using our citation method.-->). Ashley Thorndike speculates that the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> was most likely still standing at the closing of the theatres in <date when-custom="1642" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1642</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#THOR3">Thorndike 45</ref>). Some scholars assert it was still standing until destroyed by the <ref target="FIRE1.xml">Great Fire in 1666</ref>, while others claim that it was not pulled down until <date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" when-custom="1698">1698</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CURT8"><title level="a">Curtain</title>, <title level="m">ShaLT</title></ref><!-- Double check how we should be citing ShaLT-->).
</p>

</div>
      
<div xml:id="CURT2_OwnershipAndCompanies">
<head>Human Connections: Ownership and Theatre Companies</head>

  <p><name ref="PERS1.xml#BURB3">James Burbage</name> built the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, but actors also owned shares in the building. The <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> appears in the will of <name ref="PERS1.xml#POPE5">Thomas Pope</name>. <name ref="PERS1.xml#POPE5">Pope</name>, a member of the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name>, left his share of the <ref target="GLOB1.xml">Globe</ref> and the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> to his heirs in his will dated <date when-custom="1603-07-22" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">22 July 1603</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CURT6"><title level="m">EMLoT</title></ref>; see also <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#HONI1">Honigmann and Brock 70</ref>). <name ref="PERS1.xml#UNDE1">John Underwood</name>, a member of the <name ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1" type="org">King’s Men</name>, likewise left his share of the <ref target="GLOB1.xml">Globe</ref>, the <ref target="BLAC6.xml">Blackfriars</ref>, and the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> to heirs in his will dated <date when-custom="1624-10-04" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">4 October 1624</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CURT6"><title level="m">EMLoT</title></ref>; see also <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#HONI1">Honigmann and Brock 143</ref>).</p>

  <p>In <date notBefore-custom="1597" notAfter-custom="1598" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1597—1598</date>, the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name>, which included <name ref="PERS1.xml#KEMP3">Will Kempe</name> as their clown, used the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> for their performances. The <date when-custom="1599" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1599</date> second quarto of <title level="m">Romeo and Juliet</title> features the stage direction <quote>enter <name ref="PERS1.xml#KEMP3">Will Kemp</name></quote> just prior to the character Peter’s lines in 4.5 (<ref target="http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/facsimile/book/BL_Q2_Rom/78/?zoom=500">Q2, K3v</ref>, qtd in <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CURT6"><title level="m">EMLoT</title></ref>). Collier concludes that <name ref="PERS1.xml#KEMP3">Kemp</name> must have played on the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> stage (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#COLL10">Collier 89</ref>). Another of <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">Shakespeare</name>’s comic actors also may have performed there. <name ref="PERS1.xml#ARMI1">Robert Armin</name> once referred to himself as <quote>Clonnico de Curtanio Snuff</quote> or the Clown of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> Snuff (Chambers 403).</p>

  <p>After the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name> moved to the <ref target="GLOB1.xml">Globe</ref> in <ref target="SOUT2.xml">Southwark</ref>, some public records indicate that other companies played at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>. In <date when-custom="1601" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1601</date>, <name ref="ORGS1.xml#OXFO5" type="org">Oxford’s Men</name> seem to have been the target of an order from the <name ref="ORGS1.xml#PRIV2" type="org">Privy Council</name>, who asked the <ref target="MIDD30.xml">Middlesex</ref> county justices of the peace to halt the performance of an unnamed play at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>. The play apparently represented <quote>the persons of some gentlemen of good desert and quality that are yet alive</quote>, although it did so in <quote>an obscure manner</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BERR4">Berry, <title level="a">The View of London</title> 414</ref>). Beginning in <date when-custom="1603" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1603</date>, the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#QUEE5">Queen Anne’s Men</name>, also known as <name ref="ORGS1.xml#QUEE5" type="org">Worcester’s Men</name>, performed various plays at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> until <date when-custom="1609" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1609</date> when they relocated to the <ref target="REBU1.xml">Red Bull</ref>. However, the <name ref="ORGS1.xml#PRIV2" type="org">Privy Council</name> ordered in <date when-custom="1604-04" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">April 1604</date> that the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">King’s Men</name>, the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#QUEE5">Queen’s Men</name>, and the <name ref="ORGS1.xml#PRCH1" type="org">Prince Charles’s Men</name> be allowed to perform at the <ref target="GLOB1.xml">Globe</ref>, <ref target="FORT1.xml">Fortune</ref>, and <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BERR4">Berry, <title level="a">The View of London</title> 414</ref>). Starting in <date when-custom="1622" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1622</date>, the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#PRCH1">Prince Charles’s Men</name> used the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, the <ref target="REBU1.xml">Red Bull</ref>, and the <ref target="COCK5.xml">Cockpit</ref> until they disbanded in <date when-custom="1625" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1625</date> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#GURR6">Gurr 55-67</ref>; <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BOWS6">Bowsher, <title level="m">Shakespeare’s London Theatreland</title> 64</ref>). Although the building was standing in <date when-custom="1642" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1642</date> and perhaps as late as <date when-custom="1660" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1660</date>, or even 1698, no other companies have been discovered in connection with the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>.</p>
</div>

<div xml:id="CURT2_PlaysPlaywrights">
<head>Human Connections: Plays and Playwrights</head>

  <p>Between <date notBefore-custom="1585" notAfter-custom="1642" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1585 and 1642</date>, various well known playwrights had their plays performed at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>. Most famously, scholars such as Tiffany Stern and Julian Bowsher conjecture that <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">Shakespeare</name>’s <title level="m">Romeo and Juliet</title> first debuted at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> in a performance by the <name ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1" type="org">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name> in <date when-custom="1598" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1598</date><!-- Should we bibl cite this too?-->. This date arises in part from a passage by <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">Shakespeare</name>’s contemporary, <name ref="PERS1.xml#MARS7">John Marston</name>, whose <title level="m">Tenth Satire</title> has a habitual playgoer, Luscus, who is asked:</p>
<cit><quote><lg><l>Luscus, what’s plaid today? I’faith now I knowe:</l>
<l>I see thy lips abroach, from whence doth flow</l>
<l>Naught but pure Juliet and Romeo</l>
<l>Say who acts best? Drusus or Roscio?</l>
<l>Now I have him, that ne’er of aught did speake</l>
<l>But when of plays or players he did treat;</l>
<l>And speakes in print, at least whate’er he says</l>
<l>Is warranted by <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> plaudities.</l></lg></quote><bibl><ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#MARS8">Marston sig. H4r</ref>; transcribed in <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#FURN12">Furness 409</ref></bibl></cit>
  <p>According to Tiffany Stern, <quote>the few narratives that relate to the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> always suggest that there was something unglamorous about the place</quote>, and that audiences mined plays like <quote><title level="m">Romeo and Juliet</title> for verbal tidbits that they can use in their later, post-play flirtations</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#STER2">Stern 79</ref>), clearly referring to the <name ref="PERS1.xml#MARS7">Marston</name> passage above. The following year, <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">Shakespeare</name>’s final history play <title level="m">Henry V</title> played there, which likely features the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> as <quote>this Wooden O</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SHAK16">Shakespeare</ref> <ref target="http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/doc/H5_FM/scene/Prologue/#tln-14">14</ref>).</p>

  <p>Other notable playwrights whose work appeared on the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>’s stage include <name ref="PERS1.xml#JONS1">Ben Jonson</name>, <name ref="PERS1.xml#HEYW1">Thomas Heywood</name>, <name ref="PERS1.xml#ROWL8">William Rowley</name>, <name ref="PERS1.xml#DAYJ1">John Day</name>, and <name ref="PERS1.xml#WILK1">George Wilkins</name>. <seg type="interestingSnippet" xml:id="CURT2_Shakespeare">Few plays are certainly known to have been performed at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, with only a handful well known. The earliest documented play performed at the theatre was <name ref="PERS1.xml#JONS1">Ben Jonson</name>’s <title level="m">Every Man in his Humor</title> in <date when-custom="1598" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1598</date>, with <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">William Shakespeare</name> in the cast (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CURT6"><title level="m">EMLoT</title></ref>; <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BOWS6">Bowsher, <title level="m">Shakespeare’s London Theatreland</title> 64</ref>).</seg> The next few years in the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>’s history are a blank. No playbills survive, and there are no title-page ascriptions. The next known play surfaced in <date when-custom="1603" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1603</date>—<name ref="PERS1.xml#HEYW1">Thomas Heywood</name>’s <title level="m">A Woman Kill’d with Kindness</title>. In <date when-custom="1607" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic">1607</date>, <title level="m">The Travels of Three English Brothers</title> was performed by the <name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#QUEE5">Queen Anne’s Men</name> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#CURT6"><title level="m">EMLoT</title></ref>).</p>

<div xml:id="CURT2_Plays_Repertory">
  <head>Known Plays Performed at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref></head>
  <table cols="7" rows="7">
    <row role="label">
      <cell role="label">Performance Date</cell>
      <cell role="label">Title</cell>
      <cell role="label">Author</cell>
      <cell role="label">Date of First Publication<note type="editorial" resp="PERS1.xml#TAKE1">Publication dates taken from <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#DEEP1">DEEP</ref>.</note></cell>
      <cell role="label">Playing Company</cell>
      <cell role="label"><ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#DEEP1">DEEP</ref> Number</cell>
      <cell role="label"><ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#WIGG1">Wiggins</ref> Number<note type="editorial" resp="PERS1.xml#TAKE1">The five published volumes of Wiggins’ <title level="m">British Drama</title> cover 1533-1602. Forthcoming volumes will cover the rest of the period up to 1642.</note></cell>
    </row>
    <row role="data"><cell role="data"><date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" from-custom="1598" to-custom="1599">1598-1599</date></cell><cell role="data"><title level="m">Romeo and Juliet</title></cell><cell role="data"><name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">William Shakespeare</name></cell><cell role="data"><date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" when-custom="1597">1597</date></cell><cell role="data"><name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name></cell><cell role="data"><ref target="http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/234">234</ref></cell><cell>987</cell></row>
    <row role="data"><cell role="data"><date when-custom="1599" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1599</date></cell><cell role="data"><title level="m">Henry V</title></cell><cell role="data"><name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">William Shakespeare</name></cell><cell role="data"><date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" when-custom="1600">1600</date></cell><cell role="data"><name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name></cell><cell role="data"><ref target="http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/252">252</ref>/<ref target="http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/288">288</ref></cell><cell>1183</cell></row>
    <row role="data"><cell role="data"><date when-custom="1598" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1598</date></cell><cell role="data"><title level="m">Every Man in His Humour</title></cell><cell role="data"><name ref="PERS1.xml#JONS1">Ben Jonson</name></cell><cell role="data"><date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" when-custom="1601">1601</date></cell><cell role="data"><name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#KIME1">Lord Chamberlain’s Men</name></cell><cell role="data"><ref target="http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/313">313</ref></cell><cell>1143</cell></row>
    <row role="data"><cell role="data"><date when-custom="1603" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1603</date></cell><cell role="data"><title level="m">A Woman Kill’d With Kindness</title></cell><cell role="data"><name ref="PERS1.xml#HEYW1">Thomas Heywood</name></cell><cell role="data"><date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" when-custom="1607">1607</date></cell><cell role="data"><name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#QUEE5">Worcester’s Men</name><note type="editorial" resp="PERS1.xml#MCPH1">Low certainty.</note></cell><cell role="data"><ref target="http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/502">502</ref></cell><cell/></row>
    <row role="data"><cell role="data"><date when-custom="1607" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1607</date></cell><cell role="data"><title level="m">The Travels of the Three English Brothers</title></cell><cell role="data"><name ref="PERS1.xml#ROWL8">William Rowley</name>, <name ref="PERS1.xml#DAYJ1">John Day</name>, <name ref="PERS1.xml#WILK1">George Wilkins</name></cell><cell role="data"><date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" when-custom="1607">1607</date></cell><cell role="data"><name type="org" ref="ORGS1.xml#QUEE5">Queen Anne’s Men</name></cell><cell role="data"><ref target="http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/482">482</ref></cell><cell/></row>
    <row role="data"><cell role="data"><date when-custom="1615" calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic">1615</date></cell><cell role="data"><title level="m">The Hector of Germany, or The Palsgrave</title></cell><cell role="data">Wentworth Smith</cell><cell role="data"><date calendar="includes.xml#julianSic" datingMethod="includes.xml#julianSic" when-custom="1615">1615</date></cell><cell role="data">Unidentified<note type="editorial" resp="PERS1.xml#MCPH1"><quote>a Company of Young-men of the Citie</quote></note></cell><cell role="data"><ref target="http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/623">623</ref></cell><cell/></row><!-- Certainty low on author -->
    </table></div>

</div>

<div xml:id="CURT2_Archaeology">
<head>Archaeology: Excavation and Site in Modern London</head>
  <p>The precise location of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> was unknown in modern <ref target="LOND5.xml">London</ref> until the foundations were discovered in <date when="2012">2012</date> during improvement construction in the Borough of Hackney. Historians knew the general location, and so a commemorative plaque commissioned by Hackney London Borough Council was placed in <date when="1993">1993</date> high on an exterior brick wall at 18 Hewett Street. The plaque was placed at the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>’s purported location, but there was no physical supporting evidence. The plaque proved to be amazingly accurate: it was approximately 266 feet (82 metres) from the plaque to the entrance of the site of the actual theatre. The site sits at the intersection of Hewett Street and Curtain Road with the entrance of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> appearing to be on the western side of the building, now situated against Curtain Road below the Victorian era pub, The Horse and Groom. Next to the Horse and Groom is a car repair shop with an investigation pit that had, unknowingly, exposed the foundations of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> even before excavation began (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#KENN2">Kennedy</ref>). Bowsher believes that the stage was situated on the eastern side of this parcel (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BOWS6">Bowsher 67</ref>).</p>

  <p>Limited excavation began at the site in <date when="2012">2012</date>, carried out by archaeologists from the Museum of London Archaeology. According to reports on the archaeological investigation, the remains of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>’s foundation appear to have escaped serious interference and are <quote>remarkably well-preserved</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#KENN2">Kennedy</ref>). The surviving base of the foundation is made of bricks and is currently buried about 3 metres below ground level. An outer yard was also discovered in the excavation. This yard was <quote>paved with sheep knuckle bones that could date from the theatre or slightly later housing</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#KENN2">Kennedy</ref>). Unlike the <ref target="ROSE6.xml">Rose</ref> excavation in <date when="1988">1988</date>, so far only a few artifacts have been found at the site.<!-- Encoder: Make a link to the section of the Rose page about the excavations there.--><!--JT: No section on the Rose's excavation included in ROSE6 yet—is it forthcoming?--> The only artifacts found so far that date to <name ref="PERS1.xml#SHAK1">Shakespeare</name>’s time have been shards of pottery from a pipe: <quote>other small finds, including fragments of china and wall tile, were rather later in date</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#BAIL1">Baillie</ref>).</p>
</div>


<!--  
<div xml:id="CURT2_Future">



THIS INFORMATION IS OUTDATED UPdate when building development is completed see this link https://perkinswill.com/project/the-stage/ for updates.
  
<head>Future Development on the Site</head>
  <p>The property owners, Plough Yard Developments Ltd., have been cleared by the Hackney Council to 
  redevelop the site for commercial and residential use. The redevelopment process to this area of Shoreditch will include <quote>a new 40 story residential tower
  and theatre, as well as two buildings providing approximately 25,000 square metres of office space and approximately 4,500 square metres of shops and restaurants 
  on a 2.5 acre site</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:PERK1">Perkins+Will</ref>). Plough Yard Developments Ltd. has commissioned the architectural firm Pringle 
  Brandon Perkins + Will to design the multiuse site. According to Perkins + Will’s website, <cit><quote>the scheme’s centrepiece will [...] showcase [...] <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref>’s 
  second oldest Shakespearean playhouse, the 16th Century <ref target="mol:CURT2">Curtain Theatre</ref> [...] The theatre and related finds will be excavated, 
  preserved and exhibited[,] including a 164 seat indoor auditorium. An additional 200-seat performance space will be built outside and linked to a square lined 
  with shops, bars, and restaurants.</quote><bibl><ref type="bibl" target="mol:PERK1">Perkins+Will</ref></bibl></cit> The firm apparently is working closely with 
  Museum of London Archaeology on comprehensive plans to unearth the site once construction and development begin. The museum is <quote>confident that about three
  quarters of the original playhouse may be revealed</quote> for public viewing by the time excavation is completed (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:CURT9"><title level="a">Finding the Curtain</title></ref>). 
  At this time, there is still not a concrete date for when the development of the site will be finished. (See <ref target="http://perkinswill.com/work/the-stage-shoreditch.html">artist’s renderings of the 
  future site</ref>.)</p></div>
          -->


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      <back>
        <div xml:id="CURT2_Further" resp="PERS1.xml#team">
          <head>More from MoEML: Further Resources</head>
          <p><ref target="http://shakespeareinshoreditch.in/">The Curtain Theatre Shoreditch</ref>: A site produced by the community of modern Shoreditch, which has a vested interest in any future development of the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> site.</p>
       
          <p>For information about the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref>, a modern map marking the site where it once stood, and a walking tour that will take you to the site, visit the <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SHLT1"><title level="m">Shakespearean London Theatres</title> (<title level="m">ShaLT</title>)</ref> page on the <ref target="http://shalt.dmu.ac.uk/locations/curtain-1577-1625.html">Curtain</ref>.</p>
          
          <p>In 2016, archaeological excavations in <ref target="SHOR1.xml">Shoreditch</ref> revealed that the <ref target="CURT2.xml">Curtain</ref> was rectangular in shape, instead of polygonal (as initially believed, and as this article suggests). For more information, see <ref target="https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2016/may/17/curtain-excavation-early-shakespeare-theatre-rectangular-shoreditch">Maev Kennedy, <title level="a">Excavation Finds Early Shakespeare Theatre was Rectangular</title></ref>, published in <title level="j">The Guardian</title> on 17 May 2016.</p>
          <p>See also: <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#SYME3">Syme</ref>, <ref type="bibl" target="BIBL1.xml#DAVI13">Davies</ref>.</p>
        </div>
        
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