Event Comment: The
Duke's Company.
L. C. 5@139, p. 125, lists it for 3 March, but as this date falls on Sunday, it is probably an error in dating. The play was licensed on 22 May 1667.
Pepys, Diary: To the Duke's playhouse...and I in and find my wife and
Mrs Hewer, and sat by them and saw
The English Princesse, or Richard the Third; a most sad, melancholy play, and pretty good; but nothing eminent in it, as some tragedys are; only little
Mis. Davis did dance a jig after the end of the play, and there telling the next day's play; so that it come in by force only to please the company to see her dance in boy's clothes; and, the truth is, there is no comparison between
Nell's dancing the other day at the King's house in boy's clothes and this, this b
eing infinitely beyond the other.
Downes (p. 27): Wrote by
Mr Carrol, was Excellently well Acted in every Part;...Gain'd them an Additional Estimation, and the Applause from the Town, as well as profit to the whole Company
Performances
Mainpiece Title: The English Princess; Or, The Death Of Richard The Third