Event Comment: The 
King's Company.  This performance is known through a document summarized in 
The Theatrical Inquisitor and Monthly Mirror, July 1816, p. 25, and summarized in 
Fitzgerald, 
A New History, I, 145.  Although this performance is the first certainly known, it is probably not the premiere, for the attendance (see below) was too small for the premiere of a 
new work by 
John Dryden.  Since the play was entered in the 
Stationers' Register, January 1678, the first production was probably not long before this performance.  The document in 
The Theatrical Inquisitor gives this information: 
The King's Box, no receipts; 
Mr Hayles' boxes, #3 (probably 15 spectators); 
Mr Mohun's boxes, #1 12s. (probably 8 spectators); 
Mr Yeats' boxes, 12s. (probably 3 spectators); 
James' boxes, #2 (probably 10 spectators).  
Mr Kent's pitt, 82 spectators, and 
Mr Britan's pitt, 35 spectators, a total of 117, paying #14 12s. 6d.  
Mr Bracy's gallery, 42 spectators; and 
Mr Johnson's gallery, 21 spectators; a total of 63 spectators, who paid #4 14s. 6d.  
Mr Thomson's gallery, 33 spectators, paying #1 13s.  The total attendance appears to have been 249; the receipts were #28 4s.  The house rent came to #5 14s.  
Downes (
Roscius Anglicanus, p. 11) gives a cast which is identical except for omissions