It is not specifically because they were written by Shakespeare that his plays
were a desirable theatrical resource when the theatres re-opened in 1660. Thomas
D‟Urfey‟s radical adaptation of Cymbeline, The Injured Princess, was not staged until
1682, however. By that date the choice of a Shakespeare play for adaptation cannot
be explained simply by citing shortage of material as in Davenant‟s early melding of
Measure for Measure and Much Ado About Nothing into The Law against Lovers
(1664).1 It is necessary therefore to consider why D‟Urfey chose to adapt this
particular Shakespeare play and at this particular time. I shall examine his adaptation
closely in order to see in what ways he has made the play conform to and reflect
contemporary aesthetic and theatrical taste.
It is generally agreed that the King‟s Company was in severe financial
difficulties from 1679 onwards, possibly as a consequence of the expensive re-build
necessitated by the Bridges Street theatre burning down in 1672. D‟Urfey seems to
have viewed the adapted Cymbeline as potentially possessing all of the necessary
ingredients to revive the company‟s fortunes. In a time when new plays were
regarded as essential, The London Stage lists only one new play having been staged
by this company in the 1679-80 season, describes actors being absent in Scotland and
the theatre being closed between spring and October 1681.2 Michael Dobson seems to
believe that the company “went bust” deservedly as a consequence of “staging this
demonstration of the bankruptcy of its royalist theatrical genres” (i.e. D‟Urfey‟s
adaptation of Cymbeline).3 I would argue that the reality was very different. D‟Urfey
seems to have been recruited to improve the company‟s competitive position rather
than being a symptom or cause of its decline.
D‟Urfey‟s A Fond Husband (1677), acted by the Duke‟s Company, “took
extraordinary well, and […] got the company reputation and profit”, according to
Downe the prompter‟s comment. 4 It also won royal favour, Charles II attending three
out of the first five performances.5 Subsequently D‟Urfey not only wrote prolifically
for the stage, but his songs, often set to music by Henry Purcell, were collected and
published separately.6 Seen in this light, his second work for the King‟s Company,
Sir Barnaby Whigg (October 1681) can be seen as part of a desperate bid by the
company for profit and survival. Even in this season, D‟Urfey did not wholly write
for the King‟s Men. The Royalist was performed by the Duke‟s Company in late
January 1682, and was attended by the king immediately before the fast day for the
martyrdom of Charles I – presumably an indication of the play‟s success.
There was much deliberate and competitive imitation of works and genres by
the two companies in the period immediately before the merger. Cecil Deane sees
Dryden‟s All for Love (1677) as fostering imitations of Elizabethan models.7 The
Duke‟s Company performed Tate‟s adaptation of King Lear in 1680-1 and
Davenant‟s adaptation of Macbeth in February 1682. If The Injured Princess was also
performed in that month, it would have been in direct competition. By this date
D‟Urfey had adapted several plays written by others, including two by Fletcher. The
similarities between Cymbeline‟s genre and Fletcher‟s tragic-comedy have previously
been discussed. When being staged in a Restoration theatre with changeable scenes,
this play demands nothing unusual and expensive (except in the excised masque). The
production could utilise existing scenery and costumes. It is centred round a
potentially pathetic heroine (rather than a witty one) whose virtue is threatened and
doubted – giving scope therefore (especially through the addition of Clarina) for an
actress to move the audience. As an added bonus there is a „breeches‟ role for
Imogen/Eugenia. The villains can easily be made to conform to the Restoration
stereotypes of rake and fop, exploiting the more visual medium of Restoration theatre
to add humour. There is an opportunity to mock a European neighbour – D‟Urfey
shifts his target to the French for the audience of 1682. Its politics, with slight
adaptation or simplification, can become appropriately royalist and non-controversial.
With some rearranging of scenes, simplification and alteration of the language,Cymbeline can be made to fit the requirements of the time relatively easily. I shall
consider how D‟Urfey has deliberately adapted the play in order to conform to
Some of the changes made to Cymbeline enable D‟Urfey to exploit the visual
potential of the Restoration stage. By 1682 changeable scenery was the norm. The
King‟s Men would have had to fully re-equip the recently built Theatre Royal, Drury
Lane, with scenery and stage machines after losing the Bridges Street theatre ten years
before. The new theatre was apparently smaller and plainer than its rival, the Dorset
Garden.8 When D‟Urfey cuts spectacle from Cymbeline where flying is required (the
theophany in Act 5 scene 3), we cannot know, of course, whether this was to please
D‟Urfey‟s first alteration to the script is an added prologue. These were
almost always used to „quieten the house‟ in Restoration drama before the curtain is
raised on the first scene, all subsequent scenes being changed in full view of the
audience. 10 D‟Urfey then rearranges the order of events so that, for example, the
action involving the Queen and her drugs (Shakespeare‟s Act 1 scene 5) precedes the
shift to Europe (now France) and the wager between the hero Ursaces and the new
villain Shatillion. This reduces the number of scene changes involved. Similarly in
Act II scene II, Shatillion‟s initial conversation with Eugenia is in her bedroom and
his trunk needs merely to be sent for – “I'le have 'um kept /Here in my Apartment”,
she offers (II, II, 206-7). In Shakespeare her “bedchamber” (1.6.196) is somewhere
else. D‟Urfey‟s II, IV “discovers Eugenia in bed”. One assumes that the intervening
scene, here between the Queen and Pisanio (not Cloten and the two lords as in
Shakespeare), is played downstage with the same scenery as scene II. The upstage
shutters could then be opened to reveal the bed. Some of D‟Urfey‟s alterations to
Shakespeare‟s Act 2 scene 2 would seem to me to suggest that the action is less
visible as it is probably set further upstage and thus at a greater distance from the
audience. The scene is shorter. There is no mention of Shatillion “softly press[ing]
the [now outmoded] rushes” (2.1.13) but he suggests that she may wake up (there is
an added stage direction) before he announces “What's there, a Bracelet on her Arm?”
(II, IV, 29), as if the audience would not otherwise see it.
Elsewhere the number of scene changes is also reduced. We only return to the
court for one short scene, Act IV scene I, in the later part of the play. The Romans do
not negotiate with the King and Queen but proceed straight to battle. The inner stage
area could again be used as the cave‟s entrance and Act V scene II, the final scene,
specifies “Palace backward” – i.e. we are outside the palace, and seeing it behind the
action. D‟Urfey‟s adaptation allows changeable scenery to be used but rationalises
the changes of location to simplify its implementation.
The Injured Princess does not require expensive new costumes. If Roman
dress was needed, there were numerous other plays for which this could have been
previously acquired such as Dryden‟s All for Love, 1677). Otherwise it is very likely,
as engravings for Nicholas Rowe‟s 1709 edition of Shakespeare‟s plays suggest, that
most characters, with token Roman additions, would wear contemporary dress.11
In the majority of his alterations to Shakespeare‟s play, D‟Urfey can be seen to
be adapting the characters to fit contemporary stereotypes, and their behaviour and
speech to elicit specifically engineered responses. He is also, of course, altering the
It is hard to think of any other Shakespearean heroine, not already featuring in
a Restoration adaptation, who is as suitable to this era as Imogen. More emotional
and less witty than the heroines of Shakespeare‟s comedies, she is far more central to
the action than Desdemona, Ophelia or Cordelia – all of whom had already been seen
upon the Restoration stage. D‟Urfey appears to take considerable inspiration from
Tate‟s adaptation of King Lear as there are many echoes of this play in D‟Urfey‟s
text. Imogen – or rather Eugenia – requires relatively few changes to make her fit the
mould of pathetic heroine. She is being treated unfairly by her father because of what
he regards as an unsuitable marriage (Tate had to add that to King Lear). Heroines are
only allowed to take the initiative if love is their motivation and here romantic love is
already at the play‟s core.12 Several writers note the rise in popularity of „pathetic
tragedies‟ in the 1670s and 80s, leading to the later development of „she-tragedies‟.13
Elizabeth Howe sees this phenomenon not simply as an ironic containment of women
perpetuated at a time when they had been given the supposed „freedom‟ to appear on
stage, but a direct consequence of some actresses‟ talent for playing these emotional
In order to fulfil contemporary requirements for a heroine, D‟Urfey makes
some adjustments to Shakespeare‟s Imogen. I have previously shown that D‟Urfey
shortens the „trunk‟ scene. An additional reason for this is the expansion and
alterations to Act II scene II, Eugenia‟s previous encounter with Shatillion who here
becomes very much the stereotypical Restoration rake. His description of Ursaces‟s
Eug. And will he kiss those Creatures? Shatt. Kiss 'um, Madam? Alas, wou'd that were all! there's no great fault in kissing. (II, II, 129-30)
As in Shakespeare‟s scene, Shatillion offers to be her means of revenge. The addition
of the word “thus” to “I dedicate my self to your [sweet] pleasure” (l.146) implies
closer physical contact than in Shakespeare‟s scene. Rather than calling for Pisanio
(and having previously locked the doors to guard against interruption), there seems to
be a real possibility that Eugenia may submit: “Oh Heaven! Is't possible? And will
you love me too?” (l.152) Shatillion, at length, professes to do so – and it is strongly
implied that she is not physically resisting:
Kind Fate, she comes, she yields: Oh glorious Conquest!---Let me seal my Passion Upon thy snowy hands transported, then rove higher, And ransack this white Magazine of Beauty. (158-60)
Eugenia then proves her virtue by drawing a dagger. Shakespeare‟s heroine does not
resort to weapons – her angry words are strong enough to protect her. As is stressed
by many commentators, the titillation of having an actual female, physically present
and threatened, is the attraction for the audience.15
In D‟Urfey‟s play Eugenia is much more thoroughly victimised as everyone
assumes that she is guilty of infidelity and blames her for it, not just Ursaces. Eugenia
has already assumed “Mens Cloaths” (the added audience bonus of the breeches role)
when she and Pisanio enter in Act III, scene III (Shakespeare‟s 3.4).16 Unlike
Shakespeare‟s eager, impatient character, Eugenia is complaining about the “strange
wild melancholy place” (l.102) and that her legs are “weary” l.104). As soon as she
reads the letter, she reacts with appropriately feminine weakness:
I‟le kiss thy Name although it brings me death,
A cruel death to th‟Innocent. Oh my Fortune! (III, III, 131-2)
A swoon, according to George Granville‟s preface to Heroick Love (1732) was
considered particularly effective on stage.17 Pisanio regards it merely to be a “Fetch
of female Policy”, listing numerous trivial occasions where it is resorted to before
declaring it “Craft, Craft, damn‟d Craft” (134-37). Imogen draws Pisanio‟s sword
herself and roundly orders him to carry out his master‟s bidding. D‟Urfey‟s Pisanio
willingly draws his sword and Eugenia pleads with him affectingly:
Pisanio: […] Kneel therefore, and pray, Or unprepar'd receive your Fate.
Eugen. I swear I am not guilty, yet do not wish to live,
Ursaces being false. Come, strike, my Lord, Strike the innocent Mansion of my Love, my heart, And give a hapless, much wrong'd Woman rest, As lasting as her woes. (156-63)
The contrast here is strong although the text is only slightly altered. Once Pisanio has
miraculously been prevented from killing her “it wonnot be: /Methinks some Genius
hinders my rash Arm” (167-8), Eugenia pleads with him, in tears, not to leave her.
She continues to weep and lament to the end of the scene, and again in Act IV scene
II when she reaches Bellarius‟s cave. She kneels to its inhabitants and weeps fairly
continuously until the end of the scene, provoking the poetic description voiced by
Arviragus “the clear drops stand on his blushing Cheek, /As pearly dew on Roses”
Elsewhere D‟Urfey‟s textual changes are more extreme. Eugenia‟s (or
Fidele‟s) „death‟ in Act IV scene IV is stripped of all Shakespeare‟s lyricism. It takes
a mere eight lines for her body to be found and deposited in the „grave‟ – Shakespeare
uses seventy-two. Cloten‟s body, although now pointlessly in her husband‟s clothes,
is not laid, headless, beside her, so there no emotion from Eugenia on her re-
awakening. One can conclude that such a display of (misplaced) grief is not the right
sort of pathos for this stage. In the final scene of the play, Ursaces does not
inadvertently knock Eugenia down, as Posthumus does Imogen, as it would be
inappropriate to her now serious, virtuous persona. D‟Urfey, in altering the character,
has made her conform to the Conduct Book ideal.18 Shakespeare‟s Imogen is thus
“elevated by flattening […] into [a] one dimensional icon of virtue”.19
Eugenia is complemented and her impact reinforced by D‟Urfey‟s addition of
Clarina. To accord with the rules governing the decorum of social position, D‟Urfey
elevates Pisanio from servant to companion/father-substitute to Ursaces; Clarina, his
daughter, is thus Eugenia‟s friend rather than her maid.20 Sophronia and Aurelia are
also added, as maids, thus more than doubling the number of female roles. It is
Clarina rather than Pisanio, therefore, who is interrogated about Eugenia‟s
disappearance – and this scene follows straight after the latter‟s abandonment by
Pisanio. Clarina, like Eugenia, kneels and weeps but is dragged off by Cloten‟s friend
Jachimo who is to ravish her. This scene, Act IV scene III, is added by D‟Urfey
immediately after Eugenia has met her brothers. Thus the suffering of females is
expanded and replicated to fill virtually all of Act IV. Elizabeth Howe comments on
the huge increase of rape scenes in drama of this period. “Restoration tragedy staged
male lust being directly aroused by a real female body”.21 The actress Anne
Bracegirdle reputedly specialised in such scenes. The effect of the heroine‟s distress is
Tears? Why thou canst not oblige me more than to Weep soundly; it makes the flame of Love more Vigorous; (IV, II, 11-13)
This added scene is an extreme example of the titillation possible from attempted
rape. The actress‟s body – legs and breasts - would be displayed and her hair
dishevelled. Howe (p.45) comments that by this date such scenes had become almost
commonplace, thus D‟Urfey adds the additional possibility that Jachimo will “ravish
her before [her father‟s] face” (IV, III, 41). This device, and Pisanio‟s blinding, is
used contemporaneously by Tate in his adaptation of King Lear and again by D‟Urfey
in Trick for Trick. Poetic Justice – Pisanio is punished as he fails to see Eugenia‟s
virtue – has also been added. Marsden describes Clarina‟s last minute rescue as
Jacqueline Pearson claims that such scenes were not only liked by men.23 She
quotes Burnaby in The Reformed Wife demanding “A Rape or two to engage the
Ladies” (though this could be an ironic comment). She states that play-goers preferred
tragedy, whose purpose was to “raise the soul to glory” and to display “true honour”
to the audience. In this genre their sex was “deified and adored” (p.38). She quotes
Farquhar‟s claim that ladies “cry for death upon the stage” stating that they enjoyed
passionate emotion and pathos, even to the extent of masochism and prurience. If that
was so, with the alterations to Imogen and the addition of Clarina, D‟Urfey was
potentially pleasing the whole audience, not merely the men.
Not only does D‟Urfey create two emotional if passive heroines, he also alters
the role of the Queen. According to Restoration mores, on stage, women who are not
governed by love, marital or maternal, are villains. Whilst Shakespeare‟s Queen is
evil, this is made more explicit and the emphasis subtly shifted by D‟Urfey although
the role is approximately thirty-five lines shorter. In her speech at the end of scene I,
she openly states her attitude towards the king who “is old, too old to share my heart”
Cloten, For thee I'le cut through all Opposers, King, Husband, Daughter, Friend, I'le stop at none, But on their bloudy Ruines build thy Throne. (I, I, 272-74)
This is much more melodramatic – and obvious – than in Shakespeare‟s play. In Act
II, scene I she sneers at Pisanio in words reminiscent of Regan to Gloucester in King Lear: “The silver Hairs that grace thy Reverend Head, /Should grow in Wisdoms
Soyl” (36-37). Pisanio‟s age is repeatedly stressed as an additional source of pathos.
The Queen not only condones but actively supports the intended rape of Clarina by
Jachimo: “To you I give the Wretch, /Use her as she deserves: Hence hated Harpey”
(IV, I, 20-21). The alliterative ending again gives the speech a strongly melodramatic
As there is no negotiation in this play with the Roman general Lucius,
D‟Urfey removes any patriotism from the Queen. Similarly, her death is dealt with in
a way that diminishes her importance. News is brought by the captain to Lucius, not
to Cymbeline, although its cause, “raging with desperate madness” (IV, IV, 141) over
her son‟s absence, remains the same. This is before the battle starts, much earlier than
in Shakespeare‟s play. She is only briefly mentioned again, by Pisanio, as the source
of the „poison‟; the King does not speak about her death at all. The implication is that
Cymbeline, freed earlier from her influence, is more able to lead Britain successfully
D‟Urfey does not only adapt the presentation of women to conform to
contemporary taste. According to Derek Hughes, Shakespeare‟s Posthumus is well-
born and of worthy ancestry whereas Ursaces is of inferior birth. 24 As his family do
not appear at the end of this play, his parentage is not ultimately proven. Perhaps
more significantly, Ursaces does not forgive Eugenia for “wrying but a little” (5.1.5).
Rather he expresses a cynical attitude, throughout the play, towards women‟s fidelity.
Gewirtz notes “a deep-seated hostility between the sexes” as a feature of Restoration
drama. 25 Death for Eugenia was too great a punishment, he concedes, but this seems
to be largely because so many women err that “thy world wou‟d be unpeopl‟d”
(V.I.10) if the guilty were killed. Having adopted British dress, however, Ursaces
retains it to the end of the play, not being arrested as a Roman. His status as a hero is
increased in the duel with Shatillion, who, through cowardice, has disguised himself
as a Briton. Poetic justice is again seen in Shatillion‟s death, once he has revealed the
truth about Eugenia. The language is suitably heroic. Ursaces calls Shatillion
“Horrid and damn'd Impostor!” (V, I, 189) and the villain‟s closing words “But Oh
/My Soul is wandring to its unknown home, /My Blood's all Ice!” (195-96) retain a
Cloten is altered more significantly although his name is unchanged. He loses
all of Shakespeare‟s character‟s anxiety about rank, being made intellectually rather
than socially ignorant (he confuses Jehu and Job, for example). He is shown indulging
in gambling pastimes that are more contemporary. Whilst an element of comedy is
retained for this character, it becomes visual as, in an attempt to seem heroic to
Eugenia, he dons armour in Act II scene IV. “I Gad this damn'd Armour is plaguy
troublesom” (L.46), he complains, before checking “Have I the sow'r Look of a
Heroe?” (l.49) Silvio (fulfilling something of the chorus role of Shakespeare‟s 2nd
Lord) comments on the likelihood of him causing “wonder” rather than “fear” (l.50) –
thus emphasising his ludicrous appearance to the audience. This device had been used
for comic effect in The Rehearsal, Buckingham‟s popular and frequently revived
burlesque of heroic tragedy. Edward Ravenscroft also used the same device in The London Cuckolds (1681). Again here we can see D‟Urfey attempting to capitalise on
popular theatrical devices used by others.
Cloten is subsequently made far more evil as, seconding Jachimo in Clarina‟s
abduction, it is he who blinds Pisanio. Whilst one could claim that his death in
Cymbeline (the only one in what is much more clearly a tragic-comedy) is
undeserved, thus, in D‟Urfey‟s play, it is. D‟Urfey retains most of Shakespeare‟s
language for Cloten‟s conflict with Arviragus (in Shakespeare it is with Guiderius)
but his body does not re-appear – to save money on properties, perhaps. Alternatively,
by this stage in the play, as he is an object of horror rather than ridicule, perhaps his
headless body would provoke an undesirable audience response.
It would not have been wise for D‟Urfey to foreground the political issues
inherent in Shakespeare‟s play. Playwrights, in the wake of the Popish plot, had to be
cautious as several plays were banned in the 1678 – 82 period. The Injured Princess is
therefore not overtly political except in the broadest sense. Removing the
negotiations between Britain and Rome simplifies their conflict in the play. It is
possible that D‟Urfey also intends Cymbeline‟s victory to be over the Catholic
Church, not simply the Roman Empire. When the battle is won in Act V scene I
Bellarius declares “haughty Rome must bow/To th'British Power” (l.104), which
makes this more explicit than in Shakespeare‟s version. The reinstatement of the
king‟s sons deprives Eugenia of her power – D‟Urfey simply retains Shakespeare‟s
lines here. Providing a now strong if aged king with not one but two active and
legitimate heirs is a conclusion that remains politic in 1682. Shakespeare‟s play
already contains this fortuitously apt ending.
Apart from containing what Barbara Murray calls “a new sort of pessimism
about political man”, D‟Urfey adds a quite different „moral‟ to his adaptation of the
play which seems to be derived from Shakespeare‟s Othello rather than Cymbeline.26
When, in the final scene, Ursaces and Eugenia are reunited. Cymbeline warns:
But O beware of Jealousie, That worst of Passions, cherish'd by the blood, And nourish'd by destruction! (V, II, 158-60)
Having previously feared contamination by her infidelity, Ursaces ends the play with
the hope that love will heal all griefs:
Immortal Joys I find, And Heaven on Earth, whilst my Eugenia's kind. (l.174-75)
The play‟s ending thus shifts into a more domestic sphere with the emphasis on
marital fidelity rather than international politics. Shakespeare‟s play, in contrast,
Odell, writing in 1920, complains that D‟Urfey has “spoil[ed] the entire play”
through Pisanio‟s misogyny. He, and other adapters have “take[n] away the poetry
and [left] the horrors”; the “exquisite cave scenes are […] shorn of their loveliness”.27
As Dobson points out “Those dismissing these [adaptations] as travesties are
themselves influenced by their cultural contexts”. 28 Whilst Shakespeare wrote the
play initially to exploit a specific theatrical opportunity, whatever we may think of
D‟Urfey‟s rewritten Cymbeline, he was adapting a useful company resource for a
pragmatic purpose in very specific commercial crisis. He enabled changeable scenery
to be used effectively; his added female roles increased the number of actresses
involved; the altered, now stereotypical, characters were able to provoke appropriate
responses including pathos, and to demonstrate contemporary moral attitudes;
political content was non-controversial and royalist in flavour. That D‟Urfey‟s play
continued to be performed until 1738 (albeit renamed Cymbeline from 1737) suggests
that his version, rather than Shakespeare‟s, was preferred on stage for more than fifty
1 Barbara A Murray, Shakespeare Adaptations from the Restoration: Five Plays (Madison, Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2005), p.xxiv
2 William Van Leenep, ed., The London Stage 1660 – 1800: A Calendar of Plays, Entertainments and Afterpieces (Carbondale, Illinois: South Illinois University Press, 1965), p.279 3 Dobson, Michael, The Making of the National Poet: Shakespeare, Adaptation and Authorship, 1660 – 1769 (Oxford: Clarendon Press: 1992), p.90 4 The London Stage, p.257 5 John Loftis, Richard Southern, Marion Jones & A.H. Scouten, The Revels History of Drama in English, vol. V. 1660 – 1750 (London: Methuen, 1976), pp.206-8 6 The Revels History of Drama in English, pp.206-8 7 Charles Victor Deane Dramatic Theory and the Rhymed Heroic Play (London: Frank Cass/OUP, 1931), p.159 8 The London Stage, p.xli 9 Barbara Murray, Restoration Shakespeare: Viewing the Voice (Cranberry NJ: Associated University Presses, 2001),p.191 suggests that it was for the latter reason. 10 The London Stage, p.cxxxii 11 Engravings of Othello, Cymbeline reproduced in Elizabeth Howe, The First English Actresses: Women and Drama 1660 – 1700 (Cambridge: CUP, 1992), pp.39-41 12 Marsden, Jean I., The Re-imagined Text: Shakespeare, Adaptation & Eighteenth Century Literary Theory (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1995), p. 35 13 Laura Brown, „The Defenceless Woman and the Development of English Tragedy‟ in Studies in English Literature 1500-1900, 22 (1982), pp.130-4 Elizabeth Howe, The First English Actresses, pp.39, 108 Katherine M Quinsey, ed., Broken Boundaries: Women and Feminism in Restoration Drama (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1996), p.2 14 For the opposite view see Jean I Marsden, „Re-written Women: Shakespearean Heroines in the Restoration‟ in The Appropriation of Shakespeare: Post Renaissance Reconstruction of the Works and the Myth ed. by Jean I Marsden, (Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991), pp.44-7 15 Jean I. Marsden, „Spectacle, Horror and Pathos‟ in The Cambridge Companion to English Restoration Theatre ed. by Dorothy Payne Fisk (Cambridge: CUP, 2000), p181 Jean I Marsden, „Re-written Women: Shakespearean Heroines in the Restoration‟, p.44 Elizabeth Howe, The First English Actresses, p.39 16 Elizabeth Howe, The First English Actresses, p57, states that such roles, designed to show off the female body, occur in 89 out of 375 plays performed between 1660 and 1700. 17 Quoted by Elizabeth Howe, The First English Actresses, p.119 18 Jean I Marsden, „Re-written Women: Shakespearean Heroines in the Restoration‟, p.44; Jean I. Marsden, „Spectacle, Horror and Pathos‟, p. 182 19 Jean I Marsden, „Re-written Women: Shakespearean Heroines in the Restoration‟, p.49 20 Brian Vickers, ed., Shakespeare:The Critical Heritage, Volume 1 1623 -1692 (London & Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1974), p.6 21 Elizabeth Howe, The First English Actresses, p.43 22 Jean I Marsden, „Re-written Women: Shakespearean Heroines in the Restoration‟, p.52 23 Jacqueline Pearson, The Prostituted Muse: Images of Women and Women Dramatists 1642 – 1737 (Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1980), pp.33-8 24 Derek Hughes, English Drama 1660 – 1700 (Oxford: OUP, 1996), p.280 25 Arthur Gewirtz Restoration Adaptations of Early Seventeenth Century Comedies (Washington: University Press of America, 1982), p.141 26 Barbara A. Murray, Shakespeare Adaptations from the Restoration: Five Plays (Madison, Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2005), p.xxvii 27 George C. D. Odell, Shakespeare from Betterton to Irving, p.70 28 Michael Dobson The Making of the National Poet, p.9 29 John McVeagh Thomas Durfey and Restoration Drama (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000), p.169
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