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''Greene's Tu Quoque,'' also known as ''The City Gallant,'' is a Jacobean era stage play, a comedy written by John Cooke. The play was a major popular success upon its premier and became something of a legend in the theatre lore of the seventeenth century.


Performance

Cooke's play was performed by
Queen Anne's Men Queen Anne's Men was a playing company, or troupe of actors, in Jacobean era London. In their own era they were known colloquially as the Queen's Men — as were Queen Elizabeth's Men and Queen Henrietta's Men, in theirs. Formation The group w ...
at the
Red Bull Theatre The Red Bull was an inn-yard conversion erected in Clerkenwell, London operating in the 17th century. For more than four decades, it entertained audiences drawn primarily from the City and its suburbs, developing a reputation over the years for r ...
in 1611. The play satirises ''
Coryat's Crudities ' is a travelogue published in 1611 by Thomas Coryat (sometimes also spelled "Coryate" or "Coriat") of Odcombe, an English traveller and mild eccentric. History The book is an account of a journey undertaken, much of it on foot, in 1608 throu ...
,'' the travelogue by Thomas Coryat published in that year. The company's leading clown, Thomas Greene, played the role of Bubble in the play, and his rendering of Bubble's catch phrase " Tu quoque" ( Latin for "you also" or, colloquially, "the same to you"), repeated through the play, captured the audience's fancy. The play was performed twice at Court, on 27 December 1611 and 2 February 1612 (Candlemas night), before King James I and Queen Anne; Greene, representing his troupe, received a payment of £20 for the two performances on 18 June 1612 (which shows how long the players sometimes waited for money from their royal patrons). By that date in the summer of 1612, Cooke's play had already lost its original title; the Court records refer to the work as ''Tu Coque.'' ''Greene's Tu Quoque'' would likely have become a key item in the Queen's Men's repertory, except for the unfortunate death of Thomas Greene in August 1612. The play was revived by the Queen of Bohemia's Men and performed at Court on 6 January 1625 before Charles I. In the
Restoration Restoration is the act of restoring something to its original state and may refer to: * Conservation and restoration of cultural heritage ** Audio restoration ** Film restoration ** Image restoration ** Textile restoration * Restoration ecology ...
period, Sir William Davenant produced his own adaptation of Cooke's play in 1667;
Samuel Pepys Samuel Pepys (; 23 February 1633 – 26 May 1703) was an English diarist and naval administrator. He served as administrator of the Royal Navy and Member of Parliament and is most famous for the diary he kept for a decade. Pepys had no mariti ...
saw it on 12 September of that year. Davenant's version was not published in its own era, and no copy of it has survived. Francis Kirkman's 1662 volume ''The Wits'' uses a frontispiece that alludes to the play: a picture of a clown peeking out from behind a curtain is captioned "Tu quoque".


Publication

The play was first published in a 1614 quarto issued by the bookseller John Trundle. (The play was published without an entry in the
Stationers' Register The Stationers' Register was a record book maintained by the Stationers' Company of London. The company is a trade guild given a royal charter in 1557 to regulate the various professions associated with the publishing industry, including print ...
, which was unusual though not unknown. Trundle – whose shop bore the sign of "the Nobody" – would publish ''
A Fair Quarrel ''A Fair Quarrel'' is a Jacobean tragicomedy, a collaboration between Thomas Middleton and William Rowley that was first published in 1617. Performance and Publication The play was written sometime between 1612 and 1617, and probably after Oct ...
'' three years later, in 1617, also without a Register entry.) In this first edition, the work was called ''Greene's Tu Quoque, or The City Gallant;'' and it was under its ''ad hoc'' title that the play maintained its fame. The first edition bore a picture of Greene, in costume, on its title page. A second quarto was printed in 1622 for stationer Thomas Drew, and a third, undated quarto followed sometime later, perhaps by 1628.


Playwright

Virtually nothing is known of the author. He is identified as "Io. Cooke" on the title page of the 1614 quarto, and for many years scholars were not even sure if his name was John or Joshua. The first quarto bears an Epistle to the Reader by Thomas Heywood, which indicates that Cooke was dead by 1614. John Payne Collier speculated that John Cooke was a brother of Alexander Cooke, actor with the King's Men.


Plot

Cooke's play can be classed with other prodigal-son plays of its era, like '' Eastward Ho'' and ''
The Roaring Girl ''The Roaring Girl'' is a Jacobean stage play, a comedy written by Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker 1607–1610. The play was first published in quarto in 1611, printed by Nicholas Okes for the bookseller Thomas Archer. The title page of t ...
.'' It tells a double version of the story: the citizen Spendall, as his name indicates, wastes his patrimony and is reduced to poverty and prison. Bubble enjoys the reverse fortune, coming into money – yet he remains true to his master, the gentlemanly Staines, mourning the man's decline and urging him to repair his fortunes...by robbery ("if we be taken, we'll hang together at Tyburn"). The high-living Staines loses his estate to a usurer in a foreclosed debt; the usurer dies and passes his wealth to his nephew...Bubble. In a reversal of roles, Staines becomes Bubble's servant. Staines gets his revenge by making Bubble a pretentious fool, worse than the natural fool he already was. Through a series of disguises and cheats, Staines eventually manages to reverse his situation, till he is the master and Bubble the servant once again. ''Greene's Tu Quoque'' gives a rich picture of everyday life in its era; it "uses tennis rackets, tobacco pipes, cards, dice and candles to establish a life of debauchery in visual terms...and a begging-basket with scraps of food to symbolize the natural result...." The play's stark picture of debtors' prison is noteworthy. The drama is lavish in its use of costume and the details of the
mercer Mercer may refer to: Business * Mercer (car), a defunct American automobile manufacturer (1909–1925) * Mercer (consulting firm), a large human resources consulting firm headquartered in New York City * Mercer (occupation), a merchant or trader ...
's trade in the London of its time.


Metafiction

The play's text contains a bit of meta-theater, in that Greene in the role of Bubble refers to himself during performance: :''Geraldine:'' Why, then, we'll go to the Red Bull: they say Greene's a good clown. :''Bubble:'' Greene! Greene's an ass. :''Scattergood:'' Wherefore do you say so? :''Bubble:'' Indeed I ha' no reason; for they say he is as like me as ever he can look. Ben Jonson would work the same trick in 1616 in his '' The Devil is an Ass,'' by referring in his text to actor Richard Robinson, who starred in the original production. And Thomas Killigrew would give his version of the trick in '' The Parson's Wedding'' (1641).


Greene

Thomas Greene was born in Romford, Essex, in September 1573; his baptism is recorded as 13 September 1573. He was with the Queen's Men from 1604 (shortly after the death of the company's celebrated comedian Will Kempe) and his usual stage persona was that of "amiable ass". By the time of his death in August 1612 he had risen to be a principal investor in the company, as well as the leaseholder of the nearby
Curtain Theatre The Curtain Theatre was an Elizabethan playhouse located in Hewett Street, Shoreditch (within the modern London Borough of Hackney), just outside the City of London. It opened in 1577, and continued staging plays until 1624. The Curtain was ...
. One cryptic epigram states that "new come from sea, emade but one face and died"; this, states
William Oldys William Oldys (14 July 1696 – 15 April 1761) was an English antiquarian and bibliographer. Life He was probably born in London, the illegitimate son of Dr William Oldys (1636–1708), chancellor of Lincoln diocese. His father had held the ...
, appeared in Richard Braithwaite's ''Remains after Death'' (1618) and signifies that he had recently returned from overseas and specialized in but one type of role. He once played a baboon onstage. His 1612 last will and testament mentions his wife Susan, daughter Honor, brothers John and Jeffrey Greene and sister Elizabeth Barrett. The will also mentions two sons-in-law and three daughters-in-law, though in Greene's day these terms referred to stepchildren – his wife Susan's five children with her first husband, Robert Browne. (Greene's will, dated 25 July 1612, left his share in the company to his wife. She later remarried, and as
Susan Baskervile Susan Shore Browne Greene Baskervile (died 1648), or Baskerville, was one of the most influential and significant women involved in English Renaissance theatre, as theatre investor, litigant, and wife, widow, and mother of actors. Her first husband ...
initiated the lawsuit that would end the existence of Queen Anne's Men.)


Notes


Sources

* Chambers, E. K. ''The Elizabethan Stage.'' 4 Volumes, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1923. * Howard, Jean Elizabeth. ''Theatre of a City: The Places of London Comedy, 1598–1642.'' Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006. * Leggatt, Alexander. ''Jacobean Public Theatre.'' London, Routledge, 1992. * Leinwand, Theodore B. ''Theatre, Finance, and Society in Early Modern England.'' Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1999. * MacIntyre, Jean. ''Costumes and Scripts in the Elizabethan Theatres.'' Edmonton, AB, University of Alberta Press, 1992. {{Authority control English Renaissance plays 1611 plays