In the thread "From SHAKSPER: Shakespeare Scholars Unite to See off
Claims of the 'Bard Deniers'", Peter Farey started a side-discussion
about whether or not Edward Alleyn was the "Upstart Crow" famously
criticised by Robert Greene. In a follow-up post, he stated that Daryl
Pinksen's article, "Was Robert Greene's 'Upstart Crow' the actor Edward
Alleyn?", "tipped the balance" in favour of Alleyn, at least in
his opinion. It seems reasonable, then to examine Mr Pinksen's article
more closely. The article is available in PDF format on the Web:
http://www.marlowe-society.org/pubs/journal/downloads/rj06articles/jl06_03_pinksen_upstartcrowalleyn.pdf
http://tinyurl.com/yavkhpj
As I noted in the previous thread, Mr Pinksen's first substantive claim
for Alleyn as the "Upstart Crow" rests on unproven assumptions. He
writes that "Alleyn was the lead actor of Lord Strange's Men in 1592
while they were performing Henry VI, Part III. Alleyn would have played
the lead, Richard Duke of York, the character who spoke the 'tiger's
heart' line." (2) Was /3 Henry VI/ performed by Strange's Men in 1592?
Although Philip Henslowe's accounts show that they put on a production
of a play about Henry VI in 1592, the accounts do not indicate which, if
any, of the three parts of the canonical /Henry VI/ was performed.
The parody of the line "Oh Tygers hart wrapt in a womans hide" does
suggest that /3 Henry VI/ had already been staged at the time /Greenes
Groats-worth of Witte/ was composed, but gives no indication of who
might have spoken the line. The question of which play Strange's Men
performed is complicated by another 1592 publication, Thomas Nashe's
/Pierce Penilesse His Supplication to the Divell/, that apparently
alludes to /1 Henry VI/:
How would it have joyed brave /Talbot/ (the terror of the French)
to thinke that after he had lyen two hundred yeare in his Toomb, he
should triumph againe on the Stage, and have his bones new embalmed
with the teares of ten thousand spectators at least (at severall
times) who, in the Tragedian that represents his person, imagine
they behold him fresh bleeding.
The Tragedian referred to is usually assumed to be Alleyn: with over 400
lines, Talbot is the largest role in /1 Henry VI/ by a wide margin. Mr
Pinksen errs in claiming that York is "the lead" in 3 Henry VI: the
character has fewer than 200 lines and dies at the end of the first act.
It is far from certain who would have played the role. It is true that
the first published version of the play puts York's name first in the
title, but that version also states that the play "was sundrie times
acted by the Right Honourable the Earle of Pembrooke his seruants".
Alleyn was not a member of Pembroke's Men: if they were the first
company to perform 3 Henry VI, someone other than Alleyn must have
played York.
Mr Pinksen goes on to argue that while there is no evidence Greene knew
Shakespeare, his "documented dislike of Alleyn dates back to 1590 when
he chastised Alleyn for being 'proud with Aesop's crow, being pranct
with the glory of other's feathers.'" (Ibid.) This is a reference to the
following passage in /Francescos Fortunes/:
...It chanced that /Roscius/ & he met at a dinner, both guests unto
/Archias/ the Poet, where the prowd Comedian dared to make
comparison with /Tully/: which insolencie made the learned Orator to
growe into these terms; why /Roscius/, art thou proud with /Esops/
Crow, being pranct with the glorie of others feathers? of thy selfe
thou canst say nothing, and if the Cobler hath taught thee to say
/Aue Caesar/, disdain not thy tutor, because thous pratest in a
Kings chamber...
This comes in the middle of a long, digressive passage about the history
of the Classical theater. Is there any reason to suppose that Greene
intended 'Roscius' to represent Alleyn? No. He may have meant the
passage as a covert dig at an Elizabethan actor, but there is no way to
determine which actor was the target. The scholar Frederick Fleay was
quite sure that 'Roscius' was Robert Wilson (/A Chronicle History of the
Life and Work of William Shakespeare/ [London: 1886], 119-20). Many
other scholars have asserted with equal certainty that 'Roscius' was
Alleyn, but none has ventured to explain the fact that, as the passage
indicates, Roscius was a great comic actor, not a tragedian like Alleyn.
If Greene actually did dislike Alleyn, it seems strange that he would
have composed the play /The History of Orlando Furioso/ for Alleyn's
company. As it happens, Alleyn kept his copy of Orlando's lines (the
'side') among his papers, where it may still be found. /Orlando Furioso/
was performed by Lord Strange's Men in February 1591: in the same month
they performed Greene's /Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay/ - curious
behaviour if Greene had indeed "chastised" Alleyn the year before. The
identification of 'Roscius' with Alleyn appears to be one of those
commonplaces among scholars that could benefit from sober second
thought.
From 'Roscius', Mr Pinksen goes on to argue that Alleyn is also the
model for the player who hires Roberto in the narrative portion of
/Greenes Groats-worth of witte/:
The Player takes exception to Roberto's judgment of his speaking
voice, and begins to list the roles he is famous for, including -
and now Greene effectively reveals the identity of the Player - "The
Twelve Labors of Hercules have I terribly thundered on the Stage."
To Greene's 1592 audience, only one man fit this description, only
one Player could be described as "thundering on the stage" - Edward
Alleyn... (3)
This seems to suppose that the reader is meant to take the player's
boasts seriously, which is a little like taking Falstaff's claims for
himself at face value. Greene is alluding to the pageants that were
typical of early Tudor drama:
...Nay then, saide the Player, I mislike your judgement: why, I am
as famous for Delphrigus, & the King of Fairies, as ever was any of
my time. The twelve labor of Hercules have I terrible thundred on
the Stage, and plaid three scenes of the Devill in the High way to
heaven...
What Greene's readers might have made of the player's having thundred as
Hercules is suggested by Bottom's lines in /A Midsummer Night's Dream/:
That will ask some tears in the true performing of it: If I do it,
let the audience look to their eyes; I will move storms, I will
condole in some measure. To the rest:-Yet my chief humour is for a
tyrant: I could play Ercles rarely, or a part to tear a cat in, to
make all split.
It may seem superfluous to note that Bottom is not meant to represent
Edward Alleyn, and his claims to move storms are not meant to be taken
seriously.
Mr Pinksen goes on to claim that the player who hires Roberto is meant
to be the same figure as the Upstart Crow:
...Greene's later description of an actor who thinks himself a
"Shake-scene" and "bombasts" out blank verse only reinforce to his
readers that Edward Alleyn is the intended target. Naming him would
have been superfluous.
Now that Roberto has a better understanding of the Player, he asks
him, "but how mean you to use me?" The Player responds, "Why sir, in
making Plays, for which you shall be well paid, if you will take the
pains." Here is another clue to Greene's grievance: he was promised
to be well paid, yet now here he is, in pain, possibly dying,
debt-ridden, at the same time that Alleyn and his players are
cashing in with ongoing performances of his plays. Greene's later
condemnation of the actor he calls an "upstart Crow" would have been
understood by his readers as a continuation of this first encounter
with the Player. (3-4)
This is misleading. Roberto is, in fact, well paid for his plays, just
as the player promised:
But /Roberto/ now famozed for an Arch-plaimaking-poet, his purse
like the sea sometimes sweld, anon like the same sea fell to a low
ebbe; yet seldom he wanted, his labors were so well esteemed...
The narrative goes on to establish that, far from being the victim of
broken promises, Roberto is the breaker:
...It becoms me, saith hee, to bee contrary to the worlde: for
commonly when vulgar men receiue earnest, they doo performe, when I
am paid any thing afore-hand, I breake my promise...
Roberto is not meant to be an excessively sympathetic character.
...For now when the number of deceites caused /Roberto/ [to] bee
hatefull almost to all men, his immeasurable drinking had made him
the perfect Image of the dropsie, and the loathsome scourge of Lust
tyrannized in his bones...
Though he is reduced to "extreame poverty", he knows it's his own
fault, not the fault of the player who hired him. There is no ground for
claiming that the player who hires Roberto is meant to be identified
with the 'Upstart Crow.'
In the next part, I'll look at Alleyn's association with the play
/Tamber Cam/, and whether it justifies the claim that readers of 1592
would have thought of Alleyn as both a player and a playwright.
--
S.O.P.