[A Book of the Play by Dutton Cook]@TWC D-Link book
A Book of the Play

CHAPTER VI
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The company would, probably, be outnumbered by the _dramatis personae_, in which case it would devolve upon the actor to assume many parts in one play.

Thus, supposing Hamlet to be announced for representation, the stroller of inferior degree might be called upon to appear as Francisco, afterwards as a lord-in-waiting in the court scenes, then as Lucianus, "nephew to the king," then as one of the grave-diggers, then as a lord again, or, it might be, Osric, the fop, in the last act.

Other duties, hardly less arduous, would fall to him in the after-pieces.

"I remember," said King, the actor famous as being the original Sir Peter Teazle and Lord Ogleby, "that when I had been but a short time on the stage, I performed one night King Richard, sang two comic songs, played in an interlude, danced a hornpipe, spoke a prologue, and was afterwards harlequin, in a sharing company; and after all this fatigue my share came to threepence and three pieces of candle!" A strolling manager of a later period was wont to boast that he had performed the complete melodrama of "Rob Roy" with a limited company of five men and three women.

Hard-worked, ill-paid, and, consequently, ill-fed, the stroller must have often led a dreary and miserable life enough.


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