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The Actor Rebellion of 1733 was an event that took place at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in London, England when the actors who worked there, disapproving of the changes in the management, attempted to seize control. Before the rebellion, the theatre was controlled by the managers Theophilus Cibber, John Ellys, and John Highmore. When Theophilus lost his share and was denied a bid to run the theatre, he, along with other actors, attempted to take over the theatre by controlling the lease. When the shareholders found out, they refused to admit the actors to the building and the theatre was closed for several months. The fight spilled over to the contemporary newspapers, which generally sided with the managers. The Theatre Royal reopened on 24 September 1733 with a new company of actors, though they were less experienced and talented than the old crew. The majority of old actors moved to the Little Theatre, Haymarket, though a few remained loyal. Henry Fielding sided with the managers and produced several plays to aid the Theatre Royal, though this caused a backlash when the rebelling actors finally won the dispute. By the end of 1733, the rebellious actors managed to seize legal control of the theatre's property and Highmore, the sole manager of the Theatre Royal at the time, lost all legal abilities to stop them. By February 1734, he sold his shares to Charles Fleetwood who then made an agreement with the actors that secured their return. ==Background== The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane was run by the holders of one of the two official licenses, or letters patent, established by Charles II in 1660. It was operated by Christopher Rich from 1693 until 1714. He was replaced after his death by three actors, Colley Cibber, Thomas Doggett, and Robert Wilks. After Doggett died, Barton Booth took over his share.〔Styan 1996 p. 274〕 In 1730, a notice in the ''Daily Journal'' stated that a patent would be issued to Booth, Cibber, and Wilks authorising the official government license to run the Theatre Royal. After bureaucratic delays, the official patent was given to the three managers only in 1732 that was to last for 21 years. On 13 July 1732, Booth, in poor health, decided to sell half of his share to Highmore, a fellow actor and a socialite. On 27 September, Wilks died and his share was inherited by his widow, who then authorised Ellys, a painter, to serve in her place. In reaction to the changing partners, Colley Cibber rented his share to his son Theophilus, an actor.〔Hume 1988 pp. 142–144〕 The new management group had two members, Highmore and Ellys, who were incompetent and Theophilus Cibber was known to be both arrogant and volatile.〔Hume 1988 pp. 144〕 By the end of 1732, there were problems with the management of the theatre, which resulted in the failure of Charles Johnson's ''Caelia: or, The Perjured Lover'' on 4 December. The 8 March 1733 ''Grub-Street Journal'' seized on the event and used the failure to criticise the theatre's management:〔Battestin and Battestin 1993 pp. 162–163〕 "how insufficient the present managers of Drury-lane playhouse are to discharge their trust, as directors of our public entertainments."〔Battestin and Battestin 1993 qtd. p. 163〕 The newspaper was not the only group concerned and many plays were soon cancelled.〔Battestin and Battestin 1993 p. 163〕 Matters were complicated by mass illnesses spreading across London; the epidemic, probably flu, reduced the number of actors able to work and many plays were cancelled. Even Henry Fielding's play ''The Miser'', which was to open early January, was postponed because of the poor health of its cast members, including Theophilus. ''The Miser'' was eventually staged in mid February and was successful, but another of his plays, ''Deborah: or, a Wife for You All'', lasted only one night on 6 April 1733. Regardless of the problems plaguing the season, it was positive for Fielding while it lasted, with six of his plays being produced on stage along with Thomas Arne's ''The Opera of Operas'', Fielding's ''Tom Thumb'' set to music.〔Battestin and Battestin 1993 pp. 163–167〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Actor Rebellion of 1733」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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