'James Burbage,' or 'Burbadge' (
1531 –
1597) was an
English actor, theatre
impressario, and theatre builder in the
English Renaissance theatre. He built
The Theatre, the facility famous as the first permanent dedicated theatre built in England since Roman times. Burbage seems also to have been concerned in the erection of the
Curtain Theatre, and later, the
Blackfriars Theatre, built in
1596 near the old
Dominican friary.
Edmund Malone was the first person to suggest that James Burbage was connected with the Burbage family of
Warwickshire; a forged letter of the nineteenth century maintained that Burbage and
William Shakespeare were from the same county and were "almost of one town" — though there is in fact no valid evidence of this.
[1] Trained as a
joiner, Burbage took up acting and was a member of
Leicester's Men by
1572; he appears to have been a leader of that company by
1574. In
1576, Burbage partnered with his brother-in-law John Brayne (Burbage was married to Brayne's sister Ellen) to erect The Theatre.
(Burbage's brother-in-law John Brayne was also the man responsible for an earlier attempt at building a permanent theatre, The
Red Lion in
Mile End in
1567. That enterprise apparently did not survive its first year. The implication is that Burbage's experience as both actor and builder helped to make the second venture a success where the first had failed.)
Burbage and his family were settled in St. Leonard's parish in Shoreditch by 1576, with residence on Halliwell Street or Holywell Lane.
[2] Records list the baptism of a daughter, Alice (1576), and the burial of another daughter, Joan (
1582). A third daughter, Helen, was buried at St. Anne's in Blackfriars (
1595).
James Burbage's son
Richard Burbage became one of the most celebrated actors of his era.
Cuthbert Burbage, Richard's elder brother, followed in his father's footsteps as a theatre manager.
James Burbage was buried in Shoreditch on February 2, 1597; his widow Ellen was buried there on May 8,
1613.
Notes
1. Chambers, Vol. 2, p. 305.
2. Chambers, Vol. 2, p. 306.
References
★
★
Chambers, E. K. ''The Elizabethan Stage.'' 4 Volumes, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1923.
★ Halliday, F. E. ''A Shakespeare Companion 1564–1964.'' Baltimore, Penguin, 1964.