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See also: English actor and founder of See also: Dulwich See also: College, was See also: born in See also: London on the 1st of See also: September 1566, the son of an innkeeper
.
It is not known at what date he began to See also: act, but he certainly gained distinction in his calling while a See also: young See also: man, for in 1586 his name was on the See also: list of the See also: earl of See also: Worcester's players, and he was eventually rated by See also: common consent as the foremost actor of his See also: time
.
See also: Ben See also: Jonson, a critic little prone to exalt the merits of men of mark among his contemporaries, bestowed unstinted praise on See also: Alleyn's acting (Epigrams, No
.
89)
.
See also: Nash expresses in See also: prose, in See also: Pierce Penniless, his admiration of him, while Heywood calls him
'See also: Egerton See also: MSS., Brit
.
See also: Mus
.
2807 f
.
197 b; See also: Life of Dr See also: John Barwick, ed. by G
.
F
.
Barwick (1903), pp
.
107, 129, 134." inimitable," " the best of actors," "
See also: Proteus for shapes and Roscius for a See also: tongue." Alleyn inherited See also: house See also: property in Bishopsgate from his See also: father
.
His See also: marriage on the 22nd of See also: October 1592 with See also: Joan Woodward, stepdaughter of See also: Philip
See also: Henslowe; brought him eventually more See also: wealth
.
He became See also: part owner in Henslowe's ventures, and in the end See also: sole proprietor of several See also: play-houses and other profitable pleasure resorts
.
Among these were the See also: Rose Theatre at Bankside, the See also: Paris Garden and the See also: Fortune Theatre in St See also: Luke's—the latter occupied by the earl of Nottingham's See also: company, of which Alleyn was the See also: head
.
He filled, too, in conjunction with Henslowe, the See also: post of " master of the See also: king's
See also: games of bears, bulls and See also: dogs." On some occasions he directed the sport in See also: person, and See also: Stow in his See also: Chronicles gives an account of how Alleyn baited a See also: lion before See also: James I. at the Tower
.
Alleyn's connexion with Dulwich began in 16o5, when he bought the
See also: manor of Dulwich from See also: Sir See also: Francis Calton
.
The landed property, of which the entire estate had not passed into Alleyn's hands earlier than 1614, stretched from the crest of that range of Surrey hills on whose See also: summit now stands the Crystal Palace, to the crest of the parallel See also: ridge, three See also: miles nearer London, known in its several portions as See also: Herne See also: Hill,
See also: Denmark Hill and Champion Hill
.
Alleyn acquired this large property for little more than £1o,000
.
He had barely got full possession, however, before the question how to dispose of it began to occupy him
.
He was still childless, after twenty years of wedded life
.
Then it was that the prosperous player-the man " so acting to the life that he made any part to become him " (See also: Fuller, Worthies)—began the task of See also: building and endowing in his own lifetime the College of See also: God's Gift at Dulwich
.
All was completed in 1617 except the charter or deed of in-corporation for setting his lands in mortmain
.
Tedious delays occurred in the See also: Star Chamber, where See also: Lord Chancellor See also: Bacon was scheming to bring the pressure of kingly authority to bear on Alleyn with the aim of securing a large portion of the proposed endowment for the maintenance of lectureships at
See also: Oxford and Cambridge
.
Alleyn finally carried his point and the College of God's Gift at Dulwich was founded, and endowed under letters patent of James I., dated the 21st of See also: June 1619
.
The building had been already begun in 1613 (see Du1.wlcn) . Alleyn was never a member of his own foundation, but he continued to the close of his life to guide and control its affairs underSee also: powers reserved to himself in the letters patent
.
His See also: diary shows that he mixed much and intimately in the life of the college
.
Many of the jottings in that curious record of daily doings and incidents favour the inference that he was a genial, kind, amiable and religious man
.
His fondness for his old profession is indicated by the fact that he engaged the boys in occasional theatrical performances
.
At a festive gathering on the 6th of See also: January 1622 " the boyes play'd a playe."
Alleyn's first wife died in 1623
.
The same See also: year he married See also: Constance, daughter of John See also: Donne, the poet and dean of St See also: Paul's
.
Alleyn died in See also: November 1626 and was buried in the See also: chapel of the college which he had founded
.
His gravestone fixes the See also: day of his See also: death as the 21st, but there are grounds for the belief that it was the 25th
.
A portrait of the actor is preserved at Dulwich
.
Alleyn was a member of the corporation of wardens of St Saviour's, See also: Southwark, in 161o, and there is a memorial window to him in the See also: cathedral
.
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