Online Encyclopedia

WILLIAM KEMP (fl. 1600)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 725 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM KEMP (fl. 1600)  ,
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English actor and dancer . He probably began his career as a member of the
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earl of Leicester's
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company, but his name first appears after the
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death of Leicester in a list of players authorized by an order of the privy council in 1593 to
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play 7 M. out of
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London . Ferdinand Stanley, Lord Strange, was the
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patron of the company of which Kemp was the leading member until 1598, and in 1594 was summoned with Burbage and Shakespeare to act before the queen at
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Greenwich . He was the successor, both in parts and reputation, of Richard Tarlton . But it was as a dancer of jigs that he won his greatest popularity, one or two actors dancing and singing with him, and the words doubtless often being improvised . Examples of the
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music may be seen in the MS. collection of John Dowland now in the Cambridge University library . At the same time Kemp was given parts like Dogberry, and Peter in Romeo and Juliet; indeed his name appears by accident in place of those of the characters in early copies . Kemp seems to have exhibited his dancing on the Continent, but in 1602 he was a member of the earl of Worcester's players, and Philip Henslowe's
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diary shows several payments made to him in that
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year .

End of Article: WILLIAM KEMP (fl. 1600)
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