The Laws of Candy

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The Laws of Candy is a Jacobean stage play, a tragicomedy that is significant principally because of the question of its authorship. [citation needed] Critics are unanimous in their verdicts on the low quality of The Laws of Candy; [citation needed] "tiresome" is one of the kinder epithets that have been attached to the work.

The play received its initial publication in the first Beaumont and Fletcher folio of 1647. Scholars judge it to have been written most likely in the 161923 period.[1] The play was clearly performed by the King's Men; the cast list for the original production, added to the play in the second Beaumont/Fletcher folio of 1679, includes Joseph Taylor, John Lowin, William Ecclestone, John Underwood, Nicholas Tooley, George Birch, Richard Sharpe, and Thomas Pollard, all members of that company. With that roster of personnel, the play could have premiered anytime between the spring of 1619, when Taylor joined the troupe, and June 1623, when Tooley died.

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