The Swisser

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The Swisser is a Caroline era stage play, a tragicomedy written by Arthur Wilson. It was performed by the King's Men in the Blackfriars Theatre in 1631, and is notable for the light in throws on the workings of the premier acting company of its time.

(In seventeenth-century parlance, "Swisser," or "Swizzer" or "Switzer," referred to a Swiss mercenary soldier.)

Though Humphrey Moseley entered the play into the Stationers' Register on 4 September 1646, no edition of the drama was printed in the seventeenth century. The play remained in manuscript until it was published in the early 1900s.[1] The manuscript, now Add. MS. 36,749 in the collection of the British Museum, is in the author's hand.[2]

The Swisser shares the primary fault of Caroline drama as a whole; it is unoriginal and highly derivative of earlier works. Felix Schelling catalogued the play's stock elements as "the lecherous tyrant; the love-lorn girl page; the banished lord...; two old men of noble houses, enemies; their children, in love; poison evaded by the substitution of a sleeping potion; a fair captive generously treated by a chivalrous soldier, her captor; and...consanguinity a bar to virtuous love." Schelling cites Campaspe, Romeo and Juliet, The Malcontent, Philaster, and 'Tis Pity She's a Whore as dramatic precedents.[3] (He also concedes that the play "is not bad, as such productions go.")

The cast

The cast list supplied by the manuscript is one of only eight extant King's Men lists from the period of the 1620s and the early 1630s, making it a valuable source of information on the company in this era.

Role Actor
The King of the Lombards Richard Sharpe
Arioldus, a nobleman retir'd Joseph Taylor
Andrucho, a Swisser otherwise Count Aribert banish'd John Lowin
Timentes, a fearful General Thomas Pollard
Antharis Robert Benfield
Clephis William Penn
Alcidonus, son to Antharis Eliard Swanston
Asprandus Anthony Smith
Iseas Curtis Greville
Panopia, the King's sister John Thompson
Eurinia, a captive Alexander Gough
Selina, daughter to Clephis William Trigg

Greville, Penn and Smith were hired men, and Goughe, Thompson, and Trigg were boy players filling female roles. The other six were the "sharers," partners, permanent members of the company. The burly Lowin plays a character of "great Beard and Bulke" – Smith's Asprandus and Greville's Iseas are "two little Pigmies" in comparison (Act III, scene 2).

[The other seven King's Men cast lists are for the company's productions of John Webster's The Duchess of Malfi, Philip Massinger's The Roman Actor, The Picture, and Believe as You List, Lodowick Carlell's The Deserving Favourite, John Clavell's The Soddered Citizen, and John Fletcher's The Wild Goose Chase. The 1629 quarto of John Ford's The Lover's Melancholy provides a roster of the 17 actors involved, but doesn't assign them to their roles.]

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