The 18th-century English composer
Stephen Storace wrote an opera titled
Dido, Queen of Carthage (1794) – alleged, by his sister
Anna (Nancy) Storace, for whom the title role was written, to have been his greatest work – which largely set Marlowe's play to music. It was also the only one of Storace's works to have been completely sung throughout, with no spoken dialogue. However, the work was never published, as Storace's impresario
Richard Brinsley Sheridan wished to retain control over productions of it. A single copy was kept at the
Drury Lane Theatre, to prevent pirated versions appearing elsewhere – and the opera is presumed to have been lost in the 1809 Drury Lane Theatre fire, since nothing of it has survived. An adaptation of the play was broadcast on
BBC Radio 3 on 30 May 1993, the 400th anniversary of Marlowe's death, along with
The Massacre at Paris, directed by
Allen Drury and Michael Earley and featuring
Sally Dexter as Dido, Timothy Walker as Aeneas, Jeremy Blake as Iarbas, Ben Thomas as Achates, Teresa Gallagher as Anna/Juno and Andrew Wincott as Cupid. The play was recorded live as part of the Beyond Shakespeare Winter Revels on Tuesday 12th December 2023, with the final edited full cast audio adaptation made available online in 2026. ==Notes==