The growing population of London, the growing wealth of its people, and their fondness for spectacle produced a dramatic literature of remarkable variety, quality and extent. About 3,000 plays were written for the Elizabethan stage, and although most of them have been lost, at least 543 remain. The people who wrote these plays were primarily self-made men from modest backgrounds. Some of them were educated at either
Oxford or
Cambridge, but many were not. Although
William Shakespeare and
Ben Jonson were actors, the majority do not seem to have been performers, and no major author who came on to the scene after 1600 is known to have supplemented his income by acting. Their lives were subject to the same levels of danger and earlier mortality as all who lived during the early modern period:
Christopher Marlowe was killed in an apparent tavern brawl, while Ben Jonson killed an actor in a duel. Several were probably soldiers. Playwrights were normally paid in increments during the writing process, and if their play was accepted, they would also receive the proceeds from one day's performance. However, they had no ownership of the plays they wrote. Once a play was sold to a company, the company owned it, and the playwright had no control over casting, performance, revision or publication. The profession of dramatist was challenging and far from lucrative. Entries in
Philip Henslowe's Diary show that in the years around 1600 Henslowe paid as little as £6 or £7 per play. This was probably at the low end of the range, though even the best writers could not demand too much more. A playwright, working alone, could generally produce two plays a year at most. In the 1630s
Richard Brome signed a contract with the
Salisbury Court Theatre to supply three plays a year, but found himself unable to meet the workload. Shakespeare produced fewer than 40 solo plays in a career that spanned more than two decades: he was financially successful because he was an actor and, most importantly, a shareholder in the company for which he acted and in the theatres they used. Ben Jonson achieved success as a purveyor of Court
masques, and was talented at playing the
patronage game that was an important part of the social and economic life of the era. Those who were purely playwrights fared far less well: the biographies of early figures like
George Peele and
Robert Greene, and later ones like Brome and
Philip Massinger, are marked by financial uncertainty, struggle and poverty. Playwrights dealt with the natural limitation on their productivity by combining into teams of two, three, four, and even five to generate play texts. The majority of plays written in this era were collaborations, and the solo artists who generally eschewed collaborative efforts, like Jonson and Shakespeare, were the exceptions to the rule. Dividing the work, of course, meant dividing the income; but the arrangement seems to have functioned well enough to have made it worthwhile. Of the 70-plus known works in the canon of
Thomas Dekker, roughly 50 are collaborations. In a single year (1598) Dekker worked on 16 collaborations for impresario Philip Henslowe, and earned £30, or a little under 12 shillings per week—roughly twice as much as the average artisan's income of 1
s. per day. At the end of his career,
Thomas Heywood would famously claim to have had "an entire hand, or at least a main finger" in the authorship of some 220 plays. A solo artist usually needed months to write a play (though Jonson is said to have done
Volpone in five weeks); Henslowe's Diary indicates that a team of four or five writers could produce a play in as little as two weeks. Admittedly, though, the Diary also shows that teams of Henslowe's house dramatists—
Anthony Munday,
Robert Wilson,
Richard Hathwaye,
Henry Chettle, and the others, even including a young
John Webster—could start a project, and accept advances on it, yet fail to produce anything stageworthy.
Timeline of English Renaissance playwrights ImageSize = width:900 height:450 PlotArea = left:120 bottom:80 top:10 right:10 AlignBars = justify DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:1550 till:1666 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy Colors = id:Life value:skyblue legend:Life id:Plays value:brightblue legend:Playwriting_career id:line1 value:black legend:Accession_of_monarch id:line2 value:green legend:Opening_of_Burbage's_The_Theatre id:line3 value:red legend:Closing_of_theatres Legend = orientation:vertical position:bottom columns:1 ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:4 start:1550 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:1550 BarData = #Note that bars are ordered by career rather than birth bar:Labels bar:Peele text:
George Peele bar:Lily text:
John Lyly bar:Munday text:
Anthony Munday bar:Kyd text:
Thomas Kyd bar:Marlowe text:
Christopher Marlowe bar:Greene text:
Robert Greene bar:Shakespeare text:
William Shakespeare bar:Chapman text:
George Chapman bar:Jonson text:
Ben Jonson bar:Dekker text:
Thomas Dekker bar:Marston text:
John Marston bar:Heywood text:
Thomas Heywood bar:Webster text:
John Webster bar:Middleton text:
Thomas Middleton bar:Fletcher text:
John Fletcher bar:Beaumont text:
Francis Beaumont bar:Rowley text:
William Rowley bar:Massinger text:
Philip Massinger bar:Ford text:
John Ford bar:Brome text:
Richard Brome bar:Shirley text:
James Shirley PlotData= width:10 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(3,-4) bar:Labels at:1558 text:
Elizabeth I bar:Labels at:1603 text:
James I bar:Labels at:1625 text:
Charles I bar:Labels at:1660 text:
Charles II bar:Peele from:1556 till:1596 color:Life bar:Peele from:1581 till:1595 color:Plays bar:Lily from:1553 till:1606 color:Life bar:Lily from:1584 till:1594 color:Plays bar:Munday from:1560 till:1633 color:Life bar:Munday from:1585 till:1602 color:Plays bar:Kyd from:1558 till:1594 color:Life bar:Kyd from:1586 till:1594 color:Plays bar:Marlowe from:1564 till:1593 color:Life bar:Marlowe from:1587 till:1592 color:Plays bar:Greene from:1558 till:1592 color:Life bar:Greene from:1588 till:1592 color:Plays bar:Shakespeare from:1564 till:1616 color:Life bar:Shakespeare from:1590 till:1613 color:Plays bar:Chapman from:1559 till:1634 color:Life bar:Chapman from:1596 till:1616 color:Plays bar:Jonson from:1572 till:1637 color:Life bar:Jonson from:1596 till:1637 color:Plays bar:Dekker from:1572 till:1632 color:Life bar:Dekker from:1598 till:1624 color:Plays bar:Marston from:1576 till:1634 color:Life bar:Marston from:1599 till:1608 color:Plays bar:Heywood from:1573 till:1641 color:Life bar:Heywood from:1600 till:1634 color:Plays bar:Webster from:1580 till:1634 color:Life bar:Webster from:1602 till:1624 color:Plays bar:Middleton from:1580 till:1627 color:Life bar:Middleton from:1603 till:1624 color:Plays bar:Fletcher from:1579 till:1625 color:Life bar:Fletcher from:1606 till:1624 color:Plays bar:Beaumont from:1584 till:1616 color:Life bar:Beaumont from:1606 till:1616 color:Plays bar:Rowley from:1585 till:1626 color:Life bar:Rowley from:1607 till:1624 color:Plays bar:Massinger from:1583 till:1640 color:Life bar:Massinger from:1613 till:1636 color:Plays bar:Ford from:1586 till:1640 color:Life bar:Ford from:1621 till:1638 color:Plays bar:Brome from:1590 till:1653 color:Life bar:Brome from:1623 till:1642 color:Plays bar:Shirley from:1596 till:1666 color:Life bar:Shirley from:1625 till:1642 color:Plays bar:Peele at:1583 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Lily at:1580 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Munday at:1587 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Kyd at:1585 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Marlowe at:1591 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Greene at:1585 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Shakespeare at:1591 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Chapman at:1586 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Jonson at:1599 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Dekker at:1599 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Marston at:1603 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Heywood at:1600 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Webster at:1607 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Middleton at:1607 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Fletcher at:1606 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Beaumont at:1611 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Rowley at:1612 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Massinger at:1610 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Ford at:1613 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Brome at:1617 mark:(line,yellow) bar:Shirley at:1623 mark:(line,yellow) width:2 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(10,-4) LineData = at:1558 color:line1 layer:back at:1603 color:line1 layer:back at:1625 color:line1 layer:back at:1660 color:line1 layer:back at:1576 color:line2 layer:back at:1642 color:line3 layer:back Short yellow lines indicate 27 years—the average age these authors began their playwriting careers ==Genres==