During the previous six years, the English Court of King
James I had established a pattern of staging a major (and expensive) masque in the Christmas season, often on
Twelfth Night. James's queen,
Anne of Denmark, was a prime mover is these entertainments, and repeatedly performed in them herself, as in the masques of
Blackness (
1605),
Beauty (
1608), and
Queens (
1609). 1611 saw a divergence from this pattern: the major masque of that season was
Oberon, the Faery Prince, which starred Anne's and James's eldest son
Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales. Anne got a masque of her own a month later, though it was a more modest affair than previous events; while the bills for earlier masques regularly ran into the thousands of pounds, the total for
Love Freed from Ignorance and Folly was only £719. The queen's masque
Love Freed was originally scheduled for December 1610, and then for Twelfth Night, 6 January 1611. It was postponed twice because of delays in the arrival of the French ambassador, the Marshal de Laverdin, in the wake of the assassination of
Henri IV. Martin Butler explains a misunderstanding that the performance was delayed a whole year, which was based on a misreading of a letter from the Venetian ambassador.
Marc' Antonio Correr also suggested the delay was caused by problems with the stage machinery. ==The show==