Sapho and Phao is known to have been performed at Court before Queen Elizabeth, probably on 3 March 1584; it was also staged at the first
Blackfriars Theatre. In these respects it resembles
Campaspe, Lyly's other early play; and like
Campaspe, sources conflict on the identity of the
acting company that performed the work. Court records credit "Oxford's boys," while the title page of the play's first edition specifies the
Children of Paul's, Lyly's regular company, and the
Children of the Chapel. The evidence, taken as a whole, may indicate that both plays,
Campaspe and
Sapho and Phao, were acted by a combination of personnel from three troupes of
boy actors—those of Paul's and the Chapel and the young company that the
Earl of Oxford maintained in the 1580s.
Sapho was entered into the
Stationers' Register on 6 April 1584 and was first published that year in a
quarto edition printed by Thomas Dawson for the bookseller Thomas Cadman—the same men who were responsible for Q1 of
Campaspe, also in 1584. And again like
Campaspe, the first edition of
Sapho was released in more than one "state" or impression: the two impression of the 1584
Sapho are sometimes defined as two separate quartos. Another distinct quarto edition was issued in 1591, printed by Thomas Orwin for William Broome. The play was also included in
Six Court Comedies, the initial collection of Lyly's plays published by
Edward Blount in 1632. ==Sources==