In addition to whatever public performances there were around 1613–1614, evidence suggests a performance of
The Two Noble Kinsmen at Court in 1619. In 1664, after theatres had re-opened after
Charles II returned to the throne at the beginning of the
English Restoration period, Sir
William Davenant produced an adaptation of
The Two Noble Kinsmen for the
Duke's Company titled
The Rivals.
Thomas Betterton played the role of Philander, Davenant's version of Palamon.
Samuel Pepys saw Davenant's production, and judged it "no excellent play, but good acting in it" (10 September 1664). In 2016, the Royal Shakespeare Company staged a version of the play at the Swan Theatre, and the play was part of the 2018 summer season at
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London. In July 2007, the
Hudson Shakespeare Company of New Jersey staged a version of the play as part of its annual
Shakespeare in the Parks series. Director David Sewell set the production in
ancient Greece with an ethnically diverse cast reflective of its Mediterranean setting. A production opened on 9 June 2015 at the
White Bear Theatre in Vauxhall, London—the first London production of the play since 2000. In 2019,
The Porters of Hellsgate in Los Angeles staged a production in a
rep with
Double Falsehood. The production, directed by Will Block, re-purposed the Morris Dance as a hallucination featuring major characters from the Jailer's Daughter's life. It also excised Palamon and Arcite's prayers, focusing the scene instead on Emilia's dilemma. From January 25 to February 4, 2024, the
Toronto based Shakespeare Bash'd Theatre Company staged this play in Toronto at The Theatre Centre Incubator (1115 Queen St West). ==References==