The playhouse was closely associated, during its short lifetime, with
James Shirley, the prominent London dramatist who spent the years 1637–40 in Dublin. (Shirley left London when the theatres closed due to a severe outbreak of
bubonic plague, from May 1636 to October 1637.) Shirley wrote four plays for the theatre,
The Royal Master,
The Doubtful Heir,
The Constant Maid, and
St. Patrick for Ireland; the first of these plays premiered on 1 January
1638, the last was performed in the autumn of
1639. During the same period, the theatre also performed
Jonson's The Alchemist,
Middleton's ''
No Wit, No Help Like a Woman's, two plays from the John Fletcher canon, and anonymous plays titled The General
and The Toy.'' The earliest published play by an Irish author,
Henry Burnell's Landgartha, was acted at the theatre on 17 March
1640. Shirley wrote Prologues for all of these works. Shirley may also have brought some London actors with him to Dublin. Shirley had functioned as the house dramatist for
Queen Henrietta's Men, but the plague crisis of 1636–37 had disrupted that company. Four veterans of the troupe —
William Allen,
Michael Bowyer,
Hugh Clark, and
William Robbins — disappeared from the London theatre scene for the time that Shirley was in Dublin; they reappeared at the end of the Dublin venture in 1640, when all four joined the
King's Men. The years of the Werburgh fill the holes in the four actors' careers. ==Closure==