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30 January 1586, and an older William Knell had been buried on 24 September 1578.[1] One of these was not improbably the early actor celebrated by Heywood. Malone found a family of Heming at Shottery, and conjectured that of this family John was born at some date earlier than the opening of the Stratford-on-Avon register in 1558.[2] But this is rendered improbable by a confirmation of arms in 1629 to 'John Hemings of London Gent. of long tyme Servant to Queen Elizabeth of happie Memory, also to King James hir Royal Successor and to King Charles his Sonne', in which he is described as 'Sonne and Heire of George Hemings of Draytwiche in the Countye of Worcester Gent.'[3] There seems little reason to doubt that this John Hemings is the player. He very probably began his theatrical career with the Queen's company, to which also Knell had belonged. By May 1593, however, he had joined Strange's men, from whom he passed to the Chamberlain's men, probably on the original formation in 1594. Of this company, afterwards the King's men, he remained a member to the end of his career. He appears in all the official lists of the company up to 1629, and regularly acted as their payee for Court performances, generally with a colleague from 1596 to 1601, and thereafter alone. This and his prominence in the negotiations of the company and the law-suits arising out of them, suggest that he acted as their business manager. As an actor he appears in all the casts up to Catiline in 1611, but not thereafter; possibly he may have resigned acting, and devoted himself to business. The unreliable John Roberts, Answer to Pope (1729), conjectures that he was a 'tragedian'. Malone had seen a statement in some tract of which he had forgotten the title, that he was the original performer of Falstaff.[4] The lines on the burning of the Globe in 1613 thus describe him:

Then with swolne eyes, like druncken Flemminges,
Distressed stood old stuttering Heminges.

He is 'old Master Hemings' in Jonson's Masque of Christmas (1616). He lent his 'boy' John Rice (q.v.) to the Merchant Taylors for their entertainment of James on 16 July 1607, and another 'boy' for Chapman's mask of 1613. He is named as a legatee and overseer in the will of Augustine Phillips in 1605, and as executor in the event of the widow's re-marriage; also as a trustee in the will of Alexander Cooke, who calls him his 'master', in 1614; as a witness in that of Richard Cowley in 1618; as a legatee in that of Shakespeare in 1616; and as a legatee and overseer in those of Underwood in 1624 and of Condell in 1627. He was appointed a trustee for Shakespeare's Blackfriars property in 1613,[5] and acted with Condell as editor of the First Folio of the plays in 1623. This fact is probably the origin of the statement of Roberts that he was engaged with Condell in business as a printer. He filled various parochial posts from 1608 to 1619 in St. Mary's, Aldermanbury, and the registers contain records of the

  1. Variorum, iii. 472; Chester, London Marriage Licenses.
  2. Variorum, iii. 187.
  3. Ibid. 188.
  4. Ibid. 187.
  5. Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 31.