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Duke of York's, now Prince Charles's, and the Lady Elizabeth's in 1615, and when this terminated in the following year, Taylor became again a member of the Prince's company. He was still with them between 6 January and 2 February 1619, when he appeared as Dr. Almanac in Middleton and Rowley's Mask of Heroes, but on 19 May 1619 he appears in a livery warrant issued for the King's men. As he is not in their patent of the previous 27 March, it is to be supposed that he joined them to replace Burbadge, who had died on 13 March.[1] The rest of his stage career was spent with the King's men. He succeeded Burbadge in several of his characters, including Ferdinand in the Duchess of Malfi and Hamlet, although the incidence of dates must cast some doubt upon the statement of Downes that he was instructed in the part 'by the Author M^r Shakespear'.[2] Wright says that he played it 'incomparably well', and praises him also as Iago in Othello, Truewit in Epicoene, and Face in The Alchemist.[3] He is included in the First Folio list of performers in Shakespeare's plays. In 1623 Nicholas Tooley left him £10 to pay a debt for which Tooley had become his surety. With Lowin he seems to have assumed the leadership of the company in succession to Heminges and Condell, and after Heminges's death in 1630 he was admitted to two shares in the 'house' of the Globe and one in that of the Blackfriars, which he still held in 1635. About 1637 he petitioned for a waiter's place in the Custom House of London,[4] and on 11 November 1639 he obtained the post of Yeoman of the Revels, probably through the influence of Sir Henry Herbert, with whom he had been in frequent contact as representative of his company.[5] After the closing of the theatres he joined his fellows of the King's men in publishing the First Folio of Beaumont and Fletcher's plays in 1647, and for his benefit and Lowin's The Wild-goose Chase was added in 1652. He died at Richmond and was there buried on 4 November 1652.[6] The ascription to his brush of the 'Chandos' portrait of Shakespeare is now discredited.

THARE (THAYER), JOHN. Worcester's, 1602-3; Germany, 1603-6 (?).

TILBERY, JOHN. Chapel, 1405.

TOMSONE, JOHN. A 'player' who borrowed 5s. from Henslowe on 22 December 1598 (H. i. 40).

TOOLEY, NICHOLAS, appears in the 1619 patent to the King's men, but not in that of 1603. He probably joined the company about 1605, as he received a legacy under the will of Phillips on 4 May as his 'fellow'. He is not in the actor-list of Volpone in that year, but is in most of the later actor-lists from The Alchemist (1610) to The Spanish Curate (1622), and in that of the First Folio Shakespeare. In 1619 he witnessed Richard Burbadge's will. He made his own will as Nicholas Tooley, Gentleman, on 3 June 1623. After legacies to charity, to the families of 'my good friend Mr. Cuthbert Burbadge (in whose house

  1. M. L. Review, iv. 395, from Hist. MSS. iv. 299.
  2. Downes, 21.
  3. Wright, Hist. Hist. 405.
  4. S. P. D. 1637-8, p. 99.
  5. Cunningham, l.; Variorum, iii. 238.
  6. Cunningham, l.; Wright, Hist. Hist. 411.