Overview
On December 1727 an intriguing play called Double Falshood; Or, The
Distrest Lovers was presented for production by Lewis Theobald, who had
it published in January 1728 after a successful run at the TheatreRoyal,
Drury Lane, London. The title page to the published version claims that
the play was 'Written Originally by W.SHAKESPEARE'. Double Falsehood's
plot is a version of the story of Cardenio found in Cervantes's Don
Quixote (1605) as translated by Thomas Shelton, published in 1612 though
in circulation earlier. Documentary records testify to the
existence of a play, certainly performed in 1613, by John Fletcher and
William Shakespeare, probably entitled The History of Cardenio and
presumed to have been lost. The audience in 1727 would certainly have
recognised stage situations and dramatic structures and patterns
reminiscent of those in Shakespeare's canonical plays as well as many
linguistic echoes. This intriguing complex textual and performance
history is thoroughly explored and debated in this fully annotated
edition, including the views of other major Shakespeare scholars. The illustrated introduction provides a comprehensive overview of the
debates and opinions surrounding the play and the text is fully
annotated with detailed commentary notes as in any Arden edition.