George Bryan (16th-century actor)

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George Bryan (ff. 15861613) was an actor in English Renaissance theatre, a member of the Lord Chamberlain's Men with William Shakespeare and Richard Burbage.

Bryan enters the historical record as one of a quintet of English actors who toured Denmark and Saxony in the years 1586 and 1587. He was in the Admiral's Men/Lord Strange's Men production of The Seven Deadly Sins, ca. 1591, with Augustine Phillips and William Sly and other future Lord Chamberlain's Men. Bryan may also have toured with the same group of actors under Edward Alleyn in 1593. He is generally believed to have been one of the original members and sharers in the Lord Chamberlain's Men when that company was re-consituted in 1594; he certainly was a key member in 1596, when he and John Heminges received payment for a performance at Court. After that point, however, he drops out of the evidenciary record; it is assumed that he left the company and quit acting around 1597. He hadn't died: in 1603 and the 1611-13 period, he was recorded as a Groom of the Chamber under James I.

[edit] Reference

F. E. Halliday, a Shakespeare Companion 1564-1964, Baltimore, Penguin, 1964.