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Public entertainments, such as theatrical performances, were banned under the Puritan rule in the English Commonwealth . After he was restored to the throne, Charles II issued Letters Patent to Thomas Killigrew and William Davenant , granting them the Monopoly right to form two London Theatre Companies to perform "serious" drama. Killigrew established this company, the King's Company at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1663; Davenant esablished his company, the Duke's Company , in Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1663, later moving to Dorset Garden in 1671.

After problems under the direction of Charles Killigrew, Thomas' son, the King's Company was taken over by its rival, the Duke's Company in 1682. The two companies merged and the combined "United Company" continued under Thomas Betterton at Drury Lane. After some disagreements, Betterton obtained a license from William III to form a new company at the old theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1695, which moved to the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden in 1720 (now the Royal Opera House ). The two patent theatres closed in the summer months. To fill the gap, Samuel Foote 's Theatre Royal, Haymarket became a third patent theatre in London in 1766.

Further letters patent were granted to theatres in other English towns and cities, including the Theatre Royal, Bath in 1768, the Theatre Royal, Liverpool in 1772, and the Theatre Royal, Bristol in 1778.

These monopolies on the performance of "serious" plays were eventually revoked by the Theatre Regulation Act 1843 , but Censorship of the content of plays by the Lord Chamberlain under Robert Walpole 's Theatrical Licensing Act Of 1737 continued until 1968.


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