From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Andrew Wise (fl. 1589 – 1603), or Wyse or
Wythes, was a London publisher of the Elizabethan era
who issued first editions of five Shakespearean plays. "No other
London stationer invested in Shakespeare as assiduously as Wise
did, at least while Shakespeare was still alive."[1]
Andrew Wise was the son of a Yorkshire yeoman; as "Wythes," he served an
eight-year apprenticeship under Henry Smith and Thomas Bradshaw
starting in 1581, and became a "freeman" (a full member) of the Stationers
Company on May 26, 1589.[2] He ran
his own business in London from about 1593 to 1603; his shop was at
the sign of the Angel in St. Paul's Churchyard.
Wise published editions of the following five Shakespearean
plays:[3]
- He entered Richard II into the Stationers' Register on August 20,
1597,
and published the first quarto of the play before the end of
the year. The second and third quartos both followed in 1598. All
three volumes were printed by Valentine Simmes.
- Richard III was entered into
the Stationers' Register on October 20, 1597; the first quarto
appeared later that year. Wise published the second quarto of R3 in 1598, and
the third in 1602. All three books were printed
by Thomas
Creede.
- Henry
IV, Part 1 was registered on February 25, 1598 (new style), and published
later that year, printed by Valentine Simmes and Peter
Short. Q2 followed in 1599, with printing by Simon Stafford.
- Henry
IV, Part 2 was registered on August 23, 1600; the
sole quarto edition of the era was published that same year. In
this case, Wise worked in partnership with colleague William Aspley;
the printing was done once again by Valentine Simmes.
- Much Ado About Nothing was
also registered on August 23, 1600, and published that year by Wise
and Aspley, with printing by Simmes.
In one view, "Andrew Wise...struck gold three times in a row in
1597–8 by picking what would become the three best-selling
Shakespearean quartos as the first three plays of his brief
career."[4]
In addition to Shakespeare's plays, Wise published a range of
other contemporary works, including Thomas Nashe's Christ's Tears Over
Jerusalem (1593), and Thomas Campion's Observations in the
Art of English Poesy (1602). As was typical of publishers of
his era, he published religious and homiletic works, like The
Pathway to Perfection and The Mean of Mourning (both
1596)
by Thomas Playfair — though he appears to have operated a rather
small-scale business, in comparison with other stationers of his
generation.
On June 25, 1603, Andrew Wise transferred his copyrights to
R2, R3, and 1H4 to fellow stationer Matthew Law,
who issued subsequent quartos of all three plays. Thereafter Wise
"is not heard of again."[5]
References
- ^
Sonia Massai, Shakespeare and the Rise of the Editor,
Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2007; p. 91.
- ^
Joseph Ames, Typographical Antiquities, London, 1790; Vol.
3, pp. 1372-3.
- ^
E. K.
Chambers, The Elizabethan Stage, 4 Volumes, Oxford,
Clarendon Press, 1923; Vol. 3, pp. 481-5.
- ^
Peter W. M. Blayney, "The Publication of Playbooks," in: A New
History of Early English Drama, John D. Cox and David Scott
Kastan, eds.; New York, Columbia University Press, 1997; p.
389.
- ^
F. E.
Halliday, A Shakespeare Companion 1564–1964,
Baltimore, Penguin, 1964; p. 533.