Saturday 8 March 1788

Plays

Event Type
Standard
Revenue
£227 4s 6d
Available Revenue
54%
Capacity
67%

Beneficiary(ies)
N/A
Commanded by
N/A
Requested by
N/A

Business

Income

Category Amount Full price Half price Aftermoney Supplementary Notes
Door Receipts £227 4s 6d £222 14s 6d £0 £4 10s £0
Total £227 4s 6d

Expenditure

Category Amount Payment Type A/c book entry Notes
Employees (Other) £261 10d Internal Paid 4 Nights [payroll entries here aggregated]
Singers £3 Internal Chorus Singers
Supernumeraries £2 7s 6d Internal Supernumeraries
Musicians (Band) £8 6s 6d Internal Music the 6th. Inst.
Musicians (Kettle Drums) 5s Internal Kettle Drum do. [the 6th. Inst.]
Wardrobe (Other) £7 8s Departmental Wardrobe
Carpentry and Sceneshifting £12 3d Departmental Mr: Cox for Scenemen
Properties 10s Departmental Properties do. [the 6th. Inst.]
Scene Painters £3 13s 6d Internal Mr. Hodgins
Candles (Wax) £25 4s External Paid Mr: B Barrett on Acct. Between 1772 and 1791, CG regularly paid a wax chandler named Barrett, who was also a CG renter from about the late 1780s until 1805. The situation is not very clear, because the theatre paid an oil merchant named Barrett in the late 1770s; paid both "Mr: Jno. Barrett Wax Chandler" and "Mr: Barrett Wax Chandler" on 30 June 1783; paid "Mr. Barrett Haymarket his Bills in full" on 1 November 1785, and a day later paid "Mr. Barrett Waxchandler"; then, between 15 November 1787 and 12 April 1788, recurrently paid a Bryant Barrett Esquire for no specified reason. Trade directories around this time name a John B. Barrett, wax chandler to the king (see The General London Guide (1794), p. 112, for that accolade), based at 4 Haymarket, and a Bryant Barrett, wax bleacher, who seems to have moved premises multiple times before settling on Grigsby's Coffee House, or who perhaps operated from multiple premises at the same time. Perhaps CG’s main wax chandler (and the renter) around this time was Bryant Barrett, but it sometimes also transacted with John B. Barrett; indeed, from the 1807-08 season it seems to have begun transacting with a later version of John B. Barrett’s business, Messieurs Barrett and Beaumont. However, it is also possible that John B. Barrett’s full name was John Bryant Barrett, and/or that he was CG’s main wax chandler throughout these years, and/or that John B. and Bryant were relatives and sometimes worked in tandem. In any case, the payments to Bryant Barrett Esquire evidently fit into the pattern of payments to Barrett the wax chandler in the late 1780s, and can therefore be considered payments for wax candles.
Unknown £268 8s 5d Unknown Paid Thos: Longman Esqr. Thomas Longman Esquire seems to have loaned money to Thomas Harris/Covent Garden, and/or disbursed money on the theatre's behalf; but various Longmans were involved in selling stationery, sheet music, and even musical instruments to Covent Garden, and seem to have printed playbooks for the theatre and/or bought the copyright of plays from the theatre in order to print and sell those plays for their own (the Longmans') profit. It is therefore difficult to categorise this and many other of the payments involving Thomas Longman Esquire in particular and the Longmans in general.
Total £592 4s