Band, Cuff, and Ruff (Full Cast Audio Adaptation)

Episode 439  ·  Jul 03, 08:00 AM
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Things can talk! And fight!

Beyond is sponsored by The Malone Society: The permanent utility of original texts

This week you're getting another university comedy! It's A Merry Dialogue between Band, Cuff and Ruff by the Unknown. It was printed in 1615 and probably performed a year or so earlier by students at Cambridge. More of this kind of thing is on the way!

Band, Cuff and Ruff is about different detailing in clothing, and which is better. Ruffs being favoured by some (usually the more respectable end of the spectrum) and Bands by the more louche. Cuff stands between as arbiter, presumably as the more standard utilitarian element common to all. This is, of course, merely a delivery system for puns on fabric, clothing manufacturing and washing. If you are unsure what the punchline means, assume it’s one of those three.

Band was played by Liza Graham, Cuff by Alison Whismore, and Ruff by Larissa Oates.

The text coach for the production was Liza Graham

Technical presentation by Robert Crighton

For more of this type of thing, go to Preist the Barber.

Our patrons received a mix of this episode in May 2026 - over a month in advance.
The Beyond Shakespeare Podcast is supported by its patrons – become a patron and you get to choose the plays we work on next. Go to www.patreon.com/beyondshakespeare - or if you'd like to buy us a coffee at ko-fi https://ko-fi.com/beyondshakespeare - or if you want to give us some feedback, email us at admin@beyondshakespeare.org, follow us on Twitter, Facebook & Instagram @BeyondShakes or go to our website: https://beyondshakespeare.org
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The Beyond Shakespeare Podcast is hosted and produced by Robert Crighton.

About our sponsors - the Malone Society. The Society was founded in 1906 at the initiative of A.W. Pollard, and for over a century they have published (almost) every year edited volumes of early printed and manuscript texts of both well-known and neglected plays. They also publish collections of documentary material relating to the performance and reception of early drama. Their best-known publications include W.W. Greg’s edition of Sir Thomas More, a collaborative history play, and A.C. Dunstan’s edition of the earliest surviving original play in English to have been written by a woman, Elizabeth Cary’s The Tragedy of Mariam.
Their membership is international and open to anyone interested in early drama. Members receive their annual volumes and are able to buy books from their backlist at low prices.
In addition to their publications, they support scholarship of early drama through fellowships and research grants, an annual prize for graduate students, and performances and symposia.
The Society is named after Edmond Malone, born in Dublin in 1741, a great editor, textual scholar and theatre historian, whose work continues to shape studies in early drama.