In later years they leased the Red Bull Theatre, and continued acting there for a few years, until the company broke up; this would be about the year 1623, as from this date nothing further is heard of them.

A few plays which this company possessed were all printed in the early years of the seventeenth century:

“The Travels of Three English Brothers.” By Her Majesty’s Servants, 1607. by Thomas Heywood. By Her Majesty’s Servants, at the Red Bull, near Clerkenwell, 1608.

“The Golden Age.” At the Red Bull, by the Queen’s Majesty’s Servants, 1611.

“A Woman Killed with Kindness,” by Thomas Heywood. By the Queen’s Majesty’s Servants.

In a pleasant conceited comedy is shown how a

“Man may choose a Good Wife from a Bad.” By the Earl of Worcester’s Servants.

The last play is the only one in which the name of the Earl of Worcester appears.

The title of Her Majesty’s Servants refers to Queen Anne, wife of James the First, and must not be confused with the company of Queen Elizabeth, bearing a similar appellation.