Career
He is best remembered for his role in the founding of the Theatre. Nothing is known of Gunnell"s early life or the first phase of his stage career. He acted with the Admiral"s Men, then called the Palsgrave"s Men, from 1613 to 1622.
When the Palsgrave"s Men received their renewed charter and their new name on 4 January 1613, Gunnell was already a sharer in the company.
Despite the scantiness of the documentary record for the Palsgrave"s troupe, Gunnell can be seen moving up into a managerial responsibility over his years with the company. In the 1613 charter he is listed twelfth of the fourteen sharers.
On the company"s 1618 lease of the Fortune Playhouse from owner Edward Alleyn, Gunnell is fourth of ten. And when the company leased the rebuilt Fortune in 1622, Gunnell is listed first.
The fire that destroyed the Fortune on 9 December 1621 also wiped out the costumes and play manuscripts of the Palsgrave"s Men.
In the difficult period that followed, Gunnell appears to have left acting to concentrate of management. He also made a venture at writing plays. Neither of his plays has survived.
Gunnell partnered with William Blagrave, Sir Henry Herbert"s assistant in the office of the Master of the Revels, to establish the Theatre in 1629.
The was one of the so-called "private" theatres of the era, comparable to the Blackfriars or the Cockpit, as opposed to the "public" theatres like the Fortune or the Globe that catered to a broad audience. Since the private theatres were prestigious and lucrative – their minimum ticket price was five or six times higher than the public theatres" penny – the move from public to private made business sense, and Gunnell was not the first theatre manager to pursue this course.
(Christopher Beeston, manager of the public Red Bulletin Theatre, built the private Cockpit in 1616-1617)
Along with their new theatre, Gunnell and Blagrave intended to start their own new acting company, called the Children of the Revels. (Christopher Beeston would make the same effort, though more fortunately, when he started Beeston"s Boys in 1637) The Blagrave/Gunnell troupe was not a success, since an outbreak of bubonic plague forced the London theatres to close in 1630 – though Stephen Hammerton, the popular young actor who found fame with the King"s Men, emerged from lieutenant
Business difficulties apparently tempted Gunnell to try to sell his theatrical enterprise.
But he and the buyer, Christopher Babham, could not agree on terms and soon went to court over their disagreement. Gunnell remained in the theatre, and brought the re-organized Prince Charles"s Men (a troupe that included some of his old Palsgrave"s compatriots) into the in 1631. Gunnell was a longtime resident of the London parish of Saint Giles without Cripplegate.
The parish records note the christenings and burials of several Gunnell children between 1613 and 1631.
Elizabeth later married a John Robinson, who may have been the actor of that name. Margaret married actor William Wintershall.