Aristocratic, dilettante biographers do not 400-year-old court testimony and trial verdicts make. And it won't change that Augustine Phillips testified before the privy council on 18 February, 1601, that Robert Devereux's conspirators paid the Lord Chamberlain's Men 40 shillings more than their going rate to perform "Richard II" complete with deposition scene.As I said earlier: for an aristocratic, dilettante autobiographer who needs a hook to make a humdrum autobiography more exciting to improve sales, spinning this sort of yarn is handy. As historical scholarship, it's as compelling as a wet fart: it's closer to the level of arguing that Denver Airport is the home to one of the Illuminati.
Or is "historical scholarship" now the bold pursuit of ignoring inconvenient primary sources and/or pretending they do not exist?