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In that year Thomas Nashe implies the existence of such a play in his introduction to Robert Greene's Menaphon:
There is a record of a performance of Hamlet in 1594 in Philip Henslowe's diary and in 1596 Thomas Lodge wrote of "the ghost which cried so miserably at the theatre, like an oyster-wife, Hamlet, revenge!".
Because Nashe apparently makes allusions to Thomas Kyd in the same passage, and because of similarities between the Shakespearean Hamlet and Kyd's Spanish Tragedy, it is generally accepted that Kyd was the author. More controversial is the question of how much of Thomas Kyd's play survives in William Shakespeare's version, especially the first quarto of 1603.
Some anti-Stratfordians claim that there was no Ur-Hamlet, and that the references are merely signs that the Shakespearean Hamlet was written earlier than the generally accepted date. Only a few orthodox Shakespeareans, such as Harold BloomHarold Bloom (born July 11, 1930) is an American literary critic, known as a defender of the 19th century Romantic poets at a time when their reputations were at a low ebb, the author of a controversial theory of poetic influence, and more recently as the and Peter Alexander , have believed that Shakespeare himself was the author.