The present article is based on a number of unexplored notarial acts preserved in the City Archives at The Hague, which provide new information about Jacob Hall (fl. 1662-1681), the most famous of English rope dancers. Hall not only appears to have become a citizen of The Hague in 1679, he also envisaged continuing his professional career in the Low Countries, where in 1680 he entered into a partnership with Moritz von der Beck (ca. 1649-1694), a French manager-rope dancer/acrobat, who had tried his hand at various theatrical ventures in his home country. Agreeing to a temporary merger of their respective companies, both men set out their plans for joint appearances in Paris as well as London. Apart from affording a glimpse of the lives of the British and French performers the two managers had recruited, the archival records also reveal a good deal about the provisions laid down in rope dancers' contracts and refer in passing to the role played by Susanna King, Jacob Hall's wife, as the company's treasurer. The continued presence of British (and French) professional entertainers who entered into co-operation agreements with their continental counterparts attests to the significance of the Low Countries as the meeting-point for cross-Channel cultural exchange.