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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Age of Johnson
>
The Drama and the Stage
> Murphy and Bickerstaff
Footes Comic Mimicry; His Farces
George Colman the Elder:
The Jealous Wife
and
The Clandestine Marriage
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume X. The Age of Johnson.
IV.
The Drama and the Stage
.
§ 23. Murphy and Bickerstaff.
Of the playwrights of the Garrick era, Arthur Murphy may serve as a type of prolific industry. His dramatic efforts include farces, like
The Upholsterer
(1758), in the general vein of Fieldings political satire; adaptations from Voltaire; comedies, often, like
All in the Wrong
(1761) and
The School for Guardians,
based on Molière; and tragedies such as
Zenobia
(1768) and
The Grecian Daughter
(1772). Without enough originality to channel out his own way, he drifted easily with the tide, appropriating whatever came within easy reach. His comedy has the usual didactic note, schooling wives in the way to keep their husbands,
41
and husbands in the lesson that constancy should not be shamefaced. His tragedy preserves the conventional cast, and
The Grecian Daughter
owes its place in theatrical traditions largely to Mrs. Siddons. Yet, Murphy had the cleverness required for fashioning successful acting plays, and to some ingenuity added much industry.
41
Another popular Irish playwright of the day was Isaac Bickerstaff. His facile pen turned most successfully to opera
libretti.
With much of Murphys ability in adaptation and sense of theatrical effectiveness, he blended materials from such divergent sources as Charles Johnson, Wycherley and Marivaux into his successful comic opera,
Love in a Village
(1762), and found in Richardsons
Pamela
the basis for his popular
Maid of the Mill
(1765). In 1768, he scored two popular hits at Drury lane by his musical entertainment,
Padlock,
and by his version of Cibbers
Non-Juror,
and produced successfully at Covent garden (1768)
Lionel and Clarissa
(published anonymously in 1768).
42
To many of his operatic works, Charles Dibdin, later a prolific playwright, supplied much of the music.
42
Note 41
.
The Way to keep him
(1760).
[
back
]
Note 42
. It was reprinted, in 1773, with the title
A School for Fathers.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Footes Comic Mimicry; His Farces
George Colman the Elder:
The Jealous Wife
and
The Clandestine Marriage
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