Theater in Jane Austen's Time

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Theater in Jane Austen's Time All the best plays were run over in vain. Neither Hamlet, nor Macbeth, nor Othello, not Douglas, not the Gamester, presented any thing that could satisfy even the tragedians; and the Rivals, the School for Scandal, Wheel of Fortune, Heir at Law, and a long etcetera, were successively dismissed with yet warmer objections. No piece could be proposed that did not supply somebody with a difficulty, and on one side or the other it was a continual repetition of, 'Oh! no, that will never do!' (Mansfield Park, 110). As seen here, Jane Austen was more than familiar with the plays that were being produced and read during her lifetime. It is safe to assume that Jane Austen, an educated and talented writer would not include in her list of theatrical critique a play with which she was unfamiliar. More probable than not, the plays above listed were one's she understood quite well. With that assumption in mind, it is also probable that the characters for certain reasons rejected the plays. Perhaps the subject matter was a bit too close to home. In this light, I have undertook to find out about the playwrights that wrote the plays and the story lines each play followed. Edward Moore was the son of a minister. He began his career as a simple linendraper. However, that soon became to dull for such an active mind, and Moore began to write. His first attempt was a collection of Fables for the Female Sex. The nominal success was soon followed
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by his first play The Foundling, which is still rather well known in theatrical circles. The play of his the Jane Austen mentioned was The Gamester. It follows the story of a gamester's downfall through and infatuation with gambling. Basically, he had a gambling addiction. The story also included the elements of murder, suicide, and men who wanted other men's wives, a bit too close to the lives of Tom Bertram and Henry Crawford for their liking (British Drama). John Home was the son of a town clerk. He attended the University of Edinburgh where he followed the curriculum of ...

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