Love and a Bottle
Love and a Bottle | |
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Written by | George Farquhar |
Date premiered | December 1698 |
Place premiered | Drury Lane Theatre |
Original language | English |
Genre | Restoration comedy |
Love and a Bottle is a 1698 comedy play by the Irish writer George Farquhar.[1] Written shortly after Farquhar, an Irish Protestant originally from Derry, moved to London its central character is an Irishman Roebuck who has fled from Ireland after getting a woman pregnant. Resisting his father's demand that he marry the woman, he is followed to the English capital by the recent mother of his son.
The original Drury Lane cast included Joseph Williams as Roebuck, John Mills as Lovewell, William Bullock as Mockmade, Benjamin Johnson as Lyrick, Joseph Haines as Pamphlet, William Pinkethman as Club, Jane Rogers as Lucinda, Mary Powell as Bulfinch, Henrietta Moore as Pindress, Maria Allison as Leanthe and Margaret Mills as Trudge. The published version was dedicated to the Marques of Carmarthen.
His debut work in England, it lacked the impact that his subsequent work The Constant Couple had. However, following the success of his later plays it became a commonly-performed work during the eighteenth century.
References
- ^ Earnshaw p.136
Bibliography
- Earnshaw, Steven. The Pub in Literature: England's Altered State. Manchester University Press, 2000.
External links
- Love and a Bottle public domain audiobook at LibriVox
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- Aphra Behn
- Susanna Centlivre
- Colley Cibber
- William Congreve
- John Dryden
- Thomas D'Urfey
- George Etherege
- George Farquhar
- Edward Howard
- James Howard
- Robert Howard
- Thomas Otway
- Charles Sedley
- Thomas Shadwell
- Thomas Southerne
- Richard Steele
- John Vanbrugh
- George Villiers
- William Wycherley
- The Cutter of Coleman Street (1661)
- The Adventures of Five Hours (1663)
- The Comical Revenge (1664)
- The Mulberry-Garden (1668)
- She Would If She Could (1668)
- An Evening's Love (1668)
- Sir Solomon Single (1670)
- Love in a Wood (1671)
- The Rehearsal (1671)
- Epsom Wells (1672)
- Marriage à la mode (1672)
- The Country Wife (1675)
- Love in the Dark (1675)
- The Country Wit (1676)
- The Plain-Dealer (1676)
- The Man of Mode (1676)
- Tom Essence (1676)
- A Fond Husband (1677)
- Friendship in Fashion (1678)
- Squire Oldsapp (1678)
- Tunbridge Wells (1678)
- A True Widow (1678)
- The Woman Captain (1679)
- The London Cuckolds (1681)
- Sir Barnaby Whigg (1681)
- The Royalist (1682)
- City Politiques (1683)
- Dame Dobson (1683)
- A Commonwealth of Women (1685)
- Sir Courtly Nice (1685)
- Bellamira (1687)
- A Fool's Preferment (1688)
- The Squire of Alsatia (1688)
- Bury Fair (1689)
- The Fortune Hunters (1689)
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- Sir Anthony Love (1690)
- Love for Money (1691)
- The Wives Excuse (1691)
- Greenwich Park (1691)
- The Marriage-Hater Matched (1692)
- The Volunteers (1692)
- The Canterbury Guests (1694)
- The Married Beau (1694)
- Love for Love (1695)
- Love's Last Shift (1696)
- The Relapse (1696)
- The Campaigners (1698)
- Love and a Bottle (1698)
- The Constant Couple (1699)
- The Way of the World (1700)
- Sir Harry Wildair (1701)
- The Lying Lover (1703)
- The Careless Husband (1704)
- The Recruiting Officer (1706)
- The Beaux' Stratagem (1707)
- Bedlam
- Chocolate houses
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- Court
- Dorset Garden
- Drury Lane
- Fleet Prison
- Hedonism
- The Libertine (1994)
- The Libertine (film)
- Libertinism
- Lincoln's Inn Fields
- Mode
- Restoration of Charles II
- Second Anglo-Dutch War
- Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage
- Wit
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