Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN

Richard Brinsley Sheridan

'Richard Brinsley Sheridan' (October 30, 1751July 7, 1816) was an Irish playwright and Whig statesman.

Contents
Early life
Works
Family and career
Politics
External links

Early life


R.B. Sheridan was born in Dublin on October 30, 1751 at 12 Dorset Street, a fashionable street in the late eighteenth century. (Fellow playwright Sean O'Casey was born in Dorset Street 130 years later.) He was baptized on November 4, 1751, his father Thomas Sheridan being an actor-manager who managed the Theatre Royal, Dublin for a time, and his mother, Frances Sheridan, a writer (most famous for her novel ''The Memoirs of Sidney Biddulph''). She died when her son was fifteen. The Sheridans' eldest child, Thomas, died in 1750, the year when their second son, Charles Francis (d. 1806), was born.

Works



★ ''The Rivals'' (first acted 17 January 1775)

★ ''St Patrick's Day'' (first acted 2 May 1775)

★ ''The Duenna'' (first acted 21 November 1775)

★ ''A Trip to Scarborough'' (first acted 24 February 1777)

★ ''The School for Scandal'' (first acted 8 May 1777)

★ ''The Camp'' (first acted 15 October 1778)

★ ''The Critic'' (first acted 30 October 1779)

★ ''The Glorious First of June'' (first acted 2 July 1794)

★ ''Pizarro'' (first acted 24 May 1799)
He also wrote a selection of poems, and political speeches for his time in parliament.

Family and career


Richard was educated at Harrow School, and was to study law. However, his highly romantic elopement with Elizabeth Linley (1754-1792; daughter of Thomas Linley), and their subsequent marriage on 13 April 1773 at St Marylebone Parish Church, put paid to such hopes; they had a son, Thomas (1775-1817).
Richard's second marriage was to Esther Jane Ogle; they also had a son, Charles Brinsley Sheridan (died 1843).
When Richard returned to London, he began writing for the stage. His first play, ''The Rivals'', produced at Covent Garden in 1775, was a failure on its first night. Sheridan cast a more capable actor for the role of the comic Irishman for its second performance, and it was a smash which immediately established the young playwright's reputation. It has gone on to become a standard of English literature.
Having quickly made his name and fortune, Sheridan bought a share in Drury Lane. His most famous play ''The School for Scandal'' (1777) is considered one of the greatest comedies of manners in English. It was followed by ''The Critic'' (1779), an updating of the satirical Restoration play ''The Rehearsal'', which received a memorable revival (performed with ''Oedipus'' in a single evening) starring Laurence Olivier at the Old Vic Theatre in 1946.
He was the grandfather of society beauty and author Caroline Norton, and the great-grandfather of Lord Dufferin, third Governor General of Canada and eighth Viceroy of India. The famous ghost story writer Sheridan le Fanu was his great-nephew.

Politics


Sheridan was also a Whig politician, entering parliament in 1780 under the sponsorship of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire. A great public speaker, he remained in parliament until 1812, and was a leading figure in the party.
He held the posts of Receiver-General of the Duchy of Cornwall (1804–1807) and Treasurer of the Navy (1806–1807).
In December 1815 he became ill, largely confined to bed. Sheridan died in poverty, and was buried in the Poets' Corner of Westminster Abbey; his funeral was attended by dukes, earls, lords, viscounts, the Lord Mayor of London, and other notables.

External links





★ Full text of Thomas Moore's ''Memoirs of the Life of the Right Honorable Richard Brinsley Sheridan'', Vol. 1, Vol. 2



This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.