A Fond Husband

1677 play by Thomas d'Urfey From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Fond Husband; Or, The Plotting Sisters also known as The Fond Husband is a 1677 comedy play by the English writer Thomas D'Urfey. It was first staged by the Duke's Company at London's Dorset Garden Theatre with a cast that included William Smith as Rashley, Henry Harris as Ranger, James Nokes as Peregrine Bubble, Anthony Leigh as Old Fumble, Samuel Sandford as Sir Roger Petulant, Thomas Jevon as Sneak, John Richards as Spatterdash, Thomas Percival as Apothecary, Elizabeth Barry as Emillia, Rebecca Marshall as Maria and Margaret Hughes as Cordelia.[1] The published version was dedicated to the Irish statesman James Butler, Duke of Ormonde.

Original languageEnglish
Written byThomas D'Urfey
Date31 May 1677
Quick facts Original language, Written by ...
A Fond Husband
1735 version printed at the time of a revival at Drury Lane.
Original languageEnglish
Written byThomas D'Urfey
GenreRestoration Comedy
Premiere
Date31 May 1677
PlaceDorset Garden Theatre, London
Close

It was a popular work and was revived on a number of occasions.

References

Bibliography

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI