Love for Money
1691 play
Love for Money | |
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Written by | Thomas D'Urfey |
Date premiered | January 1691 |
Place premiered | Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London |
Original language | English |
Genre | Restoration Comedy |
Love For Money; Or, The Boarding School is a 1691 comedy play by the English writer Thomas D'Urfey. It was originally staged at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane by the United Company. In 1733 it was adapted into a ballad opera The Boarding School by Charles Coffey.
Original cast
- Cave Underhill as Sir Rowland Rakehell
- William Mountfort as Jack Amorous
- John Hodgson as Will Merriton
- John Freeman as Old Merriton
- George Powell as Nedd Bragg alias Captain Bouncer
- George Bright as Old Zachary Bragg
- Thomas Doggett as Deputy Nincompoop
- William Bowen as Monsieur Le Prate
- Mr. Kirkham as Singing Master
- John Bowman as Dancing Master
- Mr. Peire as Presbyterian Parson
- Anthony Leigh as Lady Addleplot
- Mrs. Richardson as Lady Straddle
- Anne Bracegirdle as Mirtilla
- Frances Maria Knight as Miss Jenny
- Mrs. Davies as Miss Molly
- Charlotte Butler as Betty Jiltall
- Katherine Corey as Crowstich
- Margaret Osborne as Teareshift
- Elinor Leigh as Oyley[1]
References
- ^ Van Lennep p.392
Bibliography
- Van Lennep, W. The London Stage, 1660-1800: Volume One, 1660-1700. Southern Illinois University Press, 1960.
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Restoration comedy
- 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)
- The English Friar (1690)
- 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
- Comedy of manners
- 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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