David Garrick

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David Garrick was an influential figure in the 18th century British theatre.[1][2][3]

He began as an actor. He later worked as a playwright and theatre owner.[1][2][3]

Garrick is said to have played a key role in changing how actors played their roles in the British theatre.[1][2][3] He played a role in plays, written by other playwrights, that appeared in his theatre, with scholars claiming he influenced over 60 plays. Many of the 22 works explicitly credited to Garrick are merely translations of French plays.

One play he is remembered for is Bon Ton; or, High Life Above Stairs.[3][4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Robert D. Hume. The Plays of David Garrick by David Garrick, Harry William Pedicord, Fredrick Louis Bergmann, The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, October, 1981, pp. 578-581. Retrieved on 2022-06-12.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Gerald Weales. Review: There's No Business like Show Business, The Sewanee Review, Summer, 1981, pp. 448-453. Retrieved on 2022-06-12.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Gillian Skinner (2015). “Stage-plays ... and a thousand other amusements now in use”: Garrick’s response to antitheatrical discourse in the mid-eighteenth century 63-82. Restoration and eighteenth-century theatre research. Retrieved on 2022-06-12. “Bon Ton’s subtitle overtly connects the two-act comedy with an earlier afterpiece, James Townley’s High Life Below Stairs (1759).”
  4. Elizabeth Stein (2005). David Garrick, Dramatist. Kessinger Publishing, 52–3. ISBN 1-4179-8798-7. Retrieved on 2 August 2011.