Love (play) explained

Love
Date Of Premiere:4 November 1839
Original Language:English
Place:Theatre Royal, Covent Garden
Genre:Drama

Love (also known as The Countess and the Serf) is an 1839 play by the Irish writer James Sheridan Knowles.[1] It premiered at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden on 4 November 1839 with a cast that included Charles Selby as Prince Frederick, James Vining as Sir Rupert, Alfred Wigan as Sir Conrad, William Payne as Stephen, Ellen Tree as Countess, Emma Brougham as Empress and Lucia Elizabeth Vestris as Catherine. Knowles was paid six hundred pounds for the work by the management of Covent Garden.[2] Mary Shelley praised the play for its "inspiring situations founded on sentiment and passion".[3] It went on to enjoy success in the United States where it became part of the repertoire, being performed at the Broadway Theatre in New York many times in the 1850s.[4] It was celebrated by abolitionists who cheered its anti-slavery theme of a serf falling in love with a countess despite her father's disapproval and the threat of execution.[5]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Nicoll p.339
  2. Morash p.83
  3. Crook p.342
  4. James p.128
  5. Hughes p.26-27