Fatal Extravagance Explained

Fatal Extravagance
Date Of Premiere:21 April 1721[1]
Original Language:English
Place:Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre
Genre:Tragedy

Fatal Extravagance is a 1721 tragedy by the British writer Aaron Hill. It was presented by another writer Joseph Mitchell, a friend of Hill, at the Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre in London.[2] The original cast included James Quin as Bellmour, Anthony Boheme as Courtney, John Ogden as Bargrave and Anna Maria Seymour as Louisa. It was printed with the slightly longer title The Fatal Extravagance.

Hill was inspired by the recent South Sea Bubble where speculative investment had led to a massive crash, ruining backers of the company. In the play this takes the former a out-of-control gambler who ends up killing a creditor and planning to commit suicide.[3]

In 1793 a version of the play retitled The Prodigal by Francis Godolphin Waldron was staged at the Haymarket Theatre, with a happy ending added.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Burling p.91
  2. Gerrard p.9
  3. Gerrard p.54