The Heiress (1786 play) explained

The Heiress
Date Of Premiere:14 January 1786
Original Language:English
Place:Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London
Genre:Comedy

The Heiress is a comedy play by the British playwright and soldier John Burgoyne. The play debuted at the Drury Lane Theatre on 14 January 1786. It concerns the engagement of Lord Gayville to Miss Alscrip, a fashionable woman he believes to be an heiress. Gayville later discovers that the woman who really stands to inherit the fortune is his true love Miss Clifford.[1] The play was an enormous success, running for 31 performances in its initial season and being revived again the following year.[2] The play was initially anonymous, but Burgoyne was soon widely reported to be the author and he acknowledged this after the play's debut.[3]

The original Drury Lane cast included Thomas King as Sir Clement Flint, John Palmer as Lord Gayville, William Parsons as Alscrip, Robert Baddeley as Chignon, John Bannister as Mr Blandish, James Aickin as Mr Rightly, Robert Palmer as Prompt, Jane Pope as Mrs Alscrip, Charlotte Tidswell as Tiffany and Elizabeth Farren as Lady Emily.[4]

References

  1. Thomson p.121
  2. Adams Papers p.X
  3. Adams Papers p.X
  4. Hogan p.855-56

Bibliography