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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Age of Johnson
>
The Drama and the Stage
> Footes Comic Mimicry; His Farces
Homes
Douglas
Murphy and Bickerstaff
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume X. The Age of Johnson.
IV.
The Drama and the Stage
.
§ 22. Footes Comic Mimicry; His Farces.
Footes career as playwright coincides almost exactly with Garricks managership at Drury lane (174776). He was a direct descendant of Fielding, fully developing personal satire through the medium of brief dramatic sketches. Of about a score of printed dramatic pieces, none exceeds three acts. With Foote, as with Fielding, most of the zest of his local hits is now lost. Taylor the quack oculist, the extortioner Mrs. Grieve, chaplain Jackson and many other once familiar personages whom he boldly caricatured are now shadowy or forgotten figures.
40
Footes characters often have animation and theatrical effectiveness; but they are not developed in action. Though his pieces are usually printed as comedies, they mainly belong to the realm of farce. Like his own art as an actor, they tend to substitute mimicry for original delineation of character.
39
The zest of Footes farces, without their personal bitterness, is seen in various contemporary after-pieces. Garrick produced a number of lively farces, such as
The Lying Valet
(1741),
Miss in her Teens
(1747),
The Irish Widow
(1772) and
Bon Ton
(1775). James Townleys
High Life below Stairs
(1759) proved a welcome variety to those who, like George Selwyn, were tired of
low
life above stairs, and it long maintained its popularity.
40
Note 40
. The satire against Whitefield and his methodist followers in
The Minor
(1760) and that against the suitors of Elizabeth Linley before her romantic marriage to Richard Brinsley Sheridan in
The Maid of Bath
(1771), have a personal interest.
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CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Homes
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Murphy and Bickerstaff
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