The Jealous Wife

{{Short description|1761 British play by George Colman the Elder}}

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File:Bodleian Libraries, Playbill of Drury Lane Theatre, Tuesday, Sept. 28 1784, announcing The jealous wife &c..jpg]]

The Jealous Wife is a 1761 British play by George Colman the Elder. A comedy, it was first performed at the Drury Lane Theatre on 12 February 1761 and ran for 19 performances in its first season and 70 by the end of the century. It was translated into French and German.Nettleton p.669

Colman was indebted to Henry Fielding's novel Tom Jones as an inspiration for several characters and incidents and is an early example of a dramatisation of a popular novel.{{Cite book|title = The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21) Volume X. The Age of Johnson.|publisher = Cambridge University Press|year = 2000|isbn = 1-58734-073-9}} An Advertisement preceding The Jealous Wife in Colman's Dramatick Works of 1777 reveals that he also developed ideas for the play from The Spectator, The Connoisseur and The Adelphi of Terrance.{{Cite journal|title = "[A] play, which I presume to call original": appropriation, creative genius, and eighteenth-century playwriting.|last = Kewes|first = Paulina|date = 2001|journal = Studies in the Literary Imagination}} David Garrick helped Colman to work on the draft and cut down its length.Nettleton p.669

References

=Bibliography=

  • Nettleton, George H. & Case, Arthur E. British Dramatists from Dryden to Sheridan. Southern Illinois University Press, 1975.