Literary Criticism (1400-1800)

Foote, Samuel | Susan Lamb (essay date 1996)

Susan Lamb (essay date 1996)

SOURCE: Lamb, Susan. “The Popular Theater of Samuel Foote and British National Identity.” Comparative Drama 30, no. 2 (1996): 245-65.

[In the essay below, Lamb discusses the works of Foote as they relate to Britain's emergence as a world power.]

For some time now it has been generally recognized that the relative neglect and conventional aesthetic and moral disapproval of the eighteenth-century London theater's most notorious figure, Samuel Foote, must give way to both formal and contextual re-evaluations. Much of the impetus behind this general call for re-evaluation lies in an appreciation of Foote's extraordinary success and popularity, for in his day he was as well-known and widely-discussed as David Garrick. Foote was the author of some thirty comedies and was a highly successful wit, actor, and theater manager.1 To dismiss him for reasons moral (he should not have made fun of people) or...

[The entire page is 9526 words long]

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