Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • The Woman-Hater

      • Beaumont soon associated himself with the theater and wrote his first play, The Woman-Hater, about 1606.
      www.encyclopedia.com › people › literature-and-arts
  1. People also ask

  2. Beaumont's plays. The Knight of the Burning Pestle, one of Beaumont's early plays. It was once written of Beaumont and Fletcher that "in their joint plays their talents are so...completely merged into one, that the hand of Beaumont cannot clearly be distinguished from that of Fletcher."

  3. Beaumont wrote some plays on his own (as did John Fletcher) but collaborated on many more with a variety of playwrights, particularly Philip Massenger. Francis Beaumont was born in 1585 and died in 1616. His father was Francis Beaumont, justice of common pleas, of Grace-Dieu priory Leicestershire.

  4. Francis Beaumont (born c. 1585, Grace-Dieu, Leicestershire, England—died March 6, 1616, London) was an English Jacobean poet and playwright who collaborated with John Fletcher on comedies and tragedies between about 1606 and 1613. The son of Francis Beaumont, justice of common pleas of Grace-Dieu priory, Charnwood Forest, Leicestershire ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. It is not known exactly when Beaumont met John Fletcher , nor whether they met at the Mermaid, through Jonson, or through a company for which both were writing, but their collaboration in playwriting would become famous.

  6. May 23, 2018 · Their best-known plays include Sir John Van Olden Barnavelt (1619), The Custom of the Country (c. 1619), and The Sea Voyage (1622). He also continued to write plays alone, including The Humourous Lieutenant (c. 1619), The Island Princess (1621), The Wild Goose Chase (1621), and The Pilgrim (c. 1621).

  7. A concise introduction to the all-too-brief life of Francis Beaumont, writing partner of John Fletcher, and one of the greatest English playwrights of all time.

  8. The Dramatic Canon. The respective shares of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher in the traditional Beaumont and Fletcher canon have always been a subject of scholarly debate, as also have the possible contributions made by Chapman, Jonson, Massinger, Middleton, Shakespeare, Tourneur, and others. For discussions of the canon, see, inter alia ...

  1. People also search for