Otway, Thomas

Otway, Thomas
born March 3, 1652, Trotton, near Midhurst, Sussex, Eng.
died April 14, 1685, London

English dramatist and poet.

A failed actor, he turned to writing and had immense success with Don Carlos (produced 1676), considered the best of his rhymed heroic plays. His other plays include The Orphan (1680), a blank-verse domestic tragedy; The Souldier's Fortune (1680), a comedy; and his masterpiece, Venice Preserv'd (1682), one of the greatest theatrical successes of the period. A forerunner of sentimental drama, he is outstanding for his convincing presentations of human emotions in an age of heroic but artificial tragedies. The Poet's Complaint of His Muse (1680) is a powerful, gloomy autobiographical poem.

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▪ English author
born March 3, 1652, Trotton, near Midhurst, Sussex, Eng.
died April 14, 1685, London
 English dramatist and poet, one of the forerunners of sentimental drama through his convincing presentation of human emotions in an age of heroic but artificial tragedies. His masterpiece, Venice Preserved, was one of the greatest theatrical successes of his period.

      Otway studied at Winchester College and at the University of Oxford but left in 1671 without taking a degree. He went to London, where he was offered a part by Aphra Behn in one of her plays. He was overcome by stage fright, and his first performance was his last. His first play, a rhyming tragedy called Alcibiades, was produced at the Duke's Theatre at Dorset Garden in September 1675. The part of Draxilla in this play was created by the well-known actress Elizabeth Barry, and Otway fell violently in love with her. Six unsigned love letters, said to be addressed to Barry, were published in a collection that appeared in 1697, 12 years after Otway's death. His second play, Don Carlos, produced in June 1676, had an immense success on the stage and is the best of his rhymed heroic plays. Titus and Berenice, adapted from Molière, and The Cheats of Scapin, adapted from Jean Racine, were published together in 1677.

      In 1678 Otway obtained a commission in an English regiment serving in the Netherlands, and he was abroad when his first comedy, Friendship in Fashion, was staged. His next play, Caius Marius, a curious mixture of a story from Plutarch with an adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, was staged in 1679. He published his powerful, gloomy autobiographical poem, The Poet's Complaint of His Muse, in 1680.

      Otway's most memorable dramatic work was done in the last years of his short life. In the spring of 1680 his fine blank-verse domestic tragedy The Orphan had great success on the stage. On March 1 in the same year his best comedy, The Souldier's Fortune, probably drawn from his military experience, was produced. Venice Preserved, also written in blank verse, was first performed at the Duke's Theatre in 1682. Until the middle of the 19th century it was probably revived more often than any poetic play except those of Shakespeare. John Dryden, who wrote the prologue, praised it highly. Otway's tragedies, particularly Venice Preserved, are notable for their psychological credibility and their clear and powerful presentation of human passions.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Otway, Thomas — ► (1652 85) Dramaturgo inglés. Autor de Don Carlos y El huérfano. * * * (3 mar. 1652, Trotton, cerca de Midhurst, Sussex, Inglaterra–14 abr. 1685, Londres). Dramaturgo y poeta inglés. Actor fallido, se dedicó a escribir y obtuvo un enorme éxito… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • OTWAY, THOMAS —    English dramatist, born in Sussex, intended for the Church; took to the stage, failed as an actor, and became a playwright, his chief production in that line being Alcibiades, Don Carlos, The Orphan, and Venice Preserved, the latter two… …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Otway, Thomas —  (1652–1685) British playwright …   Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors

  • Otway, Thomas — (1651 or 1652 1685)    Dramatist, s. of a clergyman, was b. near Midhurst, Sussex, and ed. at Oxf., which he left without graduating. His short life, like those of many of his fellows, was marked by poverty and misery, and he appears to have d.… …   Short biographical dictionary of English literature

  • Otway — Otway, Thomas …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • OTWAY (T.) — OTWAY THOMAS (1652 1685) Élevé à Winchester, puis à Christ Church (Oxford), Thomas Otway vint à Londres en 1671 pour y faire une carrière de comédien. Déçu par son maigre succès, il se mit à écrire des pièces sans désemparer. À vingt trois ans,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Thomas — Thomas, Albert Thomas, André Antoine Thomas, Ch. L. Ambroise Thomas, Dylan Thomas, Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, Theodore * * * (as used in expressions) Adès, Thomas …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Thomas Otway — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Otway. Thomas Otway (né le 3 mars 1652 à Trotton, près de Midhurst mort le 14 avril 1685) est un dramaturge anglais de l époque de la Restauration, sous Charles II. En 1675, Thomas Betterton… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Thomas — /tom euhs/ for 1, 2, 4 14; /taw mah / for 3, n. 1. an apostle who demanded proof of Christ s Resurrection. John 20:24 29. 2. Augustus, 1857 1934, U.S. playwright, journalist, and actor. 3. (Charles Louis) Ambroise /shannrddl lwee ahonn brddwannz… …   Universalium

  • Thomas Otway — (March 3, 1652 – April 14, 1685) was an English dramatist of the Restoration period.He was born at Trotton, near Midhurst, the parish of which his father, Humphrey Otway, was at that time curate. Humphrey later became rector of Woolbeding, a… …   Wikipedia

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