Book description
The first night of Richard Brinsley Sheridan's The School for
Scandal, on 8 May 1777, was one of the great dates in theatrical
history. From then on, Sheridan was launched into eighteenth-century
society, as much at home in the salons of the Duchess of Devonshire
and the Prince of Wales as in the taverns and coffee-houses around
Drury Lane. Sheridan's comedies were all written by the time he was
twenty-eight. For the next thirty years he was wholly involved in his
twin careers as manager of the Drury Lane theatre and Member of
Parliament. At a time when politics were dominated by a few
aristocratic families, he rose above his poverty to become one of the
greatest parliamentary figures of the age. In the theatre, he presided
over one of the most brilliant periods in the history of the English
stage. Drawing on a wide variety of sources, Kelly gives a
comprehensive picture of Sheridan's tempestuous career and chaotic
private life. For all his faults, his charm was irresistible - 'there
has been nothing like it since the days of Orpheus,' wrote Byron. It
is charm that illuminates her narrative, bringing Sheridan to life. 'I
can imagine no better biography of this talented, dynamic, impossibly
unreliable firework of a man.' Victoria Glendinning, Daily Telegraph