Frances Boothby
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Frances Boothby (floruit 1669–1670) was an English playwright, the first woman to have a play produced in London; her tragicomedy Marcelia, or, The Treacherous Friend (published 1670) was performed by the King's Company at the Theatre Royal in 1669. The plot involves romantic difficulties and deceit. It is her only work extant, and little else is known of her.
References
- Hughes, Derek. "Boothby, Frances (fl. 1669–1670)." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison. Oxford: OUP, 2004. 16 November 2006.
- Wynne-Davies, Marion. "Boothby, Frances (1669) English Restoration dramatist." Dictionary of English Literature. Bloomsbury, 1997.
External links
- Corporaal, Marguérite. "Love, Death and Resurrection in Tragicomedies by Seventeenth-Century English Women Dramatists." Early Modern Literary Studies 12.1 (May, 2006) 3.1-24.
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Categories:
- Use British English from May 2015
- Use dmy dates from June 2013
- 17th-century dramatists and playwrights
- 17th-century English people
- 17th-century women writers
- English dramatists and playwrights
- British women dramatists and playwrights
- Women of the Stuart period
- Year of death unknown
- British dramatist and playwright stubs
- English writer stubs
- United Kingdom theatre stubs