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See also: English dramatist and essayist, usually called " the Elder," and sometimes "See also: George the First," to distinguish him from his son, was See also: born in 1732 at Florence, where his See also: father was stationed as See also: resident at the See also: court of the See also: grand duke of See also: Tuscany
.
Colman's father died within a See also: year of his son's See also: birth, and the boy's See also: education was undertaken by See also: William Pulteney, afterwards
See also: Lord See also: Bath, whose wife was Mrs Colman's See also: sister
.
After attending a private school in Marylebone, he was sent to See also: Westminster School, which he See also: left in due course for Christ See also: Church,
See also: Oxford
.
Here he made the acquaintance of Bonnell See also: Thornton, the parodist, and together they founded The Connoisseur (1754–1756), a periodical which, although it reached its 14oth number, "wanted See also: weight," as See also: Johnson said
.
He left Oxford after taking his degree in 1755, and, having been entered at Lincoln's
See also: Inn before his return to See also: London, he was called to the See also: bar in 1757
.
A friendship formed with See also: David See also: Garrick did not help his career as a See also: barrister, but he continued to practise until the See also: death of Lord Bath, out of respect for his wishes
.
In 176o he produced his first See also: play, Polly See also: Honeycomb, which met with See also: great success
.
In 1761 The Jealous Wife, a See also: comedy partly founded on Tom See also: Jones, made Colman famous
.
The death of Lord Bath in 1764 placed him in possession of
See also: independent means
.
In 1765 appeared his metrical See also: translation of the plays of See also: Terence; and in 1766 he produced The Clandestine See also: Marriage, jointly with Garrick, whose refusal to take the See also: part of Lord Ogleby led to a See also: quarrel between the two authors
.
In the next year he See also: purchased a See also: fourth share in the Covent Garden Theatre, a step which is said to have induced General Pulteney to revoke a will by which he had left Colman large estates
.
The general, who died in that year, did, however, leave him a considerable See also: annuity
.
Colman was acting manager of Covent Garden for seven years, and during that See also: period he produced several "adapted" plays of See also: Shakespeare
.
In 1768 he was elected to the See also: Literary See also: Club, then nominally consisting of twelve members
.
In 1774 he sold his share in the great playhouse, which had involved him in much litigation with his partners, to See also: Leake; and three years later he purchased of See also: Samuel Foote, then broken in See also: health and See also: spirits, the little theatre in the Haymarket
.
He was attacked with paralysis in1785; in 1789 his See also: brain became affected, and he died on the 14th of See also: August 1794
.
Besides the See also: works already cited, Colman was author of adaptations of See also: Beaumont and See also: Fletcher's Bonduca, See also: Ben See also: Jonson's Epicoene, See also: Milton's Comus, and of other plays
.
He also produced an edition of the works of Beaumont and Fletcher (1778), a version of the Ars Poetica of Horace, an excellent translation from the Mercator of Plautus for Bonnell Thornton's edition (1769–1772), some See also: thirty plays, many parodies and occasional pieces
.
An incomplete edition of his dramatic works was published in 1777 in four volumes
.
His son, GEORGE COLMAN (1762-1836), known as "the Younger," English dramatist and See also: miscellaneous writer, was born on the 21st of See also: October 1762
.
He passed from Westminster school to Christ Church, Oxford, and See also: King's
See also: College, See also: Aberdeen, and was finally entered as a student of See also: law at Lincoln's Inn, London
.
While in Aberdeen he published a poem satirizing See also: Charles
See also: James
See also: Fox, called The See also: Man of the See also: People; and in 1782 he produced, at his father's playhouse in the Haymarket, his first play, The See also: Female Dramatist, for which See also: Smollett's See also: Roderick Random supplied the materials
.
It was unanimously condemned, but Two to One (1784) was entirely successful
.
It was followed by Turk and no Turk (1785), a musical comedy; Inkle and Yarico (1787), an See also: opera; Ways and Means (1788); The Iron Chest (1796), taken from William Godwin's Adventures of See also: Caleb See also: Williams; The Poor Gentleman (1802); See also: John Bull, or an Englishman's Fireside (1803), his most successful piece; The Heir at Law (r8o8), which enriched the stage with one immortal character, "Dr Pangloss," and numerous other pieces, many of them adapted from the French
.
The failing health of the elder Colman obliged him to relinquish the management of the Haymarket theatre in 1789, when the younger George succeeded him, at a yearly See also: salary of goo
.
On the death of the father the patent was continued to the son; but difficulties arose in his way, he was involved in litigation with See also: Thomas
See also: Harris, and was unable to pay the expenses of the performances at the Haymarket
.
He was forced to take sanctuary within the Rules of the King's Bench
.
Here he resided for many years continuing to See also: direct the affairs of his theatre
.
Released at last through the kindness of George IV., who had appointed him exon of the Yeomen of the Guard, a dignity disposed of by Colman to the highest See also: bidder, he was made examiner of plays by the duke of Montrose, then lord See also: chamberlain
.
This office, to the disgust of all contemporary dramatists, to whose
See also: MSS. he was as illiberal as he was severe, he held till his death
.
Although his own productions were open to charges of indecency and See also: profanity, he was so severe a censor of others that he would not pass even such words as "heaven," "See also: providence" or "See also: angel." His comedies are a curious mixture of genuine comic force and sentimentality
.
A collection of them was published (1827) in See also: Paris, with a See also: life of the author, by J
.
W
.
Lake
.
Colman, whose witty conversation made him a favourite, was also the author of a great See also: deal of so-called humorous See also: poetry (mostly coarse, though much of it was popular)—My See also: Night See also: Gown and Slippers (1797), reprinted under the name of Broad Grins, in 1802; and Poetical Vagaries (1812)
.
Some of his writings were published under the assumed name of Arthur Griffinhood of Turnham See also: Green
.
He died in See also: Brompton, London, on the 17th of October 1836
.
He had, as early as 1784, contracted a runaway marriage with an actress, See also: Clara See also: Morris, to whose See also: brother David Morris, he eventually disposed of his share in the Haymarket theatre
.
Many of the leading parts in his plays were written especially for Mrs Gibbs (nee See also: Logan), whom he was said to have secretly married after the death of his first wife
.
See the second George Colman's See also: memoirs of his early life, entitled Random Records (1830), and R
.
B
.
Peake, Memoirs of the Colman See also: Family (1842)
.
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