Online Encyclopedia

EDWARD FITZBALL (1792—1873)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 441 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EDWARD FITZBALL (1792—1873)  ,
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English dramatist, whose real patronymic was Ball, was born at Burwell, Cambridge-
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shire, in 1792 . His
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father was a well-to-do farmer, and Fitzball, after receiving his schooling at
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Newmarket, was apprenticed to a Norwich printer in 1809 . He produced some dramatic pieces at the
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local theatre, and eventually the marked success of his Innkeeper of
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Abbeville, or The Ostler and the Robber (182o), together with the friendly acceptance of one of his pieces at the Surrey theatre by Thomas Dibdin, induced him to settle in
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London . During the next twenty-five years he produced a
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great number of plays, most of which were highly successful . He had a
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special talent for nautical drama . His Floating Beacon (Surrey theatre, 19th of
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April 1824) ran for 140 nights, and his
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Pilot (Adelphi, 1825) for 200 nights . His greatest triumph in melodrama was perhaps Jonathan Bradford, or the
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Murder at the Roadside
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Inn (Surrey theatre, 12th of
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June 1833) . He was at one time stock dramatist and reader of plays at Covent Garden, and afterwards at Drury Lane . He had a considerable reputation as a
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song-writer and as a librettist in opera . The last years of his
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life were spent in retirement at Chatham, where he died on the 27th of
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October 1873 . His autobiography,
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Thirty-Five Years of a Dramatic Author's Life (2 vols., 1859), is a naive record of his career . Numbers of his plays are printed in Cumberland's Minor
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British Theatre, Dick's Standard Plays and Lacy's Acting Edition of Plays .

End of Article: EDWARD FITZBALL (1792—1873)
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