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Sir William Davenant, also spelled D'Avenant, was an English poet and playwright. |
Sir William DavenantSir WilliamDavenant Davenant,_Sir William William Davenant.jpg Sir William Davenant, also spelled D'Avenant, was an English poet and playwright. 1606 1668 William Davenant William Davenant Category:William Davenant
Poetry [edit]
Panegyrics [edit]
- "A Panegyric to his Excellency the Lord General Monck", George Monck (1660)
- "Poem, Upon His Sacred Majesties Most Happy Return to His Dominions", (on Charles II's restoration, 1660)
- "Poem, to the King's most sacred Majesty", to Charles II (1663)
Original plays, masques and operas [edit]
- Albovine, King of the Lombards, tragedy (ca. 1626-9; printed 1629)
- The Cruel Brother, tragedy (licensed 12 January 1627; printed 1630)
- The Just Italian, comedy (licensed 2 October 1629; printed 1630)
- The Wits, comedy (licensed 19 January 1634; printed 1636)
- Love and Honour, tragicomedy, also previously performed as The Courage of Love; and The Nonpareilles, or The Matchless Maids (licensed 20 November 1634: printed 1649)
- The Temple of Love, masque (licensed 10 February 1635; printed 1635)
- News from Plymouth, comedy (licensed 1 August 1635; printed 1673)
- The Platonick Lovers, comedy (licensed 16 November 1635; printed 1636)
- The Triumphs of the Prince D'Amour, masque (performed 23 or 24 February 1636; printed 1636)
- Britannia Triumphans, masque, with Inigo Jones (licensed 8 January 1638; printed 1638)
- Luminalia or The Festival of Light, masque, with Inigo Jones (licensed 6 February 1638; printed 1638)
- The Unfortunate Lovers, tragedy (licensed 16 April 1638; printed 1643)
- The Fair Favourite, tragicomedy (licensed 17 November 1638; printed 1673)
- The Spanish Lovers, or The Distresses, comedy (licensed 30 March 1639; printed 1673)
- Salmacida Spolia, masque (performed 21 January 1640; printed 1640)
- The Siege of Rhodes, Part I, tragicomedy (performed September 1656; printed 1656)
- The Cruelty of the Spaniards in Peru, opera (performed and printed 1658)
- The History of Sir Francis Drake, history (performed 1658-9; printed1659)
- The Siege of Rhodes, Part II, tragicomedy (ca. 1657-9; printed 1663)
- The Playhouse to Be Let, comedy (performed ca. August 1663; printed 1673); includes Sir Frances Drake and The Cruelty of the Spaniards in Peru
- The Man's the Master, comedy (performed 26 March 1668; printed 1669)
Revisions, adaptations and other productions for the stage [edit]
- The First Day's Entertainment at Rutland House, a "disputation" (performed 23 May 1656; printed 1657)
- The Law Against Lovers (performed 10 February 1662, printed 1673), a version of Measure for Measure mixed with Much Ado About Nothing
- Macbeth (performed 5 November 1664; printed 1674), an operatic adaptation of Shakespeare's Macbeth
- Greene's Tu Quoque (performed 12 September 1667; lost), based upon the 1614 edition of John Cooke's Greene's Tu Quoque Or, the Cittie Gallant, which had been made famous by the actor Thomas Greene's 1611 performance
- The Tempest, or The Enchanted Island (performed 7 November 1667, printed 1670), an adaptation with John Dryden of Shakespeare's The Tempest
- The Rivals (c. 1664; printed 1668), a revision of The Two Noble Kinsmen
- Hamlet
- Julius Caesar with John Dryden
Compendiums [edit]