The Beggar's Opera

Mr. and Mrs. Peachum are horrified when they learn of their daughter Pollys secret marriage to the rebellious and notorious highwayman, Macheath. However, their fear is soon mitigated when they decide to kill him for his money. When Macheath is in the tavern, surrounded by women of ill repute, he discovers that he has been rumbled: two of these women are in cahoots with the Peachums and plan to kill him.


He finds himself in Newgate and, worse than that, in the company of the jailers daughter, Lucy, to whom he is also betrothed. Although Macheath is captured and destined to be hanged, Gays action-packed and entertaining play subverts audience expectations by letting Macheath off the hook and not punishing its villains.


John Gays satirical opera, written in 1728, was revolutionary because it took poverty and corruption as its subject, and paupers and villains as its characters. The lyrics were set to famous songs of the day making it hugely popular with audiences and a radical departure from traditional opera.


The introduction puts the play in its historical and theatrical contexts and details its stage history in modern times too. David Lindley is an expert on theatrical music and the new dramatic form of ballad opera this play created. The music for the songs is included in the text, making this an edition to be used for performance as well as for study.

"1116756752"
The Beggar's Opera

Mr. and Mrs. Peachum are horrified when they learn of their daughter Pollys secret marriage to the rebellious and notorious highwayman, Macheath. However, their fear is soon mitigated when they decide to kill him for his money. When Macheath is in the tavern, surrounded by women of ill repute, he discovers that he has been rumbled: two of these women are in cahoots with the Peachums and plan to kill him.


He finds himself in Newgate and, worse than that, in the company of the jailers daughter, Lucy, to whom he is also betrothed. Although Macheath is captured and destined to be hanged, Gays action-packed and entertaining play subverts audience expectations by letting Macheath off the hook and not punishing its villains.


John Gays satirical opera, written in 1728, was revolutionary because it took poverty and corruption as its subject, and paupers and villains as its characters. The lyrics were set to famous songs of the day making it hugely popular with audiences and a radical departure from traditional opera.


The introduction puts the play in its historical and theatrical contexts and details its stage history in modern times too. David Lindley is an expert on theatrical music and the new dramatic form of ballad opera this play created. The music for the songs is included in the text, making this an edition to be used for performance as well as for study.

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Overview

Mr. and Mrs. Peachum are horrified when they learn of their daughter Pollys secret marriage to the rebellious and notorious highwayman, Macheath. However, their fear is soon mitigated when they decide to kill him for his money. When Macheath is in the tavern, surrounded by women of ill repute, he discovers that he has been rumbled: two of these women are in cahoots with the Peachums and plan to kill him.


He finds himself in Newgate and, worse than that, in the company of the jailers daughter, Lucy, to whom he is also betrothed. Although Macheath is captured and destined to be hanged, Gays action-packed and entertaining play subverts audience expectations by letting Macheath off the hook and not punishing its villains.


John Gays satirical opera, written in 1728, was revolutionary because it took poverty and corruption as its subject, and paupers and villains as its characters. The lyrics were set to famous songs of the day making it hugely popular with audiences and a radical departure from traditional opera.


The introduction puts the play in its historical and theatrical contexts and details its stage history in modern times too. David Lindley is an expert on theatrical music and the new dramatic form of ballad opera this play created. The music for the songs is included in the text, making this an edition to be used for performance as well as for study.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781408143834
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 06/13/2014
Series: New Mermaids
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

David Lindley is Professor of Renaissance Literature at Leeds University. He is the author of Shakespeare and Music in the Arden Critical Companions Series and editor of The Tempest for the New Cambridge Shakespeare series.

Vivien Jones is Professor of Eighteenth-Century Gender and Culture at Leeds University. She has edited Evelina and Jane Austen: Selected Letters for Oxford Worlds Classics and has written widely on women in the eighteenth century.
John Gay (b. Barnstaple, Devon, 1685) was an English poet and playwright. Hugely successful in his own time, he is now best remembered for The Beggars Opera (1928), a ballad opera satirizing the then Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole. The Beggars Opera, and its sequel Polly, earned Gay fame, infamy and a healthy fortune. After his death at the age of47, he was buried in Westminster Abbey.
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