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An Humorous Day's Mirth
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01 July 2010

George Chapman is known today as a translator of Homer and as the author of dark tragedies such as Bussy D'Ambois. An Humorous Day's Mirth, written in 1597, was one of the most popular plays of the Elizabethan era. Not only was Chapman's play the Rose Theatre's greatest box-office success of that year, but it also presented an entirely new type of comedy, one that has profoundly influenced comic writing up to the present day.
This play is the English theatre's first 'comedy of humours', in which the attitudes, behaviour, and social pretensions of contemporary men and women are satirised. Charles Edelman's is the first fully annotated, modern spelling edition of this long-neglected play. In his extensive introduction and commentary, Edelman discusses the intellectual, philosophical and theatrical background to Chapman's comedy, and shows that An Humorous Day's Mirth would delight the readers and audiences of today as much as it did those in 1597.
LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Literature: history and criticism, LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / 16th Century, Literary studies: plays and playwrights, Plays, playscripts, Literary studies: c 1400 to c 1600
GENERAL EDITORS' PREFACE
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
EDITIONS, REFERENCES, ABBREVIATIONS
Previous Editions
Editions and Textual Studies Collated, in Chronological Order
Editions of Early Modern Dramatic Works cited in Commentary
Other Primary Works Cited in Commentary
Secondary Works Cited in Commentary
Abbreviations: Notes and collation
INTRODUCTION
The Rose’s New Hit
A Typical London Day
The Philosophy of Mirth
The Four Humours
The Humours and the soul
Melancholy
A Comedy of Manners
From Page to Stage
The Text
Conclusion
AN HUMOROUS DAY'S MIRTH
APPENDIX Dowsecer's Defence of Cosmetics (7.00-00)