Difference between revisions of "Sayings and Doings, or The Rule of Contrary"

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Often found simply as '''''[[Sayings and Doings]]'''''.  
 
Often found simply as '''''[[Sayings and Doings]]'''''.  
  
Possibly a dramatization by Morton of the story ''The Man of Many Friends'' by Theodore Edward Hook ()[], from volume two of his collection of stories entitled ''Sayings and Doings'' (1838). Morton took the title of the play from the collection of stories, but Hook admits Morton might have obtained the plot for his play directly from the French comedy ''[[Jour á Paris]]'' (), from which Hook himself had drawn the idea.  
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Possibly a dramatization by Morton of the story ''The Man of Many Friends'' by Theodore Edward Hook ()[], from volume two of his collection of stories entitled ''Sayings and Doings'' (1838). Morton took the title of the play from the collection of stories, but Hook admits Morton might have obtained the plot for his play directly from the ''Jour á Paris'', from which Hook himself had drawn the idea.  
  
  

Revision as of 06:29, 4 December 2018

Sayings and Doings, or The Rule of Contrary is a farce in one act by John Maddison Morton (1811-1891)[1]

Often found simply as Sayings and Doings.

Possibly a dramatization by Morton of the story The Man of Many Friends by Theodore Edward Hook ()[], from volume two of his collection of stories entitled Sayings and Doings (1838). Morton took the title of the play from the collection of stories, but Hook admits Morton might have obtained the plot for his play directly from the Jour á Paris, from which Hook himself had drawn the idea.


First performed in London at Covent Garden on the 18th of April, 1839, and first published in the same year by Chapman and Hall.


https://openlibrary.org/authors/OL2356805A/John_Maddison_Morton

Theodore Edward Hook. 1838. Sayings and Doings Second Volume. London: Colburn.[2]