Alonzo the Brave
There appear to have been a number of stage versions that include this phrase in their title, all apparently versions of the famous ballad The Celebrated History of Alonzo the Brave and the Fair Imogen by Matthew Gregory Lewis (“Monk Lewis”) (1775–1818)[]. Among them have been texts by Didelot (1801), T.J. Dibdin (1821 and 1826), E. Fitzball (1850), H.T. Craven (1855) and Francis Cowley Burnand (1855).
Contents
The ballad known as The Celebrated History of Alonzo the Brave and the Fair Imogen
The ballad tells of Alonzo, who bids Imogene be faithful to him when he leaves for the wars in Palestine, but another wooer wins her hand. At the wedding, the spectre of Alonzo, a rotting skeleton clad in armor, appears and bears the false Imogene away, to the horror of all. It is said that three times a year the couple will appear at a ball and dance
Alonzo the Brave and The Fair Imogene, a burlesque in one act by H.T. Craven
First performed at the Strand Theatre on 29 January 1855.
Alonzo the Brave, or Faust and the Fair Imogene , a burlesque by Francis Cowley Burnand ()[]
First performed at the Strand Theatre London on 5 February, 1855 and published by T.H. Lacy in the same year.
Sources
Bartleby.com: Text of the ballad by Lewis[1]
http://www.fresnostate.edu/folklore/ballads/RcAtBaFI.html
Allardyce Nicoll. 1975. A History of English Drama 1660-1900: Late 19th Century Drama 1850-1900 Cambridge University Press: p. 13[2] and p. 287[3]
52952 A - Z. LORD CHAMBERLAIN'S PLAYS, 1852 - 1866. January - February 1855. [4]