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Life [ top ] Works Bibliographical details
[ top ] Criticism [ top ] Notes Peter Kavanagh, The Irish Theatre (Tralee: The Kerryman 1946), bio-data on William Philips (d.1734); b. Londonderry; ed. TCD. Army Captain; Wincops Cat. (A Compleat List of all English Dramatic Poets) has an independent entry for one Captain Philips who wrote Hibernia Freed, but actually the same. He took a commission after he wrote his first play. Works, The Revengeful Queen (London, Drury Lane 1698); St. Stephens Green or The Generous Lovers (Dublin, Th. Royal 1700); Hibernia Freed (London, Lincoln's Inn Fields 13 Feb. 1722); Belisarius (Lincoln's Inn Fields 14 April, 1724). St Stephens Green is Irish in title only; chars. incl. Feignyouth, Wormwood, Vanity, and Frickwell; love intrigue. Poor, conventional comedy, attended by modest preface. Hibernia Freed ded. Henry OBrien, Earl of Thomond. Turgesius, the Danish king, has reduced Ireland; ONeill comes to the assistance of OBrien whose dg. Sabina he loves; Sabina rejects advances from Turgesius, who demands her and 14 virgins in revenge; ONeill and other young men dress as the virgins and kill their ravishers in the Danish Camp; Turgesius is led off, and Hibernia is freed. Kavanagh comments, Philips patriotism was not really sincere [as is revealed when Turgesius is made to say, another nation shall revenge my death, and an encomium of England by the bard Eugenius follows. C. G. Duggan, The Stage Irishman (1937), William Phillips [sic], Hibernia Freed, dedicated to the Earl of Thomond, and acted Lincolns Inn, Lon., 1722; shows Phillips capable of sustained and vigorous verse; plot includes Turgesius and the three Irish kings OConnor, ONeill, and OBrien. Turgesius has a passion for Sabina, OBriens daughter, and demands fifteen maidens as the victors due; the girls ask to where veils to spare their shame, and are revealed as ONeill and OConnor. The bard Eugeniuss epilogue - another nation shall indeed succeed/ ... They shall succeed invited to our aid/And mix their blood with ours, one people grow,/Polish our manners and improve our minds. Duggan thinks, however, that the authors sympathies were less orthodoxically colonial, When we for Honour, Faith or Justice bleed - said ONeill - Gibbets and chains are honourable made/And martyrs with the heroes vie for fame. ALSO, William Phillips, St Stephens Green, or The Generous Lovers, dated with reference to the Wool Bill, staged Theatre Royal in 1700, and written at the suggestion of the Earl of Inchiquin to whom it is dedicated; chars. incl. Freelove and Aemilia; Trickwell, his servant; Bellmine, Irish gent.; Sir Francis Feignyouth; Wormwood; Vainly; Lady Volant; Timothy Tellpenny; Aemilia is niece to Sir Francis, and Marina, his daughter. The conversation between the lovers is not brilliant. Similar plays by the score in Post-Restoration drama, and Phillips does not rise above the merest mediocrity. Yet it must reflect Dublin of the day, a somewhat shallow, gossiping, philandering world indeed. [116] Trickwell, I have known many of them when they came first to London think there is no way so ready to purchase the title of a wit as to ridicule their own country. Joseph Leerssen, Mere Irish & Fíor Ghael (Amsterdam: John Benjamins Pub. Co. 1986): William Phillips, in Hibernia freed (Dublin 1722), treated Gaelic aspirations wholly sympathetically; treats of expulsion of Vikings by Kings OBrien of Munster and ONeill of Leinster, the former modelled on Brian Boru; dedicated to Henry OBrien, earl of Thomond. The preface is a sop to the English feeling, Another Nation shall succeed/But different far in manners from the Dane/ .../And mix their Blood with ours, one People grow,/Polish our Manners, and improve our Minds (p.59). [p.378-89] Paul Hadfield reviewing Leon Rubins production of St. Stephens Green (Abbey 1988; Theatre Ireland (Sept.-Nov. 1988), p.43: [...] The plot of St Stephens Green is embellished by impossibly strained conventions and a clutch of stage Irishmen whose contribution to the play is inversely proportionate to their political integrity. Freelove, an apparently impecunious English squire appears on the scene with his libidinous comrade, local hero Bellmine. They bump into two masked women, Aemilia and Marina taking the air on the Green. These are daughter and ward respectively of Sir Francis Feignyouth who thereby holds the key to the buckos material and physical elevation. However the purity of their intentions are for the time compromised by lady Volant, a penniless madam with designs on Feignyouth. The generous lovers aspiration on the estate of Sir Francis are finally and inevitably ensured by the fortuitous appearance of another marital appendage of lady Volants who, dogged by ill-luck, is determined that his abandoned wife shant either climb out of the mire. Reviewer believes the play to suffer from two problems, firstly, the dramatists obsessive belief that Dublin rather than London is the place for the talented actor; secondly, his being a naive playwright, ;lacking necessary range of dramatic or theatrical skills to have any more than an embryonic sense of self-mockery, all making it a bad choice for the Millenium.
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