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The Bank Note

1795 play From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Bank Note
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The Bank Note: Or Lessons for Ladies is a 1795 comedy play by the Irish writer and actor William Macready the Elder. Its plot draws inspiration from William Taverner's The Artful Husband as well as other earlier plays.[1]

Quick Facts Written by, Date premiered ...

Macready's play premiered at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden in London on 1 May 1795.[1] The original cast included Macready as Lieutenant Selby, Joseph George Holman as Sir Charles Leslie, James Middleton as Bloomfield, Thomas Hull as Father, John Fawcett as Ned Dash, John Quick as Hale, John Henry Johnstone as Killeavy, Edward Townsend as Tim, Elizabeth Hopkins as Miss Emma Hale, Isabella Mattocks as Mrs Bloomfield, Mary Ann Davenport as Lady Supple and Tryphosa Jane Wallis as Miss Russel. The Irish premiere took at the Crow Street Theatre in Dublin on 22 April 1796.[2]

The play is notable for including the first known printed use of the word 'smithereens':[3]

I join you with all my heart,—and wish he was hang'd, shot, cut in smithereens.

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