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The Harlot's Progress (1733), The Rake's Progress (Ms., ca. 1778-1780) cover

The Harlot's Progress (1733), The Rake's Progress (Ms., ca. 1778-1780)

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About This Book

The volume reprints two eighteenth-century stage adaptations inspired by William Hogarth's engraved sequences: one dramatizes a six-scene narrative of a young woman's descent into vice, transforming the original moralizing prints into a grotesque pantomime that substitutes harlequinade, songs, and a concluding masque for several of the engravings' grimmer episodes; the other renders an eight-print series about a prodigal man's folly into a dramatized entertainment. An introductory essay situates both pieces within the visual-verbal exchange between print and theater and highlights the central role of music, spectacle, and contemporary song in their stage realizations.

About the Author

Cibber, Theophilus portrait

Theophilus Cibber

Theophilus Cibber was an English author and playwright active in the 18th century, known for his contributions to literary criticism and biography. He is best recognized for his extensive work, "The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland," published in five volumes in 1753, which provides insights into the lives and works of notable poets of his time. Cibber also created notable dramatic works, including "The Harlot's Progress" and "The Rake's Progress," which reflect the social mores and artistic trends of his era. His writings offer a valuable perspective on the literary landscape of 18th-century England.

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