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City Sir Play John Wife Daughters Brother Dedicated

Front the City Madam
Back comedy
Philip Massinger
1659
sir John Frugal is a successful merchant , his wife and daughters have grown in affection and vanity as his wealth has increased
sir John pretends to retire to a monastery and hand the management of his household to his brother
at the end of the play sir John punished and recorrected his brother and daughters
the play gives a realistic picture of London society at various levels in the Caroline period

The City Madam is a Caroline era comedy written by Philip Massinger. It was licensed by Sir Henry Herbert, the Master of the Revels, on 25 May 1632 and was acted by the King's Men at the Blackfriars Theatre.[1] It was printed in quarto in 1658 by the stationer Andrew Pennycuicke, who identified himself as "one of the Actors" in the play. A second edition followed in 1659. Pennycuicke dedicated the play (Massinger was long dead) to Ann, Countess of Oxford—or at least most of the surviving copies bear a dedication to her; but others are dedicated to any one of four other individuals.[2]

No direct source for the play has been identified, other than Massinger's own earlier play, A New Way to Pay Old Debts, which was modeled on Thomas Middleton's A Trick to Catch the Old One. Specific connections have been cited between The City Madam and Shakespeare's Measure for Measure (regarding Sir John Frugal's pretended absence and masquerade), Ben Jonson's Volpone (Luke Frugal's rhapsodizing over his wealth), and Rollo, Duke of Normandy (Stargaze's astrological verbiage), among other works.[3]

The City Madam was adapted into a version titled A Cure for Pride in 1675.[4] The original version may have been revived in 1771, and was definitely performed in 1783 at Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.[3] A play founded on The City Madam, entitled Riches; or, The Wife and Brother, by Sir James Bland Burges, was brought out with success at the Lyceum in 1810.

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