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The Temple Beau : ウィキペディア英語版
The Temple Beau

''The Temple Beau'' is a play by Henry Fielding. It was first performed on 26 January 1730, at Goodman's Fields after it was rejected by the Theatre Royal. The play, well received at Goodman's Fields, depicts a young law student forsaking his studies for pleasure. By portraying hypocrisy in a comedic manner, Fielding shifts his focus from a discussion of love and lovers.
The play's relative success when compared to other plays at Goodman's Fields was in part caused by the relative freedom granted by Goodman's Fields, though the play was not dramatically different from Fielding's first play, ''Love in Several Masques''. No contemporary reviews exist, but modern critics pointed to a general improvement in Fielding's play writing though it still had several noticeable weaknesses.
==Background==
Fielding wrote ''The Temple Beau'' sometime after leaving Leiden in April 1729. It was the fourth play that Fielding wrote and he finished it by the end of 1729.〔Fielding 2004 p. 99〕 Although his first play was performed at the Theatre Royal, ''The Temple Beau'' was rejected by the theatre.〔Rivero p. 23〕 He turned to Goodman's Fields and the play was first advertised, in the 16 January 1730 ''Daily Journal'', as being rehearsed and to open 22 January. A deferral notice was posted on 22 January 1730 in the ''Daily Journal'' and ''Daily Courant'' stating that the play would open 26 January.〔Fielding p. 103〕〔Fielding 2004 p. 103〕
It first ran on 26 January 1730 at Goodman's Fields, a new theatre that first opened 31 October 1729. The play was the first new play staged at Goodman's Fields and it ran for nine nights until 5 February 1730. Three of the nights were author's benefits.〔Battestin and Battestin 1993 p. 80〕 For the first author's benefit on 28 January, Fielding added a new song titled "Like the Whig and the Tory". Later showings of the play came immediately on 10 February and 3 March 1730. Other revivals included showings on 5 June and 9 July 1730 but it slowly disappeared, with only two showings the next year, on 13 March and 4 December 1731, and a later revival in 1736 on 25 March and 27 April, all taking place at Goodman's Fields. A revised version of the play titled ''The Temple Beau; or, The Intriguing Sisters'' was performed on 21 September 1782 at the Haymarket theatre.〔Fielding 2004 pp. 103–104〕
On 2 February 1730, it was published along with a prologue added by James Ralph that attacked the treatment of authors by society, making the beginning of a theatrical relationship between Ralph and Fielding.〔Battestin and Battestin 1993 pp. 80–81〕 The publication was advertised in ''The St. James's Evening Post'', the ''London Evening Post'', the ''Whitehall Evening Post'', and the ''Monthly Chronicle''. The edition printed was the only London edition of the play on its own with a Dublin edition printed in 1730. The play was later collected in Arthur Murphy's edition of Fielding's ''Works'' (1762).〔Fielding 2004 p. 106〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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