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Fletcher, John

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Fletcher, John, 1579–1625, English dramatist, b. Rye, Sussex, educated at Cambridge. A member of a prominent literary family, he began writing for the stage about 1606, first with Francis Beaumont Beaumont, Francis (bō`mŏnt), 1584?–1616, English dramatist.
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, with whom his name is inseparably linked, later with Massinger and others. Fletcher may have collaborated with Shakespeare on Henry VIII and The Two Noble Kinsmen. Though there is great uncertainty in dating the plays of Beaumont and Fletcher, their chief works appeared between 1607 and 1613. In Philaster, A Maid's Tragedy, A King and No King, and The Scornful Lady, they developed the form of the romance tragicomedy, which came to characterize a whole generation of later plays. In these plays a potentially tragic situation is developed until, at the end, through a twist of plot a happy solution is effected. A prolific writer, he enjoyed great success in many genres because of his entertaining and accessible poetry, masterful use of sexual intrigue, and the refined composition of his work.

Bibliography

See edition of the works of Beaumont and Fletcher by F. Bowers (7 vol., 1966–); studies by E. Waith (1952), A. E. Thorndike (1965), and J. H. Wilson (1968).


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Purporting to give a "wholly fresh picture of Charles" in a book that takes its agenda "less from the debates of historians than from the issues that emerged from the archives" (xxii) we find ourselves at the outset caught up in a litany of references to Thomas Cogswell, Anthony Fletcher, John Morrill, L.
Though there is currently much academic support for the view that Henry VIII was in fact a collaborative effort with fellow Elizabethan playwright, John Fletcher, John Margeson, emeritus professor of English at the University of Toronto, believes that, "the authorship question is unlikely to be settled to everyone's satisfaction unless startling new external evidence is uncovered at some future date.
 
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