New Comedies by Lady Gregory
Lady Gregory was a co-founder of Ireland’s Abbey Theatre and a master of the surprising short play. New Comedies has four plays that mix pure comedy with real heart—and a touch of mystery. Here’s the tasty summary:
The Story
Each play hooks you fast. In The Workhouse Ward, two fierce, funny old geezers have been sharing a bed in the workhouse for years—and they thank heaven for it. But imagine if one were suddenly sprung from that misery. Yup, that’s the conflict: would they leave each other, or are shared resentments more precious than a fine meal? **The Bogle** is even stranger. A mythical ghost-spirit shows up to settle a land dispute, and nobody knows if he’s real or if the whole village has gone dramatically nuts. You’ll watch community showdowns, mean servants caught red-handed, and romance thrown in just for fun. In the final play, a grumpy old man has to decide: is wallowing in his gloom worth missing a wild local festival? Drama—pressing, ridiculous, timeless drama—ensues.
Why You Should Read It
Honestly? Lady Gregory treats her Irish villagers with deep respect, but she also fights like a side-wrestler with two tropes: the Poor Innocent and the So-Called Hero. Countless medieval stories forgive stuck-up peasants their *just desserts*, but here, commoners are HILARIOUS crooks. That woman bearing down on the government guy with a frying pan? She’s the star. A proud family scorns their cousin for being a myth-believer, but guess who heads on a secret Bogle hunt? Even characters hung up on property better learn that people are worth more than estate paper. There’s a deeply wise insight between rude punchlines this mostly works, y’know, because the dialogue feels natural—like a secret you overhear in your bus aisle. Also, Lady Gregory, a woman writing for 1900 literary salons, uses local dialect made up anyway, but it gives a fantastic accent you can almost *hear*.
Final Verdict
This book is a gem for anybody who loves **lively argument-driven plays** (think a Irish, more-quick-witted version of *The Odd Couple*). Also, Perfect for buffs of early 20th-century Celtic storytelling who are aching for strong women unmissable for those of us rolling eyes at “one-dimensional” characters. A history ploy? Eh, not as much. More recommended an all the careful parts; if it said to be ‘feminist+folklore all,’ you set reading. This 10-year veteran read can mean show—sweary tweeds with green moss doesn’t yield. The chatty, spark off print *right because today someone shouted they after conflict—same like**
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Emily Miller
1 month agoOne of the most comprehensive guides I've read this year.