Charles Coffey (late 17th century – 13 May 1745) was an
Irish playwright, opera
librettist and arranger of music from
Westmeath.
Following the initial failure of his ballad opera The Beggar’s Wedding (Dublin,
Smock Alley Theatre, 24 March 1729) - a work capitalising on the success of
John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728) - he moved to London, where the work opened at the Haymarket on 29 May 1729. In an abbreviated form as Phebe, or The Beggar's Wedding it became highly successful, although it was not to be heard in Dublin before 1754. His fifth ballad opera, The Devil to Pay, or The Wives Metamorphos'd (1731) became the most successful ballad opera of the 18th century after The Beggar's Opera. A German translation as Der Teufel ist los, oder Die verwandelten Weiber (Berlin, 24 January 1743) strongly influenced the development of the German
Singspiel.
The Merry Cobler, or The Second Part of The Devil to Pay (ballad opera) (1735)
The Devil Upon Two Sticks, or The Country Beau (ballad opera) (1745)
Bibliography
Joseph Knight: "Charles Coffey", in Dictionary of National Biography vol. 11 (London, 1887)
W. J. Lawrence: "Early Irish Ballad Opera and Comic Opera", in: The Musical Quarterly 8 (1922), pp. 397–412
Peter Kavanagh: The Irish Theatre from the Earliest Period up to the Present Day (Tralee, 1946)
Walter H. Rubsamen: "Mr. Seedo, Ballad Opera and the Singspiel", in: M. Querol (ed.): Festschrift Higinio Anglès vol. 2 (Barcelona, 1958–61), pp. 775–809.
Frank Ll. Harrison: "Charles Coffey and Swift's Description of an Irish Feast", in: Swift Studies 1 (1986), pp. 32–8.
B. H. van Boer: "The Devil to Pay, the Comic War, and the Emergence of the German Singspiel", in: Journal of Musicological Research 8 (1988), pp. 119–39.
Aloys Fleischmann (ed.): Sources of Irish Traditional Music c.1600-1855 (New York, 1998).
References
^Stephen, Sir Leslie (1887).
DNB. Smith, Elder, & Company. p. 215. Retrieved 25 June 2018.