While in America, Boucicault explored the turmoil that was boiling up in the new nation and wrote about it. As a result of this, in 1859 he wrote, produced, and acted in a very famous antislavery play called
The Octoroon (Rowell 173). He and his wife played the leads and, after the first week of runs, only earned about 1500 dollars between the two of them. Boucicault thought this was a bit unfair since he had done the majority of the work for the production and asked for a larger cut for both him and his wife. Consequently, they both found themselves cut from the show entirely and jobless. One evening, not long after the
Octoroon incident, in the spring of 1860, Boucicault was walking home when he felt the sudden urge to venture into a bookstore he had passed a hundred times before. He came out moments later with a
Gerald Griffin novel,
The Collegians which was written in 1829. He was so excited that the first thing he did when he got home was to write Laura Keene a letter stating that he was writing a play based on
The Collegians and that he would have the first act to her by the end of the weekend. He told her that they should start the rehearsal/build process immediately and he would finish the play as they rehearsed, so basically, the definition of theatre on the fly. Thus, Boucicault took his playwriting back to his Irish roots and
The Colleen Bawn came to life and opened at the Laura Keene Theatre in May 1860. The novel was based on the true story of
Ellen Scanlan (née Hanley), a fifteen-year-old girl who was murdered on 14 July 1819. She was recently married to John Scanlan, but when he saw that she would not be accepted into his family he persuaded his servant, Stephen Sullivan, to kill her. Sullivan took her out on the
River Shannon near
Kilrush,
County Clare where he killed her with a
musket, stripped her and dumped her body in the river, tied to a stone. Her body was washed ashore six weeks later at
Moneypoint. Both men had fled but Scanlan was found first and arrested for murder. At his trial, he was defended by
Daniel O'Connell. He was found guilty and hanged at Gallows Green, the place of execution on the Clare side of the Shannon. Sullivan was apprehended shortly afterwards, confessed and was also hanged. ==Characters==