Plays •
Sixteen-String Jack (1823) •
Professionals Puzzled, or, Struggles at Starting (1832) • ''The Rake's Progress''(1832) •
The Old Stager and the New (1835) written as a vehicle for comedian John Liston to introduce the new recruit Charles James Mathews; the former was shown as a traditional kind of coachman and the latter as his son. • The Skeleton Witness: Or, the Murder at the Mound (1835); plot summary
here. •
Flight to New York (1836), written as a vehicle for
Thomas D. Rice and incorporating his 'Jim Crow' persona. • ''Life's a Lottery'' (1842) •
Our Village (1843) •
The Old House of West Street (1844) (Withdrawn from the licensing process on advice from the lord chamberlain's examiner of plays because of its excessive violence.) •
The Boyhood of Bacchus (1845), probably Rede's last play. His most successful play, ''The Rake's Progress''(1832), which later opened at the New York City Theatre on 23 January 1833, is based on
William Hogarth's ''
A Rake's Progress'' (1735), a cautionary series of eight prints depicting Tom Rakewell, a middle-class aspirant to aristocratic status who inherits a fortune from his miserly father, seduces and impregnates his maid, indulges in debauchery, is arrested, marries an unattractive but wealthy older woman, gambles away her fortune, goes to debtors' prison, and ends up in a madhouse. Catering to popular tastes, Rede converted the ugliness of Hogarth's world to light comedy, modernized the story, added songs, and included episodes of sentimentality; he admits in the preface to the published version (1833) that "I knew that to realize Hogarth's pictures was an impossibility." ''The Rake's Progress'' was his first drama to be printed, although allegedly nothing of the production was written down until it was revised for publication by John Duncombe.
Novels ''The Wedded Wanderer, or, The Soldier's Fate ''(1827)
The Royal Rake, and the Adventures of Alfred Chesterton (privately printed, 1842, and serialized in the Sunday Times, 1846): a satire on
George IV. ==References==