Githa Sowerby grew up in a well-to-do family. Her father
John George Sowerby was the director of the Ellison's Glass Works, and her mother had an annual income of £900. Under her father's leadership, the glass works undertook several new failed business ventures in the 1880s, and he eventually declared personal
bankruptcy and sold the family home. When John George died, Githa's mother Amy Margaret was reduced to living in two rented rooms. Patricia Riley sees these events of Sowerby's life reflected in
The Stepmother and writes that the play is "suffused with Githa's anger over his irresponsible handling of money." Riley notes that the play was written nearly 40 years after the passage of the
Married Women's Property Act which allowed women to control their own property after marriage, but that many women gave
power of attorney to their husbands. Sowerby sought to discourage this practice through the play, but notes that the single night's performance meant that the play's message had little opportunity to spread. ==
Dramatis Personae ==