Thomas Southerne, born on 12 February 1660, in
Oxmantown, near
Dublin, was an Irish dramatist. He was the son of Francis Southerne (a Dublin brewer) and Margaret Southerne. He had one daughter, Agnes, of whom the mother is unknown. He attended
Trinity College, Dublin, in 1676 for two years. In 1680, he began attending
Middle Temple,
London, to study law but was drawn away by his interest for theater. By 1682 he was greatly influenced by
John Dryden and produced his first play,
The Loyal Brother, which was performed at the
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane by the
King's Company. Southerne bought his prologue and epilogue from Dryden, who made extra income from his ability to turn such pieces. Despite his friendship with the new playwright, Dryden raised his prices for Southerne". In 1684, Southerne produced his second play,
The Disappointment, or, The Mother in Fashion (Kaufman). However, in 1685 Southerne enlisted as an ensign in Princess Anne's Regiment of the Duke of Berwick's Foot. He rapidly rose to the rank of captain, but his military career came to an end in 1688 at the
Glorious Revolution. The plays Southerne had written before he withdrew from the army would see the light of day, for he returned to theater. On his return, he took on a new form of genre for his writing, "he turned from political allegory to comedy". In 1690 "Southerne made his first financial profit from his work". In 1691 he encounters failure with his play,
The Wives Excuse, or, Cuckolds Make Themselves which was produced by Dury Lane. Thus failure would not stop Southerne, and so in 1693 he wrote another comedy,''
The Maid's Last Prayer, or, Any Rather Than Fail'' which was a success. In 1692 he was blessed with the opportunity by finishing Dryden's tragedy,
Cleomenes. In February 1694 he created the tragicomedy
The Fatal Marriage which was a huge success and resulted in him being established as a tragic dramatist. By 1688, "his subject once again ends up in a novel by his colleague
Aphra Behn,
Oroonoko, or
The Royal Slave was performed as a play and was a huge success". According to Kaufman, "At the age of sixty-seven Southerne offers one last play, Money The Mistress in 1726, it is a weak conclusion to an honorable career." He was honored as a playwright. On 26 May 1746, at the age of eighty-seven Southerne died. According to Kaufman, "He was a successful man of the theater, a working playwright for forty-four years." His best plays,
The Wives Excuse,
The Fatal Marriage and
Oroonoko, reveal a competent, indeed interesting, playwright. Southerne experimented in a variety of dramatic forms. His contemporaries valued him for his ability to portray intensely emotional scenes and for his "pure" language. He worked in the tradition of
Otway, and his tragedies point the way to his successor,
Nicholas Rowe. In comedy his subject is the distressed wife, and here he offered a pattern for such playwrights as
Vanbrugh,
Cibber,
Congreve, and
Farquhar. Today readers are interested in his psychological realism, his portraits of complex characters, often women in the throes of domestic distress, and his coldly realistic, often harsh, analysis of corrupt societal relations". ==
Oroonoko==