Samuel J. Waddell (1878-1967), who took on the stage-name Rutherford
Mayne when he embarked on a theatrical career, was the most prolific,
versatile, and successful playwright that the Irish Literary Revival in
Ulster brought forth. In the course of his career as a dramatist, from
1906 to 1934, he wrote thirteen plays -- ten plays for the Ulster
Literary Theatre, one for the Dublin-based Theatre of Ireland, and two
for the Abbey Theatre. Especially his early realist Ulster peasant plays
were very successful, among them The Drone (1908), the most popular
Irish folk comedy of the first half of the twentieth century. He also
acted a great number of main parts in plays of his own and of other
writers, to great acclaim, mainly in Belfast and Dublin but also on
tours to England and Scotland, from 1904 until late in his life. His
plays disappeared from the stage in the 1950s, and, when he died, his
artistic achievements were almost forgotten. Wolfgang Zach's
introduction to this volume is the first attempt to give a lengthy
survey of Mayne's life and works, with particular emphasis on a
discussion of all his plays, their critical reception, stage history,
and specific features. As to the selection of Rutherford Mayne's plays
contained in this volume, seven of his eight published plays -- his most
important ones -- have been included in this edition. Two important
prose pieces (one of Mayne's essays and an interview), have been added
to his reprinted plays as they provide direct insight into his
personality, views, and career. In the biographical and critical section
of the Checklist appended to this book, publications have also been
included that do not solely concentrate on RutherfordMayne but are of
great significance to any student of his life and plays.