Overview
Enduringly popular less for its plots than for its verbal brilliance and
wit, The School for Scandal (1777) was the most frequently performed
play of its time. Sir Peter Teazle has made the perennial mistake of
elderly bachelors in English comedy and married a much younger wife in
the hope that she will be too innocent to cross him. In fact, Lady
Teazle spends her time with Lady Sneerwell and the worst set of
scandalmongers in town, who have a beady eye on Charles Surface, the
reckless young libertine, in expectation of seeing him ruined. Charles, however, turns out to possess the sterling virtues of
generosity and loyalty to friends and family; and it is his hypocritical
brother Joseph who ends up the villain of the piece. This edition
discusses Sheridan's earlier drafts for the play and sets it into its
theatrical context of anti-sentimentalism and its social context of the
London High Society in which Sheridan had begun to move.