Albery, James
ALBERY, JAMES (1838--1889), English dramatist, was born in
London on the 4th of May 1838. On leaving school he entered
an architect’s office, and started to write plays. After many failures
he at last succeeded in getting an adaptation—Dr Davy—Produced at the
Lyceum (1866). His most successful piece, Two Roses, a comedy, was
produced at the Vaudeville in 1870, in which Sir Henry Irving made one
of his earliest London successes as Digby Grant. He was the author of a
large number of other plays and adaptations, including Jingle (a version
of Pickwick), produced at the Lyceum in 1878, and Pink Dominoes, the
latter being one of a series of adaptations from the French which he
made for the Criterion theatre. At that house his wife, the well-known
actress, Miss Mary Moore, played the leading parts. He died on the 15th
of August 1889.
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