A two-volume memoir published in 1826 by an Irish playwright renowned for his comic operas and farces.John O'Keeffe (17471833), the Irish playwright who wrote a string of successful comic operas and farces including Wild Oats (1791), for the London stage, published this two-volume memoir in 1826. In Volume 2, O'Keeffe recounts his successful years in London and his eventual retirement from theatre life.John O'Keeffe (17471833), the Irish playwright who wrote a string of successful comic operas and farces including Wild Oats (1791), for the London stage, published this two-volume memoir in 1826. In Volume 2, O'Keeffe recounts his successful years in London and his eventual retirement from theatre life.John O'Keeffe (17471833) was an Irish playwright who began his career as an actor in 1764. His first significant success as a writer was the play The Son-in-Law in 1779, and he was later called 'our English Moli?re' by essayist William Hazlitt. He moved to London in 1781 around the same time that his marriage broke down and wrote a string of successful comic operas and dramatic works, including Wild Oats (1791). However, he suffered from failing eyesight and was nearly blind at the height of his fame. He dictated this memoir, published in two volumes in 1826, to his daughter, Adelaide (17761865). In Volume 2, O'Keeffe recounts his years in London, discussing many of his plays and giving a glimpse into theatre life in Georgian England, before moving on to his subsequent retirement and the complications surrounding the publication of his collected works.1. London; 2. Princess Amelia; 3. Charlotte-street, Portland-place; 4. Leave London for Dorsetshire, 20th June, 1791; 5. Durdle-door or Barn-door Rock, Lulworth; 6. William Lewis and Frederick Reynolds; 7. The World in a Village; 8. Publication of the author's dramatic works in four volumes; Appendix.