English dramatist. His reputation rests on two tragedies,
The White Devil (1612) and
The Duchess of Malfi (
c. 1613). Though both show the preoccupation with melodramatic violence and horror typical of the Jacobean
revenge tragedy, they are also remarkable for their poetry and psychological insight. He collaborated with a number of other dramatists, notably with Thomas
Dekker on the comedy
Westward Ho (
c. 1606).
Born in London, he was the son of a tailor and was apprenticed to the same trade, becoming a freeman of the Merchant Taylors' Company in 1603. But he was also active in the theatre by 1602, working on collaborations and perhaps also acting. His first independent work was
The White Devil, printed (and probably first performed) in 1612.
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