The Invention of Love

The Invention of Love
Cover of the Grove Press edition
Written byTom Stoppard
CharactersA. E. Housman
Alfred W. Pollard
Charon
Moses Jackson
John Ruskin
Benjamin Jowett
Jerome K. Jerome
Henry Labouchere
W. T. Stead
Frank Harris
Robinson Ellis
John Postgate
Walter Pater
Oscar Wilde
Date premieredOctober 1, 1997
Place premieredUnited Kingdom UK
Original languageEnglish
SubjectA. E. Housman
GenreDrama
SettingThe river Styx

The Invention of Love is a 1997 British play by Tom Stoppard portraying the life of poet A. E. Housman, focusing specifically on his personal life and love for a college classmate. The play is written from the viewpoint of Housman, dealing with his memories at the end of his life, and contains many classical allusions. The Invention of Love won both the Evening Standard Award (U.K.) and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award (U.S.)

Considered by many to be Stoppard's finest play, it has been called "esoteric".[1] In fact, to demystify the play's many historical and academic references, the New York production team provided the audiences with a 30-page booklet on the political and artistic history of the late-Victorian period.[2] Harold Bloom, a scholar of Walter Pater, contended that the character of Housman and those in his circle are fabulated for dramatic effect, and the play's difficulties are not historical but its own. This clarified, he cited it in 2003 as Stoppard's "masterpiece to date".[3]

  1. ^ Canby, Vincent (14 December 1997). "An Abundance of Wit On the London Stage". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Spencer, David (2001). "The Invention Of Love". Aisle Say (New York). Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  3. ^ Bloom, Harold (2003). "Introduction". Tom Stoppard. Bloom's Major Dramatists (1st ed.). Philadelphia: Chelsea House. p. 11. ISBN 0-7910-7032-8. OCLC 12724332.