The Ticket-of-Leave Man (play)

A poster for a production of the play in 1868

The Ticket-of-Leave Man is an 1863 stage melodrama in four acts by the British writer Tom Taylor, based on a French drama, Le Retour de Melun. It takes its name from the Ticket of Leave issued to convicts when they were released from jail on parole. A recently returned convict is blackmailed by another man into committing a robbery, but is rescued thanks to the intervention of a detective. It has been described as apparently being the first play to give a truly significant role to a detective.[1]

The play introduced the character of Hawkshaw the Detective, with "Hawkshaw" becoming a synonym for a detective. It was not well received by critics, but proved very popular with audiences and was constantly revived, becoming one of the standard works of Victorian melodrama.[2]

  1. ^ Steinbrunner, Chris, ed. (1976). Encyclopedia of mystery and detection. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-07-061121-4.
  2. ^ Lachman, p. 4