Leopold Davis Lewis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leopold Davis Lewis (1828 – February 23, 1890), was an English dramatist.
Lewis was born in London and educated at the King's Collegiate School, and upon graduation became a solicitor, practising as such from 1850 to 1875. In 1871, he translated Erckmann-Chatrian's Le Juif Polonais, giving it the name The Bells, under which name it was produced by Henry Irving at the Lyceum Theatre, London, November 25, 1871. Original plays from the pen of Lewis are: "The Wandering Jew" (Adelphi Theatre, April 14, 1873); "Give a Dog a Bad Name" (ib. November 18, 1873); and "The Foundlings" (Sadler's Wells Theatre, October 8, 1881). From February to December of 1868 he and Alfred Thompson conducted a monthly, The Mask, which failed. In addition to the plays mentioned Lewis wrote a number of tales under the title A Peal of Merry Bells (1880).
[edit] References
- Bibliography: Dict. National Biog. xxx. 191;
- The Times (London), Feb. 25, 1890;
- The Era and St. Stephen's Review (ib.), March 1, 1890.