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Ralph Roister Doister

[ ralf roi-ster doi-ster ]

noun

  1. a play (1553?) by Nicholas Udall: the earliest known English comedy.


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Example Sentences

Fremantle characterises Huicke as a closet homosexual, partnered by Nicholas Udall, the author of the comic play Ralph Roister Doister.

In 1550 Nicholas Udall wrote “Ralph Roister Doister,” in the very commencement of which Matthew Merrygreek “says or sings”— “Sometime Lewis Loiterer biddeth me come near: Somewhiles Watkin Waster maketh us good cheer.”

This led to a multiplication and confusion of dramatic types out of which comedy emerged in such plays as "Gammer Gurton's Needle" and "Ralph Roister Doister."

Udal’s Ralph Roister Doister had been inspired directly by Latin comedy; Gammer Gurton’s Needle was a purely native product; but Supposes is the first example of the acclimatization of the Italian models that were to exercise so prolonged an influence on the English stage.

So it is that we find the scholarly authors of the two earliest of English comedies, 'Ralph Roister Doister' and 'Gammer Gurton's Needle,' knowing what was expected of them, and giving the five-act form to both of these amusing plays.

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