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P. G. Wodehouse (Pelham Grenville) Biography

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About 13 pages (3,857 words)
P. G. Wodehouse Summary

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Encyclopedia of World Biography on P. G. Wodehouse (Pelham Grenville) (page 2)

His amusing romances, such as A Damsel in Distress (1919), his sentimental romances, such as The Little Warrior (1920), and his pure comedies, such as Right Ho, Jeeves (1934), The Code of the Woosters (1938), and other books about Bertie Wooster and his man Jeeves, were best-sellers in England and America and translated into all the major languages and a few obscure ones. His short stories also had an immense audience.

Wodehouse's work for the theater was no less abundant and successful than his fiction. America, I Like You informs us, "I have also been author or part author of sixteen plays and twentytwo musical comedies." Wodehouse wrote original plays, alone or with others, including Brother Alfred (by Wodehouse and Herbert Westbrook), first produced in 1913, and Her Cardboard Lover (by Wodehouse and Valerie Syngate), staged in 1927. He turned his own novels into plays; for example, A Gentleman of Leisure was produced in 1911, A Damsel in Distress in 1928.

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    P. G. Wodehouse (Pelham Grenville) from Encyclopedia of World Biography. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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