Perhaps I was far too predisposed towards this play before I even set eyes on it. Of course, often high expectations can jade an experience when they aren’t matched. So, School for Scandal, in spite of or because of my blatant pre-reading favoritism, managed to earn itself my high regard.
But how did I happen upon this obscure, eighteenth century, no-longer-in-print play in the first place? This won’t surprise those who know me well, but while reading Ron Chernow’s extensive biography on George Washington, I discovered that the play that Washington often attended and referenced—even more so than the more well known (now) Cato—was School for Scandal, a comedy. Well, in my obsessive push for all things Washington, coupled with a passion for plays—particularly comedies, I knew that School for Scandal would be a must-read for me. Luckily, with a Kindle, this turned out to be both cheap (free) and convenient.
As for the play itself, it turns out to be pretty sharp satire on high class society, its gossip, hypocrisy, and ultimate savagery. As a play/satire alone it is well done and entertaining, with memorable characters and lasting lessons. As far groundbreaking, eloquent, genre-changing literature, well, this is not your play, which explains why it could have been so popular in its day but got lost through the annals of time.
For me, though, historically, it is a boon. There are enough parallels with Washington’s personality that seeing why he was so enamored with the play makes complete sense. The absolute aversion to calumny and unsubstantiated gossip fits right in with a man that despised the cattiness of sensational newspapers reporting and the bitter bickering of political factions. Also, the mocking of London’s high society and the indirect nod to rural, upper class way of life is very compatible with Colonial American lifestyle—Washington’s in particular, as a Virginian gentleman farmer. I suppose further exploration into the deep-seeded similarities between Washington’s life philosophies and this play’s themes warrants a yawn-inducing, 15 essay … so I will refrain from it here.
Sufficeth to say, if you are a Washington buff and interested in what interested and entertained him … read this play. If you couldn’t care less about Washington and his worldview, then you should still be sufficiently entertained by Sheridan’s work on its merit alone. Either way, it couldn’t hurt to dabble in this play—and become the next pupil in the School for Scandal.