Synge, Wilde, Shaw, and the Irish Renaissance: Crash Course Theater #36

The Irish Renaissance in the early 20th century included a wealth of new plays written both in Ireland and by Irish ex-patriots elsewhere. W.B. Yeats, Lady Augusta Gregory, and J.M. Synge were creating a new national theater of Ireland at the Abbey Theatre. They often drew their stories from the fabric of Irish life. Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw were meanwhile writing important (and often hilarious) works on the world stage.