Abstract

This article discusses Don Cruickshank’s career and writings on Spain’s seventeenth-century theatre and culture—particularly on Calderón, and on Golden-Age printed plays. Cruickshank also collaborated in two international Projects dedicated to cataloguing thousands of comedias sueltas preserved in archives and libraries in Spain and the USA. Two books, written with Ann Mackenzie, and unfinished when Cruickshank died, are also commented upon. Their monograph on comedias sueltas printed in Seville will hopefully be published before long. Their annotated edition of Fajardo’s previously unprinted Índice de todas las comedias impresas (1717) is now published in the Bulletin of Spanish Studies.

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