O’thello: part of the Great Unpaid
Charles Dickens
The earliest surviving Dickens literary manuscript comes from a parody of Shakespeare’s Othello. Dickens wrote the adaptation in 1832 or 1833, around the time he first secured work as a journalist. The role of the Great Unpaid went to his father, John Dickens. The Dickens family apparently performed Charles’s parody in 1833 just a few years after he missed his Covent Garden audition.
John Dickens, a chronically impecunious spendthrift, sold this manuscript in 1842 hoping to benefit from his son’s fame.
Manuscript
![Charles Dickens, Autograph manuscript: O’thello: part of the Great Unpaid. London[?]:1832? EL f.D548 MS8 Charles Dickens, Autograph manuscript: O’thello: part of the Great Unpaid. Londo](http://www.rosenbach.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/feature_08col_snaprow_1pxborder/Dickens%20O%27Thello_web.jpg)