Philip Massinger (born 1583, near Salisbury, Wiltshire, England—died March 1639/40, London) was an English Jacobean and Caroline playwright noted for his gifts of comedy, plot construction, social realism, and satirical power.
Besides the documentation of his baptism at St. Thomas’s Church, Salisbury, it is known that Massinger attended St. Alban Hall, Oxford, in 1602, but nothing certain is known about his life from then until 1613, when he was in prison for debt. Bailed out by the theatrical impresario Philip Henslowe, he spent a period working as the junior partner in coauthored plays, collaborating with established dramatists such as Thomas Dekker and John Fletcher, and eventually graduated to his own independent productions. In 1625 he succeeded Fletcher, some of whose plays he revised, as the chief playwright of the King’s Men (formerly Lord Chamberlain’s Men). Though apparently not as successful as Fletcher, he remained with the King’s Men until his death, producing plays marked by a high moral tone and elevated philosophic character.
Among the plays Massinger collaborated on with Fletcher is The False One (c. 1620), a treatment of the story of Caesar and Cleopatra. Two other important plays written in collaboration are The Fatal Dowry (1616–19, with Nathan Field), a domestic tragedy in a French setting, and The Virgin Martyr (1620?, with Thomas Dekker), a historical play about the persecution of Christians under the Roman emperor Diocletian. Fifteen plays written solely by Massinger have survived, but many of their dates can only be conjectured. The four tragedies are The Duke of Milan (1621–22) and The Unnatural Combat (1624?)—both skillfully told mystery stories of a melodramatic type—and The Roman Actor (1626) and Believe As You List (1631)—each a historical tragedy in a classical setting. The Roman Actor is considered his best serious play.
The Bondman (1623), about a slave revolt in the Greek city of Syracuse, is one of Massinger’s seven tragicomedies and shows his concern for state affairs. The Renegado (1624), a tragicomedy with a heroic Jesuit character, gave rise to the still-disputed theory that he became a Roman Catholic. Another tragicomedy, The Maid of Honour (1621?), combines political realism with the courtly refinement of later Caroline drama. The tendency of his serious plays to conform to Caroline fashion, however, is contradicted by the mordant realism and satirical force of his two great comedies—A New Way to Pay Old Debts, his most popular and influential play, in which he expresses genuine indignation at economic oppression and social disorder, and The City Madam (1632?), dealing with similar evils but within a more starkly contrived plot that curiously combines naturalistic and symbolic modes. One of his last plays, The King and the Subject (1638), had politically objectionable lines cut from it by King Charles himself.