Johann Nestroy (born Dec. 7, 1801, Vienna, Austria—died May 25, 1862, Graz) was one of Austria’s greatest comic dramatists, and a brilliant character actor who dominated the mid-19th-century Viennese popular stage.
After a career as an opera singer (1822–31) in several European cities, Nestroy returned to Vienna and began writing and acting. His 50 plays, which are virtually all adaptations of plots from earlier plays or novels, characteristically revolve around a brilliant, detached central character (played by Nestroy himself ) whose part requires a virtuoso performance in language, diction, and timing in order to convey its sharp nuances. Nestroy made use of satire, irony, and parody to dissect the newly rich bourgeoisie, as well as a number of the leading figures of Viennese society. From 1854 until he retired in 1860 he managed the Carl-Theater in Vienna.
Among his best-known works are Der böse Geist Lumpazivagabundus oder Das Liederliche Kleeblatt (1833; “The Evil Spirit Lumpazivagabundus, or the Roguish Trio”); Der Zerrissene (1844; A Man Full of Nothing); Das Mädl aus der Vorstadt, oder Ehrlich währt am längsten (1841; “The Lass from the Suburb, or Honesty is the Best Policy”); Einen Jux will er sich machen (1842; “He Intends to Have a Fling”), adapted by Thornton Wilder as The Matchmaker and later adapted as the musical play and film Hello Dolly!; and Kampl oder: Das Mädchen mit den Millionen und die Nähterin (1852; “Kampl; or, The Millionairess and the Seamstress”).