Lope de Rueda (born c. 1510, Sevilla, Spain—died 1565, Córdoba) was an outstanding figure of the early Spanish theatre who did much to popularize it and prepared the way for Lope de Vega.
A gold-beater by trade, Rueda was probably attracted to the stage by touring Italian actors; he organized a traveling theatre company and as its autor, or author-manager, took his troupe throughout Spain. He became popular and played before all kinds of audiences, from Philip II to crowds of rural townfolk. His work was seen by Cervantes, who praised him both as an actor and as a writer of verse. His most important contributions to early Spanish drama are the pasos, comic representations drawn from the events of daily life and intended to be used as humorous relief between the acts of longer works or even incorporated into them as amusing interludes. Written in prose, they brought to the stage a natural language spoken by conventional figures such as the simpleton and the master. His longer works, the comedias Medora, Armelina, Eufemia, and Los engañados and the dialogues Camila, Tymbira, and Prendas de amor, derive directly from Italian comedy.