Charles Lamb Kenney
Charles Lamb Kenney (29 April 1821 – 25 August 1881) was a journalist, dramatist and miscellaneous writer.
He was the second son of the dramatist James Kenney.
Commencing life as a clerk in the General Post Office in London, he joined the staff of The Times, to which paper he contributed dramatic criticism. In 1856, having been called to the bar, he became secretary to Ferdinand de Lesseps, and in 1857 he published The Gates of the East in support of the projected construction of the Suez Canal.
Kenney wrote the words for a number of light operas, and was the author of several popular songs, the best known of which were "Soft and Low" (1865) and "The Vagabond" (1871). He also published a Memoir of MW Balfe (1875), and translated the Correspondence of Balzac He included Thackeray and Dickens among his friends in a literary côterie in which he enjoyed the reputation of a wit and an accomplished writer of vers de société.
See John Genest, Some Account of the English Stage, 1660-1830, vols. vii. and viii. (10 vols, London, 1832); PW Clayden, Rogers and his Contemporaries (2 vols, London, 1889).
Kenney died in 1881 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.
Sources
public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}
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- 1823 births
- 1881 deaths
- English dramatists and playwrights
- English male journalists
- Burials at Brompton Cemetery
- English translators
- 19th-century journalists
- Male journalists
- 19th-century translators
- English male dramatists and playwrights
- 19th-century British dramatists and playwrights
- 19th-century male writers