Wills, W[illiam] G[orman] (1828-1891), playwright, painter, and novelist; born in Kilkenny city a son of James Wills, and educated at TCD. He began writing for the stage in 1865 and went on to compose thirty-three historical plays, performed mostly at the London Lyceum, where he revived popular verse drama with Charles I (1872). Other plays include Hinko, The Headman's Daughter (1871); Medea in Corinth (1872); Eugene Aram (1873); and Faust (1885), based on Anster's translation of Goethe. His novels include Notice to Quit (1863) and The Love That Kills (1867), dealing melodramatically with landlord-peasant relations after the Famine.




