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In 1928 his play Para el cielo y los altares ("Toward Heaven and the Altars"), prophesying the fall of the Spanish monarchy, was prohibited by the government. During the Spanish Civil War Benavente lived in Barcelona and Valencia and was for a time under arrest. In 1941 he reestablished himself in public favour with Lo increible ("The Incredible"). His extraordinary productivity as a dramatist (he wrote more than 150 plays) recalled Spain's Golden Age and the prolific writer Lope de Vega. With the exception, however, of the harsh tragedy La infanzona (1948; "The Ancient Noblewoman") and El lebrel del cielo (1952), inspired by Francis Thompson's poem "Hound of Heaven," Benavente's later works did not add much to his fame.
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