THE MIRROR; OR, ACTOR'S TABLET.
We come like shadows, so depart.
AS in my elbow (though not always my easy) chair, I love to prattle and tell old tales, and remember with advantage what feats were done, I must here entreat the patience a
[...]d attention of such young persons who fix their present thoughts on stage pageantry, and their views on future greatness, wherein they image to their pleasing warm ideas how far they shall surpass those whom they now look up to and admire; for there are many actors and actresses of the present age, not yet arrived at mediocrity as professors, yet are advanced in years, and far on their journey to the world's end, who boldly affirm, that were the actors of the old school now in being, they would not please if they were to dress their characters as they did forty or sixty years ago. There, certainly,
[Page 78] the present actors' observations would be right, but in point of sterling acting surely in an error.
That there are gentlemen and ladies of infinite merit in most stage departments I rejoice at, as their emolument is a reward to their merits, as well as for the honour and credit of the profession.
As to dress I draw this conclusion, that was Mr. Garrick existing, with the vigour and appearance of thirty, yet, if he was to act Ranger now, he certainly would not dress that agreeable rake as he did forty-three years before this time, but as Mr. Lewis, or any other competent judge does dress that character. And as to the acting, I must persist, (and there are thousands living to back my assertion) that Mr. Garrick would have been a natural performer one hundred years ago▪ he was the most shining, general player I have yet seen; and were he to act Ranger an hundred years hence he would be a natural Ranger then▪ and for a very simple rule: (Mr. Macklin was
[...] the old, and is now of the new school, yet I never heard of his deviating from Nature as an instructor or an actor)—for Nature ever will be Nature.—Mr. King's and Mr. Yates's excellencies
[...] the old school prove this.—Shakspeare wrote two
[Page 79] hundred years ago, and could he write in the pres
[...]nt aera, he could not make the characters better in boldness or expression of language than those he wrote before.—I do not impertinently, or like
[...]n old stager say,—Could Mr. Quin and Mr. Ryan act now, they would give the same satisfaction as they did then.—The reason is evident, though they pleased the audiences of that age, yet the mode and manner not being natural in many characters, the present good discriminating taste that pervades would not relish or suffer it. Mr. Quin's tragedy was strutting, pompous, languid, tiresome, and wanted spirit. But the same idea of one hu
[...]dred years given just now as a supposition for Mr. Garrick's Ranger, would have an equal claim at present with Mr. Quin's Falstaff; for he was much the best any living person has seen, as he had every requisite from Nature: And though Henderson had great merit, his Falstaff was much inferior, as all he did was the effect of study and art, having neither the person, the voice, nor the eye, in particular, for that part;—in each of these material points Henderson was deficient. Now Quin, with a bottle of claret and a full house, the instant he was on the stage was Sir John Falstaff himself.—
[Page 80]
As the well-teaming earth,
With rivers and show'rs,
With smiling brings forth
Her fruits and her flow'rs,
So Faistaff will never decline;
Still fruitful and gay,
He moistens his clay,
And his rain and his rivers are wine.
Of the world he has all but its care;
No load, but of flesh, will he bear;
He laughs off his pack,
Takes a cup of old sack,
And away with all sorrow and care.
Quin's Harry the Eighth, Sir John Brute, all the Falstaffs, Old Bachelor, Volpone, Ape mantus, Brutus, Ventidius, Bishop Gardiner, Clause, Gloster, were all, with several others, all his own; nor have those characters already mentioned ever truly flourished as when inspired by him. But out of his particular walk he was ever bordering on the ridiculous:—His Richard was very heavy, laborious, and unnatural, and it was
then thought so; as I recollect reading a list of plays in a magazine for the year 1750, where, in the catalogue of tragedies and comedies there inserted, was the following line:—
King RICHARD, by Quin.
Much hissed.
His Othello, Macbeth, Lear, &c. all as bad: He
[Page 81] played Chamont.—What would our modern beaux think of young Chamont, as I have seen Mr. Quin act it at the age of sixty? He was equipped in a long, grisly, half-powdered p
[...]iwig, hanging low down on each side the breast and down the back, a heavy scarlet coat and waistcoat trimmed with broad gold lace,
[...]la
[...]k velvet breeches, a black silk neckcloth, black s
[...]ockings, a pair of square-toed shoes, with an old-fashioned pair of stone buckles;—and the youthful, the fiery Chamont adorned himself with a pair of stiff high-top'd white gloves, with a broad ol
[...] scollop'd laced hat, which when taken off the head, and having pressed the old wig, and vie
[...]ng his fair round belly with fat capon lined, he lo
[...]ked like Sir John Brute in the drunken scene.
Mr. Garrick brought to the world's light the spirited Chamont; old Ryan was the strong and lusty Polydore, with a red face, and voice truly horrible, which, like Portia, you might quickly have distinguished,
‘"He knows me, as the bl
[...]nd man does the cuckoo, by my bad voice."’—Ryan also added bad deportment, and was not near so well dressed as Quin's Chamont, though in much the same extraordinary manner; and by them stood Mr. Barry in Castalio, in a neat bag wig, then of the newest
[...]ashion, in his bloom and prime of li
[...]e; and was certainly
[Page 82] one of the handsomest men ever seen on or off the stage, with Mrs. Cibber, all-elegance and neatness by his side as Monimia. The sight of the two ancient heroes of antiquity made such a contrast in the Quartetto, that it struck even my features at the age of eleven with risibility. If so, what a whimsical feeling of tragi-comedy must it have diffused on the muscles of the pit critics, who then decided all disputes, damnations, &c. which at present, to save the audience trouble, the morning papers have taken most of the grand articles of setting up or knocking down into their own custody.
It is incumbent to remember, though Ryan's figure for Phocyas, Frankley, Sir George Airy, &c. would now appear extravagantly ridiculous, yet on the London boards no actor for a course of years could have stood more esteemed and respectable; and be it observed, that in despite of a
[...]l these deficiencies of voice, manner, person, dress, years, &c. his Edgar, mad scene of Orestes, fourth-act scene of M
[...]cduff, Ford, Dumont in Jane Shore, nay even Lord Townly, (though very likely p
[...]rformed the same week by Mr. Barry, who was in every point most excellent in that character) yet he never repeated the last scene of that part, or the mad scenes of Edgar, without evincing such a strong sense and feeling, accompanied
[Page 83] with judgment, as removed for the time all sight or sense of his defects and oddities. Mr. Woodward assured me, that when Mr. Garrick went with him to see Ryan's Richard the Third, meaning to be inwardly merry, that Garrick, on the contrary, was astonished at what he saw working in the mind of the ungraceful, slovenly, and ill-dressed figure, which told him more than he before knew, and which caused Garrick's bringing to light that unknown excellence as his own, which in Ryan had remained unnoticed and buried.
There are confessedly more than five to one actors of merit now to what there were in 1747; for their Cloughs, Vaughans, Dagger Mars, Moze
[...]ns, Ackmans, Andersons, Pagets, Oats's, Redmans, Wignals, &c. &c. would not now (were they living) be permitted to act at the York or Hull theatres, so nice are they grown, and there is such decent acting in general throughout the kingdom: Yet we must not suppose Mr. Cibber did not understand polite life and good breeding when
[...]e wrote the characters of Lord and Lady Townly; they were judged so then, and are so still—and prove that the author knew full as well what a lady of quality should be as the modern writers do. Indeed our fine ladies at present on the stage are trifling
[Page 84] when compared with Lady Townly, Lady Betty Modish, Millamant, Maria (now Charlotte in the Hypocrite), and several others. As a proof, those old written characters are what every young female fashionable candidate wishes to play; ask Mrs. Abington and Miss Farren what characters they choose to give the first impression in? they will quickly answer, Charlotte in the Hypocrite, Shakspeare's Beatrice, Lady Betty, &c.—Now if Cibber wrote his ladies characters and his fops well, he at that time knew how to play them; but that was, according to the particular mode of his own, which pleased: But his manner would not please
now I guess, because that of another age: His Foppington was a coxcomb of that time, and Sir Fopling Flutter, with Sir Courtley Nice:—Now there are no such characters extant, and therefore Lord Foppington is not so pleasing a representative of quality as he was forty years ago: And I not only think, but venture to affirm, against many judgments of stage opinions of a modern green-room, that the celebrated Mrs. Oldfield's Lady Townly, &c. would be now pronounced excellent. My imagination leads me to pin faith on this opinion, because my brethren will remark her tragedy did not suit with the bombastic taste of those actors who devoted themselves at the tragic shrine; and the true cause has been, that
[Page 85] she was more natural than her predecessors, and her conversation and manners were universally admired as a lady, which must have been the result of observation, and her being admitted on a familiar and respectable footing with persons of the first distinction, who admired the elegance of the actress, and saw themselves in her:—And persons of true taste and distinction, however the dress of the times may differ, will ever be easy, affable, attractive, and engaging.—Nay, it can be easily explained to young observers, almost to a certainty; for look back a very few years, and they will find once a year that the
ton for being seen in public, in the month of January, was naked and bare;
[...]nd another year the neck and bosom all muffled and barricaded, in July and August: Yet to a Duchess of Devonshire or Rutland, both natives and foreigners bow with admiration, in the same manner, whether the behind is swelled or diminished; as whatever they do, ease and elegance must be attendants: therefore the habiliment to such persons matters very little to a critical observer, whether they are seen decked simply in an Irish poplin, or accoutred in all the gaudy plumes of the most extravagant chan
[...]e of prevailing Paris fashions: And if Mrs. Oldfield's dress for Lady Townly, or Lady Betty, with Mrs. Abington's or any other fine lady's dress, were now put
[Page 86] into a fire, the latter would be consumed to ashes that might help a hot-house, but I fear not produce intrinsic worth—but the Oldfield's would prove
Like purest gold that's tortur'd in the furnance,
Comes out more bright, and brings forth all its weight.
The expence for the necessary profusion of stage-dresses is enormous, but there is nothing real: Taste may be discerned. That this is the period for taste in dress will be readily admitted; but the money expended, and all the true value, rests in the word
taste. I know this myself perfectly, by having had, about twenty years ago, an old wardrobe I found in the ruins of my theatrical Herculaneum, and which was of
[...] antiquity, and had appertained to Roman emperors, kings, &c. when not a performer, lady or gentleman of the London theatres, but would have involuntarily laughed at the old broad seams of gold and silver lace, and have cast piteous and contemptuous looks on the country performers thus loaded with trumpery: Yet those despicable clothes had, at different periods of time, bedecked real lords and dukes, and were bought at much less price than now; and would produce, by one day's labour of stripping merely the old materials, forty or fifty pounds to provide a supper if the stomach required. And I can assert and prove, that my present wardrobe
[Page 87] is far superior to any out of London, without excepting Dublin or Edinburgh, and has been attended with considerable expence, far beyond the bounds of prudence or common-sense. It is true, as a purchaser of the theatre, the wardrobe is of great cost and value, and would shew a play without fear or disgrace to any audience whatever, as numbers can testify; but would not, in a state of bankruptcy, pay INTRINSICALLY, as the old despised King Lear's suit almost singly would have done; as all now consists of foil, spangles, beads, interwoven fast embroidery, silks, satins, &c. which soon wear: An old petticoat, made for a large hoop of the Duchess of Northumberland, thirty
[...]ears ago, would have served a queen in the theatre
[...]everal years, then descended to a duchess of Suffolk, afterwards made two handsome tragedy shapes for an old rich Spaniard, and ten years after that burn and produce money to purchase thirty yards of lustring for a modern stage lady. Thirty years ago not a Templar, or decent-dressed young man, but wore a rich gold laced hat, and scarlet waistcoat with a broad gold lace;—as the miser says,
‘"he carried an estate upon his back;"’—also laced frocks for morning dress. I have now worn, occasionally, by comedians (for old characters of wealth) a suit of purple
[...]oth, with gold vellum holes, that I frequently
[Page 88] wore when a young man as a fashionable dress, and spoke the prologue to the Author, gave Tea, &c. on the London stage, and after that used it as my common dress to parade the streets at noon: But I must justly coincide with the point of truth, and declare, the characteristic dressing of plays forty years ago was very inferior indeed to what is seen in these riper years, particularly the comedians. At that time, no more than two or three principal characters, (at Covent Garden in particular) were well dressed, and those not with any variety as now. Mrs. Woffington's wardrobe had only the increase of one tragedy-suit, in the course of the season, in addition to the clothes allotted to her, unless she indulged herself; and she had a new suit for Sir Harry Wildair, in which character Mrs. Woffington looked the man of fashion; and Mrs. Jordan sports now in Sir Harry one of the best legs in the kingdom. Sir Joshua Reynolds is a judge of legs, and has, like Paris with his apple, given his decree on that said leg.
But the gentlemen and ladies in modern-dressed tragedies, forty years ago, at Covent Garden theatre, wore the old laced clothes which had done many years service at Lincoln's-Inn-Fields, besides having graced the original wearers; and the ladies were in large hoops, and the velvet petticoats, heavily embossed, proved extremely inconvenient
[Page 89] and troublesome, and always a page behind to hear the lover's secrets, and keep the train in graceful decorum. If two princesses met on the stage, with the frequent stage-crossing, then practised, it would now seem truly entertaining to behold a page dangling at the tail of each heroine; and I have seen a young lady, not of the most delicate form, who sustained that office frequently—a Miss Mullart;—they are now dismissed, as judged unnecessary and superfluous—but luckily they were pages of honour, and as truly to be depended upon as Edinburgh caddies, as I have never heard of any misdemeanor brought into court by their impeachment:—Yet theatrical l
[...]ngs and queens, like their brethren mortals, sometimes have been frail; but they were family secrets, and ought not to be mentioned again. I have seen Mrs. Woffington dressed in high taste for Mrs. Phillis, for then all ladies' companions or gentlewomens' gentlewomen, actually appeared in that style of dress; nay, even the comical Clive dressed her Chambermaids, Lappet, Lettice, &c. in the same manner, authorised from what custom had warranted when they were in their younger days; and in my remembrance, not a first servant maid, or unfortunate female, that usurped a right of Strand walk, which she termed her own trodden ground, from St. Mary-le-Strand
[Page 90] to Exeter Change, but what swaggered in her large banging hoop, to the terror of any young novice who dared usurp a footing of those territories:—In short, a large hoop was a requisite and indispensable mode of dress. Strict propriety of habiliment not any manager has yet arrived at, even in London; and though it is so highly improved these last twenty years, yet the achievement not even money will ever be able to obtain, that is, while the stage is honoured with pretty women, as I sincerely hope it ever will be;—
[...]or common sense, reason, persuasion, nor intreaty, will ever persuade handsome women to appear in a farmer's daughter, or a witch, or a servant maid, but with the head dressed in full fashion, and the feet deckin satin shoes; yet I think they would be gainers by trying dear variety: For what will attract more than the simple Quaker, or the truly neat chambermaid? and it is not every m
[...]n that wishes for a duchess: besides what an advantage to be seen in a gaudy attire one night, and another arrayed in pure simplicity, and be viewed with propriety in a green stuff gown, &c. and not as Madge in Love in a Village, or Betsy Blossom, with a French head, white silk stockings, and white satin shoes; by such contradictions Nature is as distant from the stage now as she was an hundred years ago; and stuff
[Page 91] s
[...]oes and clean cotton stockings would look not only as well, but better, by the preservation of character:—Nay, the plain woman (if such there be) would not be behind hand, as she would, I
[...]ear, keep equal pace in absurdity, and relinquish all pretensions to propriety, by being as fantastical as the most beautiful young one. And these contradictions of dress and manner of behaviour are often beheld off the stage by chance observers, and are very properly introduced and ridiculed on, and receive the rod of correction from the comic Muse, as proper objects for the poet's satire and
[...]he public mirth. Not any plays throughout were ever dressed as they are now—there the public enjoy a splendor indeed superior to their forefathers. Also in the magnificence of theatres, the scenery and lighting are now beyond compare; but it is evident our grannies had an idea of what they did not possess, as may be proved by the orders for scenery in Sir William Davenant's plays, Dryden's. Tempest, King Arthur, Lee's Constantine, Cyrus the Great, &c. &c. Except in Mr. Rich's pantomimes, the public then had seldom any scenery that proved of advantage, so as to allure the eye:—But now frequently we have new scenery to almost every piece. It was very uncommon formerly for new plays to
[Page 92] have more than what we term stock scenery:—There is one scene at Covent Garden used from 1747 to this day in the Fop's Fortune, &c. which has wings and flat, of Spanish figures at full length, and two folding doors in the middle:—I never see those wings slide on but I feel as if seeing my very old acquaintance unexpectedly. The advantage of the n
[...]w established theatres is another useful alteration for these times; tho' the Opera House, when first finished, must have been noble, as we are told by
[...]o
[...]ley Cibber it was so large they could not be heard till the cieling was lowered and the house lessened. The Little Theatre in the Hay Market, as it was called twenty-six years ago, till it was beautified and put into its present form b
[...] Mr. Foote and Mr. Colman, would
now cut a very
contemptible figure in most towns of England, and not fit to enter, after seeing Bath, Edinburgh, Bristol, Liverpool, York, and many other theatres. By this progress and embel
[...]ishment of regular, handsome, well-ornamented theatres, with good scenery, wardrobe, and band, (at York in particular the
[...]er) we may be assured that these theatres are superior to those wherein Booth, Betterton, and Cibber acted; for though Drury Lane was larger than the most of our present country theatres, yet forty years ago the audience part
[Page 93] of those London theatres were very crazy, inconvenient, and not pleasing to the eye: and at present the stair-case to the
upper boxes at Drury Lane is so narrow, that should an alarm of fire happen, the persons in the two upper tier of boxes would be thrown into such confusion, should they open at the same time the different doors, the passage is so strait and they would so effectually block up each other, that not one single soul could escape, and their increasing fears would cause the situation to be alarming and dreadful to a degree. Indeed Covent Garden is not so complete in that department (at least it was not so when I saw that theatre before the late alterations). The upper boxes at Edinburgh are far preferable to those at London for seeing, and indeed, in that respect, are better than any theatre I know; and it has an advantage (like Smock-Alley) by the audience part being formed in a well-finished circle. Drury Lane, like London-Bridge, has been much frittered and patched at very great expence; and, after all, the only way to repair will be to pull it down, and erect a new one:—which I understand is to be done, and I wish for health to see it finished. In proper-built convenient theatres, I am told, Paris has within these few years taken the lead, though some time ago
[...] was greatly inferior: If they are like the plates
[Page 94] which I have of those theatres, they appear very noble and spacious, and not surrounded by buildings, but good open road for carriages round:—However, as a print is not always to be depended on, I cannot say more in praise of those structures, but, by what I guess, and what I have heard concerning those in Paris; and from the pictures sent to me from thence by Mr. Maude of York, who judged I should like a peep at those theatres, being at such a distance—Veu de Theatre Italien—Veu de Theatre Francois—L'Opera Proche la Porte Saint Martin.—The Opera House is far superior, particularly the stage, as two hundred soldiers, I am informed, at times appear thereon in tragic pieces when it is necessary. These alterations of theatres in the country I am not clear, on mature deliberation, have been done for the better—so much additional finery and splendor was not requisite, as tolerable decent drapery may do very well for a house near Temple-Bar, that would look despicable in Grosvenor-Square:—Besides, while those inconveniences remained, the first actors and actresses would not have deigned to visit the provincial playhouses; for even when the theatres were closed sixty years ago, no principal performer ever played, as now, at Liverpool, Birmingham, &c. as we may conclude from Mrs. Centlivre's Prologue to her Busy Body—
[Page 95]
This season must things bear a smiling face,
But play'rs in summer have a dismal case,
Since your appearance only is our act of grace.
Thirty years ago Mr. Barry or Mrs. Cibber would not have disgraced (as they at that time judged) their current London stamp for being paid in July in Birmingham coin on any account: Indeed such would have been thought by their London patrons a most disagreeable and disgraceful exploit: And the Londoners will be astonished to be truly informed, that
now Mrs. Siddons, Mrs. Jordan, and others, make their true golden harvest on their summer excursions out of the metropolis. Bath, from its great fashionable resort and consequence, has of course an improving theatre; and though only one hundred miles distant from London, causes in the Londoners many a wishful look to honour Bath with five or six nights in the course of a season, and thereby secure a couple of hundred pounds: But those Bath managers act more prudently, as they never permit London, or any other actors, however the voice of fame may have exalted them, to perform a few nights only:—Mrs. Crawford, for instance, lived there all the last winter, but she was not offered any terms of engagement, only such as the theatre would afford as expenditure for the whole season; but no acting there for a short period to
[Page 96] take the cream and leave the skimmed milk fo
[...] the managers and performers to exist on. Consequently Bath not being capable to pay enormou
[...] salaries, the receipts being by no means adequate or proportionable, as London must secure the principal performers for the winter; and in case of disagreement, Dublin and Edinburgh are equal to reward their labours, by holding out a lucrative and happy asylum. Great theatrical personages, who formerly used to look upon a city or town as a
bore, now, on the contrary, in the summer grant they are commodious, respectable, and even alluring; and with great good manners, compliance, and condescension, will consent to trifle away a few nights at such insignificant places: Even the Jordan herself, who at present reigns as our modern Thalia, has deigned to visit Cheltenham, Reading, Margate, Richmond, and Harrowgate, which places yielded great profits, silver medals and subscriptions falling at her feet in plentiful showers, and she (as greatness knows itself) acts naturally on such occasions:—Being
earnest in her demands, I wish her every prosperity, and hope she will accumulate—
London performers, when in the country, have only the trouble to repeat their tasks like young scholars sent for a six weeks vacation, who for the credit and pride of their papas and masters are expected
[Page 97] to return perfect, and repeat when sent back to school. The consequence of these visitors, though it gratifies the pride of the audiences, (not forgetting also the manager's own
ostentation, in the principal theatres remote from the great city) is not always productive, though it gives a glare to enterprise; therefore every manager out of London should watch his farm with as much fear and observance as a West Indian planter does a hurricane, which destroys his fine prospect, and he bestows three quarters of the year in hopes the fourth quarter's produce may make amends for devastation:—So the manager, with the little overplus gained, should never lay out what is so dearly bought in too lavish improvements in a theatre; for the absence of the reigning London favourite leaves a cold chill and omnious ill-fated blast on all theatrical culture for the year to come. Indeed there are always people and money, where fashion and inclination prompt them to attend a playhouse, which, when not so, the theatre only obtains contempt, false pity, and less attendance. It is true, by these advantages which I have taken the liberty to mention, plays are wonderfully altered for the better: but was I asked,
‘"If in consequence of such good fare, are not the audiences altered for the better also?"’ I should be compelled to answer,
‘"Indeed they are not,
[Page 98] but far the contrary."’ Frequently seeing the best acting, has destroyed all theatrical
regular relish. I was lead formerly to believe, when I first began the mode of procuring principal performers from London, it would have given information to the people in general, and made more and more converts to my conventicles; but there I was egregiously mistaken, for people who are not blessed with affluent fortunes in the middling class of life, with proud minds and little souls, have but as much for pleasures as they can prudently spare; therefore if they expend in one week what would serve for a month for themselves and their families' purposes, there is likely to be a drawback—besides its being
unfashionable, and then all is over with a theatre:—For many go to a play (as the fine lady says) sometimes, because—Because why? Because all the world is there;—not to see the play, but to be seen. And it is surprising my own appetite did not inform me this; for if I feed one week on pine-apples, grapes, nectarines, and peaches, I would rather go without fruit the week following than eat common pears, plums, or blackberries. Indeed patents have not only been a security for theatrical property, but have put the country actors on a more decent level, which was highly necessary; for though there are exceptions from all well-bred persons, yet an actor in London is
[Page 99] very differently respected to what he is in the country. It is so in common life;—we are connected with, or behaved to by, a dependent or independent acquaintance as interest, caprice, or the humour hits. A Cockney, merely confined to London, and who thinks it a journey from Wapping to Covent Garden to see the play, is certainly of all critics one of the worst; for he was born in London and lives in London, and any brother mechanic from a distant county is looked on as ignorant, and told how to
comport himself. On retrospect I recollect an instance of this kind in myself; for, till the age of seventeen, I judged every man and woman I saw ignorant and stupid who
[...]ived two miles beyond Richmond and Hampton Court: A stronger instance I remember of Mr. Townsend, whose respectable family I have so frequently before-mentioned; he honoured me with be ng my cashier, and when I mentioned wanting it as the York manager, he said,
‘"What a fool must you be, Tate, to trust your money with Yorkshire people, for they think of nothing but to over-reach us here in the south?"’ Another
[...] o
[...] vulgar Cockney wisdom I was shewn a few years ago, when I was relating in London an history
[...] with every respect, and indeed blazoning ou
[...]
[...]or
[...]ern f
[...]tes, races, &c. and concluding my
[...] wi
[...]h the ladies going to the assembly-rooms
[Page 100] in chairs, my good sister Cockney, with all the elegance of one hump before and another behind, fell into an involuntary fit of laughter, for which I could n t apprehend the reason; but the instant her pleasant convulsions gave permission, she rung the bell most furiously, and called aloud,
‘"Mr. Jennings! Mr. Jennings! come down stairs—come down stairs—here's Mr. Wilkinson tells me the
[...] have chairs at York!—Oh! I should delight to se
[...] those horse godmothers, those
wulgar ladies, get into chairs!"’—
[...] n ed not observe to my re
[...]der that the lady was not of exalted breed—but is it not strange that any person of common co
[...]prehension should let the too evident and common partiality as a Londoner prevent them from naturally knowing, by yearly observation, that
[...]ondon would not be that extensiv
[...] and rich capital it is, unless supported by the resort of ladies and gentlemen from every county in the kingdom; and their own reflections in August, September, and October, should make them naturally note why, in those months in particular, they exclaim,
‘"O what an empty town!—nobody to be seen!—all the world is in the country!"’ &c.—On this subject I must beg leave to intrude another instan e:—Some fourteen years ago I dined at the
London T vern with a truly good friend of mine, Mr. Robert Bell of Hull,
[Page 101] and a large party of his intimates, resident in the metro
[...]ol
[...]s:—(
[...]t is certainly superfluous to mention that the town of Hull, in the kingdom of Great Britain, stands forward as a seaport-town for exports and imports, and is certainly superior to any after Liverpool and
[...]ristol:)—The dinner was good, and Mr. Bell's guests were cheerful and agreeable.—I was not known in my public capacity, but only as a Mr. Wilkinson, the acquaintance of Mr. Bell; and my dialect conforming to my brother Cockne
[...]s, I was not supposed but as a kinsman, therefore a man of knowledge, being a Londoner. Plays at length became a topic of conversation, when Mr. Bell began to pay some compliments on the good representations of which they could boast at Hull, under the direction of a per
[...]on whom he regarded, and for whose prosper
[...] he was anxious, when one gentleman in particular burst into a loud laugh, (which was seconded by others) and when sufficiently recovere
[...], begged of Mr. Bell to inform him whether they had blankets or a green cloth, as a substitute for scenery—for he never had been at a play in
[...]he country, but should like to see one of all th
[...]gs. it must be su
[...]h a
bore. Mr. Bell very grave
[...]y replied—If the gentleman judged it worth his att
[...]ntion he might receive immedi
[...]te information of every particular, as the gentleman at
[Page 102] his right hand, Mr. Wilkinson, was the director and patentee of the Hull theatre. This immediately turned the laugh, and my brother Cockney begged a thousand pardons:—It served as a very good joke, and often has been related by Mr. Bell as a proof how little intelligent some inconsiderate Londoners are.
Ti-tum-ti is another notion that even London managers and critiques have of plays in the country, but that is all exploded; extravagance of manner and deviation from the truth too evidently prevailing. That many great geniusses are bred in the country, that a London theatre, with its rod of authority and good judgment, would rectify and improve, is indisputable:—But I am not writing or hinting of a London audience when I speak of such confirmed Cockneys within the sound of Bow bell; there is here and there scattered out of London a strange set of
gnats, or would-be-meddling officious critiques, who are merely a
but for the players when they turn their backs, and are the plague of their own acquaintances with their profound knowledge and experience of the drama, and deal out the word
[...]
minutiae and
propriety, which they have gleane
[...] superficially from theatrical phrases, all pronounce
[...] with much self-approbation from such Sir Oracles they are much attac
[...]ed to reviving obsolete plays
[Page 103] and casting and instructing the actors:—I knew such a one for years, and whenever I find such condescension with advancing steps approaching, who if once he honours you with his advice (which he means
commands) and acquaintance, which lasts only whilst you implicitly bow and comply with his refined notions—but I avoid such a gracious person as I would a pest, being well confirmed, from experience, if he once g
[...]ts hold of my ear or time I shall be to a certainty deprived of both.
One disadvantage more to the managers of country theatres arises from the roads being so excellent to what they were formerly, and the various conveniences for those in middling life as well as the affluent, the increase of fashionable dissipation, &c. are all combined causes for the ruin of country theatres.
Nothing is more common than to meet an acquaintance in the York theatre on the Saturday, who, if asked how he liked the play, will answer,
‘"Why tolerable:—but having seen it last Wednesday night so
delightfully acted at Drury Lane, it made the comedy appear very tiresome."’
Mr. Woodfall said Mrs. Siddons spoke sensibly when she first acted Portia, but that her powers were unfit for a London stage, and were only calculated for such small places as she in the country
[Page 104] had been accustomed to.—Mr. Woodfall was no
[...] right as it proved; and Mr. Woodfall, I sincerel
[...] and honourably declare, I esteem as a man o
[...] found judgment.
Indeed the frequent intercourse between London and York, occasioned by the facility of th
[...] roads, is a fata
[...]ty, in fact, instead of an advantage; for though the mind may be theatrica
[...], i
[...] le
[...]s naturally to conceit, vanity, and self-love; and it is no wonder that the London play should throw the Yorkshire one at a distance: for tho' with every respect and high opinion I feel and acknowle
[...]ge their indubitable right to preference and
[...]uperio
[...]ity, yet I will venture to affirm, that even Mr. Garrick (
[...]uch is the force of prejudice) would not have pleased the supersine cr
[...]ic of York, or of any other place to well had he been only a provincial actor.—This assertion is
[...]ol
[...], but easily evinced:—Mrs. Siddons was thought a good actr
[...]ss at York when in her prime of life, but not so great an actress, nor
[...]o
[...]lowed as the rage of the times when she was dismissed the theatre as incapable of her engagement, till the Londoners recanted their former ill ju
[...]ged decisions; and as a contrary effect, when most
[...] san
[...]oned, they fainted, screamed, and ex red whenever
[...]hat lady acted, a few years afterwards: And for the honour of country judgement,
[Page 105] be it remembered, that had they in that instance followed London example, (o
[...]ten the case) wh
[...] that said London
[...]ad lost the pleasure of seeing (take her all in all) the first actress within
[...]mory.
Actors are led into an error in point of dressing
[...] servants of country gentlemen so awkwa
[...]d
[...]:—True, such beings were in chara
[...]ter eighty years ago; in some bye villages some traces are
[...]
[...]o be seen; but in every country gentleman's
[...] the servants at present are as forward fine gentlemens' gentlemen as the metropolis can boast
[...] and most o
[...] them have London educations, and a
[...] full as coxcombical as any Sir Harry, Lord Duke, or Tom, which the London stage produces—nor are they de
[...]icient in the grand t
[...]ur, as very many visit
[...]aris yearly—and Bath and Paris grow rich on Yorkshire spoils. It is astonishing the number of families, f
[...]om York only, now at Paris and Bath; and were they not ab
[...]entees, but were, according to my wishes, kept in their own county, it would make a jo
[...]ful alteration in my finances, and would not injure their own; but happily for them they have such plenty of golden ore that they can breathe what air, and in what climate they please, and have a constant supply like Fortunatus's purse. If I had youth and spirit, and boldly trod the road, neck or nothing, and wished
[Page 106] to make depredations on Yorkshire purses, I would never hazard life by attacking persons solacing in carriages, who were departing
from London, particularly those of flashy gemmen and ladies; for carry what cash they will into London, if they have sufficient to bring them back without borrowing on the bond, and without being in debt, they have visited London cheaply.—I mention this from my own experience, but not as a good example, and we are too apt to judge of others by ourselves: but I dare say most will agree, that they never think of going to London without a tolerably supply of metal; and if they do reflect at all, do not expect to return with many guineas to spare.
Plays are hackneyed now in every town and village:—The theatre is not such an object for the bumpkin gazers as formerly, and it is the million that must m
[...]ke the playhouse answer. Fine theatres out of London are like an easy countenance with an a
[...]ng heart.—Theatres in general should
[...]e under the controul of an actor of judgment, experience, good-nature, &c.; and tho' we have instances of g
[...]e
[...]en
[...]f property being managers, they in general have found money does not flow like a spring well (though it is in truth a
sinking one). The profession in life of ease and pleasure,
[Page 107] as it appears to be, to an unthinking auditor, who will say,
‘"Well may these players be happy people, they get money for nought but making game and picking folks' po
[...]kets."’—But gentlemen managers very rarely succeed, though the ideal riches have tempted many to rust real ore under the rubbish and dust of wardrobes, scene-rooms, pai
[...]ting-rooms, &c. I know not one instance at present where any manager and actor makes a fortune:—Garrick did, but Colley Cibber merely retired with a competency—Wilkes and Booth no more—Betterton died very poor; a man it is said ever
[...] body loved, in and out of the theatre; and known by courtier and peasant by the appellation of
honest Tom—that was honour indeed as an a
[...] or and manager—it is so written down in stage history: and I cannot contradict it:—it is true he had the appellation from all who knew him of
honest Tom, but neither his genius, his labour, his excellence, same, goodness, nor even his honesty had procure
[...] him gentleman-like existence, as he had a ch
[...]ty-benefit at the age of seventy-five, when he was supported on one side by Mrs. Barry, a fa ous actress at that time, and the celebrated Mrs. Bracegirdle on the other, who had quitted the theatre for many years in her bloom of youth with unsullied reputation, and was the admiration
[Page 108] of all who beheld her, on or off the stage.—Mrs. Bracegirdle, I believe, has not been dead above twenty-five years—her age must have been remarkable.—She was well born, and brought on the stage by Mr. Betterton; was, I believe, the original Statira, and in most of Rowe's tragedies: Mrs. Pritchard shewed me her part of Clarissa in the Confederacy, which was written out by Mrs. Bracegirdle's own hand; they were acquainted, and Mrs. Pritchard told me, that venerable actress came there on purpose to see her act Mrs. Oakley in the Jealous
[...]ife during its first run.
The advantages I have mentioned the London theatres flourish with at present are not all confined to what I have asserted as to the theatres, dresses, scenery, and many accommodations; but there is no alteration better, than the stage in these days not being infested with persons behind the scenes in common, but particularly on benefit nights.—As a proof of the force of absurdity I have often wondered, and so have others, why new stage boxes (placed where the useful stage doors used to be) were frequented; but, in short, there are persons always who would prefer such a box, were it much higher on the stage, so few want really to see the piece attentively:—Witness ladies of fashion in London, thirty years ago, sitting at the very backs of the performers.—
[Page 109] When I had the honour at York to wait upon his Royal Highness the late Duke of York, he said,
‘"Wilkinson! where am I to sit?"—I replied, "In the stage box." At which he smiled, and said, "So because I am the Duke of York I must sit in the worst box in the theatre for seeing the play!"’
The theatres formerly were not large enough on such occasions, as frequently, on the benefit of a Woodward, a Mrs. Cibber, a Shuter, and others, was the case; therefore the following advertisement appeared at the bottom of each playbill on any benefit of consequence:—
‘"Part of the pit will be railed into the boxes; and for the better accommodation of the ladies, the stage will be formed into an amphitheatre, where servants will be allowed to keep places."’ When a great house was not sufficiently ascertained (as the perfo
[...]mer ju
[...]ged) for the places taken and the tickets sold, at the bottom of the bill was,
‘"
N. B. Not
[...]y building on the stage."’ What was termed
building on the stage, certainly was the greatest nu
[...]sance that ever prevailed over an entertainment for the elegant and general resort of any metropolis: Yet London has not stood singular, as its rival city, and seat of elegance and fashion, Paris, had formerly the same defects (if we who have not been there may guess) a few years
[Page 110] ago—if credit is to be given to the authority of Mr Foote's Englishman in Paris,
‘"We saw crowds of people going into a house, and comedy pasted over the door: in we trooped with the rest, paid our cash and sat down on the stage. Presentl
[...] they had a dance, and one of the young women, with long hair trailing behind her, stood with her back to a rail just by me.—Ecod! what does me, for nothing in the world but a joke, as I hope for mercy but ties her locks to the rail; so, when it was her turn to figure out, souse she flapped on her ba
[...]k!—'Twas devilish comical!"’
Custom reconciles many things in every stage of life; and though it was the most irksome to a performer that ever could be inflicted as a punishment, the slavery of course was made easy to the persons whose benefit it was that occasioned the confusion, the perquisite being always prevailing: and if Mr. Shuter was proud that the superflux was: compliment to his wonderful abilities, Conscience would gain acquiescence to undertake the labouring oar for a brother or sister performer, as mutual lab urers in the vineyard.
But, my kind reader, suppose an audience behind the curtain up to the clouds, with persons of a menial cast on the ground, beaux and no beaux crowding the only entrance, what a play it must have been whenever Romeo was breaking open
[Page 111] the supposed tomb, which was no more than a screen on those nights set up, and Mrs. Cibber prostrating herself on an old couch, covered with black cloth, as the tomb of the Capulets, with at least (on a great benefit night) two hundred persons behind her, which for
[...]ed the back ground, as an unfrequented hallowed place of
chaplels skulls, which was to convey the idea of where the heads of all her buried ancestors were packed.
I do not think at present any allowance but peals of laughter could attend such a truly ridiculous spectacle:—Yet strange as it would now seem and insu
[...]terable, yet certain it is that I have seen occasionally many plays acted with great applause to such mummery, as to general appearance and conception: A strange proof, and the strongest I think that can be given, how far a mind may be led by attention, custom, and a willingness to be pleased without the least aid of probability; its chief and sole object certainly tended only to create laughter and disgust. Nay, the stage, which was not thirty years ago near so wide as at present, also the stagedoors, (which must be well remembered) and the stage-boxes, before which there were false canvas,
[...]nclosed fronts on each side of two or three seats, on to the lamps, for ladies of distinction, which rendered it next to impossible for those ladies in the stage-boxes to see at all; but still it was the fashion,
[Page 112] and therefore of course charming and delightful.—and whenever a Don Choleric in the Fop's Fortune, or Sir Amorous Varnict, in Woman's a Riddle, or Charles in the Busy Body, tried to find out secrets or plot an escape from a balcony, they always bowed and thrust themselves into the boxes over the stage-door amidst the company, who were greatly disturbed, and obliged to give up their seats.
The actor talked of being alone amongst hundreds; and Sir Amorous hung in a sling, with Mrs. Betty adding to the inconvenience. These were faults indeed, and almost beyond belief, within these forty years, even with all the knowledge of the Bettertons, Cibbers, Booths, and Wilks to have cleared the way, and not have left such passages of the Drama to be corrected; which their own honour and common sense might so easily have removed and expunged from their journals of disgrace: as they must now remain a lasting stigma on their taste a
[...]d judgment.
To add instances of equal absurdity in the country would be superfluou
[...], and afford no wonder at all.—The bod
[...] of course was ill, when the great mind was overpowered with sickness, debility, and disorder.—Mr. Garrick was a doctor, but too late to cure this evil at his setting forth,—better however late than never: but he
only
[Page] remedied the disease for the advantage of the train of actors that followed him, more than for any long enjoyment that it afforded to his own pride and satisfaction as the projector, or as the entire expunger and exterminator of those horrid intrusions on the mind of sensibility: Besides these troubles and inconveniences, not even those of the first theatrical rank could be insured or protected from insult; yet to this real drudgery, mortification, degradation, and humiliation, I have often seen Mr. Garrick and Mrs. Cibber exposed. I can well remember, when I was thirteen years of age, viewing Mr. Quin, on Monday, March 19, 1753, for the benefit of Mr. Ryan, play the character of Falstaff. He was thus announced in the play-bill:
‘"The part of Falstaff WILL be performed by Mr. QUIN"—’Which was his last night of performing.—The Stage was at 5s.—Pit and Boxes all joined together at 5s. There was only one entrance on each side the stage, which was always particularly crowded. First, they sported their own figures to gratify self consequence, and impede and interfere with the performers who had to come on and go off the stage. Affronting the audience was another darling delight—particularly, offending the galleries, and thereby incurring the displeasure
[Page 114] of the gods, who shewed their resentment by dispersing golden showers of oranges and halfeaten p
[...]ppins, to the infinite terror of the ladies of fashion seated in the pit on such public nights, where they were so closely wedged as to preclude all possibility of securing a retreat, or obtaining reliet till the
fina
[...]e, when they all moved from their situation by general consent
The stage spectators were not content with piling on raised seats, till their heads reached the theatrical cloudings; which seats were clo
[...]ed in with dirty worn out scenery, to inclose the painted round from the first wing, the main
entrance being up steps from the middle of the
back scene, but when that amphitheatre was filled, there would be a group of ill dressed lads and p rsons
[...]itting on the stage in front, three or four rows deep, other
[...]e those who sat behind could not have seen, and a riot would have ensued: So in fact a performer on a popular night could not step his foot with safety, least
[...]e either should thereby hurt or offend, or be thrown down amongst scores of idle tipsey apprentices.
The first time Holland acted Hamlet it was for his own benefit, when the stage was in the situation here described. On seeing the Ghost he was much frightened, and felt the sensation and terror usual on that thrilling occasion, and his hat flew
[Page 115]
[...]-
[...]a-mode off his head. An inoffensive woman in a red cloak, (a friend of Holland's) hearing Hamlet complain the air bit shrewdly, and was very
[...]old, with infinite composure crossed the stage, took up the hat, and with the greatest care placed it
[...]st on Hamlet's head, who on the occasion was as much alarmed in
reality as he had just then been
[...]eigning. But the audience burst out into such incessant peals of laughter, that the Ghost moved off without any ceremony, and Hamlet, scorning to be outdone in courtesy, immediately followed with roars of applause: The poor woman stood astonished, which increased the roar, &c. It was some time before the laughter subsided; and they could not resist a repetition (that merry tragedy night) on the re-appearance of the Ghost and Hamlet.
Mr. Quin, aged sixty-five, with the heavy dress of
[...]alstaff, (notwithstanding the impatience of
[...]he audience to see their old acquaintance) was several minutes before he could pass through the numbers that wedged and hemmed him in, he was so cruelly encompassed around.—What must the reader suppose at so barbarous and general a
[...]st
[...]m being not only yielded to, but approved by the p
[...]rformers—Mrs. Cibber arrayed for Juliet in a
[...] white satin dress, with the then indispensable
[...]rge hoop, in all her pomp of woe, thus shaken
[Page 116] and taken prisoner as it were by foes sarcastic an
[...] bar
[...]arous! And in these situations they under went greater aff
[...]ctions of punis
[...]ment and tyran
[...] than
[...]ver the Mrs. Pritchard or Woffington experienced, as an Arpa
[...]ia or a Merope, from a Bajazet or
[...]pliont
[...]s.
Now Mr. Garrick acutely felt this horrid in convenience: for th
[...]u
[...]h the actor might re
[...]o
[...] ci
[...]e th
[...]se offensive and degrading situations for
[...] additional hundre
[...] pounds profit, yet as Mr Garrick on su
[...] occasi
[...]ns had n
[...]t a fellow-
[...]eeling, it was therefore to
him more irksome. Th
[...] pu lic truly knew and felt the inconvenience, b
[...] this was
[...]heerfully submitte
[...] to They, the
[...] considered it as a reward to the
[...]av
[...]urite actor fo
[...] his yearly lab
[...]ur, toil and industry; but it may ea
[...]i y be supp s
[...]d that many lovers of the Dram
[...] dep
[...]ed themselves from seeing a play so disgraceful
[...]y ac
[...] d, on such occas
[...]ons, however well such pe so
[...]s might wish the performers: But at th
[...] same time they consulted their own ease and comfort by absenting themselves on such nights. Ye
[...] such is the force of true good sterling acting, that I do aver, I have seen on very particular occasions, when the stage has not been
too much crowded, a play performed with universal approbation.
Mr. Foote's first night of the Englishman in Paris for Mr. Macklin's benefit, stood the hazard
[Page 117] of the die under the disadvantage of this predicam
[...]nt. Its value was stamped that night, and a great run and establishment it met with the winter follow
[...]ng: Mr. Garrick's Lord Chalkstone the
[...] A pr
[...]of what good acting, humoured with
[...] and candour will produce; and the
[...] when not interrupted on such benefit nights,
[...] in lieu surrounded by a well-bred set of ladies
[...]nd
[...]entlemen, have felt themselves so much at ease
[...] specimens of good-luck, (for it could be
[...] to nothing else) that they have gloried in
[...]he unexpected luxury of comfort and encourage
[...]e
[...]t with which they have been so fortunately re
[...]ved; and they have acted as well as if surro
[...]d
[...]d by their usual slaves and attendants, with the addi
[...]ion of s ;cenery, &c. to have ai
[...]ed their ex
[...]ons.
At the time this bear-garden flourished in our th
[...]tres, whenever on the managers' nights the
[...] overflowed in the winter season; not only their acquaintance, but persons of distinction and
[...] were indiscriminately admitted behind the
[...]n
[...]s, particularly at Drury-Lane on the nights Mr. Garrick acted his first esteemed characters of
[...] Lear, Bayes, &c. but I have often seen
[...] distre
[...]ed on such nights. At Covent-Garden
[...]e same rude custom was prevalent, but not un
[...]e
[...]s on very rare occasions were they so much disturbed
[Page 118] with such visitors. The boxes at that theatre did not so often groan with the overpowering numbers, unless when one of Rich's rareesh
[...]ws was revived; as Harlequin Sorcerer in particular, when the following paragraph was inserted at the bottom of the bill.
"As any obstructions in the movements of the machinery will greatly prejudice the performance of the entertainment, it is hoped that no gentlemen will take it a
[...]ss the being refused admittance behind the scenes."
"Ladies are requested to send their servants by three o'clock."
And if the performers at either house, on a benefit, were moderate in their exactions or hopes from the town, they cheered their well-wishers with placing the following line conspicuous.
‘"N. B. There will not be any building on the stage."’
When Rich, after two or three years' promise and delay, brought forth one of these long-wished-for pantomimes, it was a rage, a madness incredible seized all the Londoners: On such fortunate occurrences Mr. Rich was strongly attached and tenderly tenacious of his harlequin jacket being prophaned or infringed upon; and kept his holy rites and mysteries of serpents, lions, druids, &c. sacred from the inspection of all curious
[Page 119] p
[...]ying inspectors. Nor would he have had his magical sword interrupted, or his fountains and cascades stopped in their munificent flow to the admiring and astonished crowds in front, to have pleased all the nobility in the kingdom. And indeed the difference of performing pantomimes under Mr. Rich's direction and skill was as much superior at that time, as was Mr. Garrick's Hamlet at Drury-Lane compared to old Ryan's at Covent-Garden.
The constant admission behind the scenes is no where more fully or better explained than by Mr. Garrick in the farce of Lethe, acted first at Goodman's Fields; where he makes the Fine Gentleman thus express himself—
Aesop.
How do you spend your evening Sir?
Fine Gent.
I dress in the evening, and go generally behind the scenes of both play-houses; not, you may imagine, to be diverted with the play; but to intrigue and shew myself. I stand upon the stage, talk loud, and stare about, which confounds the actors, and disturbs the audience; upon which the galleries, who hate the appearance of one of us, begin to hiss, and cry, Off, off! while I, undaunted, stamp my foot so—loll with my shoulder thus—take snuff with my right hand and smile scornfully—thus.—This exasperates the savages, and they attack us
[Page 120] with vollies of sucked oranges, and half-eaten pippens.
Aesop.
And you retire?
Fine Gent.
Without doubt, if I am sober; for orange will stain silk, and an apple disfigu
[...]e a feature.
This is a proof that Garrick saw and felt the evil in his younger days; and he at last mustered courage by one bold stroke to put the hatchet to the tree, and thereby annihilate the grievance; and tho' he had undergone these hardships and inconveniences for many years, with the utmost severity and patience, yet he judged it a reformation due to his future name and fame. And I may observe it is not always seen that much-wished-for alterations, even in affairs of the utmost moment, are in general approved or willingly submitted to by the million; with whom no reason or argument will or can convince, or wear off ancient customs and preju
[...]ices.
As Mr. Garrick had three parties to encounter, and each formidab
[...]e, when bundled they were truly alarming. First, to banish the young beaux from behind the scene was judged a daring attempt; (though Mr. Sheridan had proved it was to be done in Dublin, where the behaviour sometimes had been mentioned as
most savage;) as the manager's right to rule, where young men of ton
[Page 121] we
[...]e concerned, was looked upon as a vulgar law, w
[...]h none but the mean spirited obeyed. The
[...]o
[...]r order were attached to it; as going behind the
[...]cenes on benefit nights pleased young clerks
[...]nd others, who liked to see the a
[...]resses nearer
[...]han t
[...]ey were accustomed to; also most of the pr
[...]ipal, and several of the middling class of the per
[...]ormers would not choose to pay Mr. Garrick's ch
[...]rges for their benefit nights, and be abridged o
[...] a 1
[...]l or a 150l. advantage, accruing from the
[...]uilding and general admittance on the stage.
Garrick did not like the obstacles he had to encounter, till a lucky thought burst in upon his
[...] concerning that business. He reflected t
[...]at the theatre was but in an indifferent state; a
[...]d that by enlarging it to the now present fo
[...]m, 1790, it would not only immediately answe
[...] for his pecuniary advantages, but also for a pub
[...] c theatrical property, which he meant in four or
[...]ive years after that to part with to the best
[...] as was the case when Doctor Ford, Mr. Sheridan, and Mr. Linley, were the purchasers, a he grew harassed, and had secured affluence in an o
[...]er abundance. Which makes it lamentable to
[...]sider how short a time he enjoyed a private
[...] for he was snatched from his friends and all h
[...]s w
[...]rldly wealth, in about two years after his
[...]age farewell.
[Page 122] However his projected plan he put in practice; altered the Old Drury-Lane into its present form, which now holds considerably above 100l. in front more than it did thirty years ago: and, after this beneficial alteration was accomplished, by degrees all parties were pleased and convinced of its propriety. The comedians had particular reasons to jump for joy, as they received the same benefit emoluments, without those degrading and irksome situations, which interest had made them submit to. The Covent-Garden managers adopted the same change of measures, and from that time general admittance and stage building, on benefits, has ever been prohibited.
These stage remarks have carried my memory back to recollect that the same evils existed in provincial theatres, and in a worse degree; as those stages (not being formed into an amphitheatre) were without any order or decency, merely rows of forms, one level with the other: for the audience part of those theatres were full large for their usual seasons of acting; yet on particular benefits, London furnished a plea for what might be attempted to render the bad playhouses worse than they were before. And the alterations in this respect, from Mr. Garrick's reformation of abuses in London, I should apprehend
[Page 123] led into the sudden wonderful improvements, enlargements, and aggrandizing of most of our theatres in every principal town and city.
And as to the article of being freed from beaux behind the scenes, a greater blessing could not be wished or more devoutly prayed for; as it cannot be conceived how dreadful in the country that would sometimes prove, (my own situation in my history mentioned at Shrewsbury, is one instance) the hauteur and dignity of such visitants being often so insulting and imperious as not to be described.
The receipts of the theatres, it is true, should be mentioned. In 1750, two hundred pounds before the curtain, at Covent-Garden, was judged an amazing sum. Now, we hear of upwards of four hundred pounds; but the profits of the season I dare pronounce are not equal to Mr. Garrick's reign, the expences are grown so enormous.
At Dublin, in 1757, one hundred and fifty pounds was a great house indeed. In 1763, one hundred and eighty pounds at Crow-Street was ju
[...]ged a wonder: but with the late alterations, Mr. Daly had, in July 179
[...], three hundred and twenty-four pounds; and he mentions hundreds that could not obtain admittance.
[Page 124] Mr. Garrick was certainly formed to obtain favour:—and the public, in general, willingly subscribed to his proposals (though like man and wife they sometimes did not agree):—His coffers were always full, and he was too great an oeconomist
[...]ver to empty them by the hand of extravagance:—he locked on his Majesty's picture with love and reverence, and never parted with his King's likene
[...]s but with the greatest relu ance.—The expences of the house were not then so great as at present; for when I had a benefit at Covent Garden, 1760, I only paid 60l.; now I believe performers pay 120l.; and if Mrs. Jordan acts on that benefit, it is ten guineas more.
It is worthy remark, that with all the boasted improvements, certainly the goings out are immense in proportion to the comings in; and where there was one place open against the theatres then, now there are double—such as various new-established concerts at Hanover-Square,
[...]ottenham-Court, Pantheon, besides Astley's, the Circus, &c. therefore, with the London managers being at double the expence of their predecessors, I can never coincide with the opinions started by dissatisfied performers, or as o
[...]ten hinted at in the news papers. But let us ask, is there a superfluity of principal actors? Certainly no. Are the managers in great
[Page 125] circumstances? Certainly no. One play got up now will cost more than three would, fifty years ago. I have heard great arguments of what encouragement would be given by a third theatre instead of the present, termed monopoly. Were it possible to create three industrious Mr. Sheridans to write for the stage, something might be said and done, but I fear not otherwise; and if people in general find their plays not all perfection with two companies, I cannot conceive that, divided into three, the
[...] would be acted better—Nay, is not Mr. Harris reduced (I say reduced, or he certainly w
[...]uld not do it) to cut plays into farces, and give farces instead of plays, and sometimes all farce and no play, with different
boxers, Mendoza and Humphreys, on the stage, for the entertainment of the first audience in the world? in which he has
[...]ulfilled Garrick's prophecy; for the theatre royal at Covent Garden gives a dish of all sorts: And were they twenty years since to have seen
[...] medley play-bills at a third theatre, or from York or Edinburgh, such stuff would have served the whole green-room in London for a week's laugh at the country strollers' expence:—B
[...]si
[...]es, such productions, if to be tolerated and approved at all, should certainly be permitted only
[...] a summer theatre, when the wine and the wea
[...]her is hot.
[Page 126]GARRICK's PROPHECY, 1747.
Perhaps, for who can guess the effects of chance?
Here Hunt may box, and Mahomet may dance.
Ah! let not censure term our fate our choice,
The stage but echoes back the public voice.
As to gentlemen writers of genius being excluded from having their works produced, I cannot think the injustice alledged is by any means founded on truth or equit
[...]; for I never can believe, even tho' many good plays were to be sunk in oblivion, but that some of them would again visit the world in print, to gratify the author's pride and reputation, and by such means prove how indifferent managers were to merit:—I do not mean to insinuate that there are not good authors at present capable of affording the highest and most improving additions to the stage catalogue; I only wish to be understood, that the stage is not overstocked with such offers; and it is too probable that authors may have occasion perhaps to complain of indifferent and improper treatment, as a London manager is not, like the Pope, a ways infallible. I am only speaking by guess, not being a quainted with the facts. It is certain the new pieces brought out, in a general
[Page 127] way, do not please; and as money is always welcome, I cannot think any projector existing would be at great expence to produce a piece that creates confusion in the theatre, damnation to the author, a
[...]d if persisted in, he excludes the possibility of crowded houses, besides being well abused in every public print into the bargain. I cannot t
[...]ink Mr. Harris would lavish money on the Prophetess if he had as good a new opera to produce as the Duenna; (the very run of such a piece as the latter would supply him for half the seas n) or that Mr. Kemble would produce a comedy, only acted three nights, if he had been presented with one equal to the School for Scandal. And, indeed, how few plays of late seasons reach the ninth night! What a quantity of plays, farces, and pantomimes, do the three theatres exhibit in the course of the year, and how few succeed! What perpetual labour and anxiety mu
[...]t the performers undergo, and all end in vexation of spirit,—all for nothing—some few pieces excepted, which need not be enumerated; as those that live, and are the oftenest acted, prove their public estimation. One great fault has crept into the benefit bills in London, filling them up with such a quantity of interludes, &c.—I am sorry to observe Mr. Garrick was the introducer—he led
[Page 128] the way to what has grown to an enormous height, but I am certain he never meant the ill effects it has established. But his Farmer's Return, Linco's Travels, &c. wrote as interludes, have considerably lessened the dignity of the drama. It was the practice at my own theatres: I at first, on benefit nights, insisted on all interludes being done as afterludes, but nothing would do, so as to keep the play-bills
[...]it to be seen, they were so loaded with trumpe
[...]y: so for some years past I have not had any preludes, interludes, or afterludes at all. Mr. Kemble wished, on his night in August 1788, at York, to introduce the Toy Shop as an interlude, (which he had formerly done, and which gave great satisfaction on account of his excellent performance of the Master); but unless he took it as a farce I was compelled not to suffer it, on account of my established law, which Mr. Kemble, at the head of the profession, breaking through, would have set aside
[...]uc
[...] law by the example from his high authority and judgment. I remember his reply was,
‘"That the act was good, it kept in force; but," added he jokingly, "Mr. Wilkinson, the first benefit bi
[...] I shall
[...]ee o
[...] your own night I shall find it full of interludes!"’ However, it has not happened yet, and I dare say never will to any benefit of mine.
[Page 129] London opinion, though its stamp passes current in provincial towns as to first-rate performers, yet has so fallen in reputation as to pieces, that it is not a recommendation in advertising a new play, but the contrary; and many are never attempted: So that there is no wish to see a new production unless much spoken of, and it has fortunately had a very considerable run; but even that was not always secure its footing. I have great obligations to acknowledge to the School for Scandal, the Poor Soldier, and the Farmer, of modern date.
As I have given an account of the amazing alterations as to the manners practised in the theatres, not much longer ago than our
[...] prime, yet so quick is the transition, that a few only remain now who can affirm or contradict what I have inserted: A proof how we are
[...]eceived by the apparent slowness of the running sand in the hour-glass, which in reality
[...] astonishing rapidity, and wafts us dreaming from life to
dusty death! This is verified,
[...] in the course of these last forty years, few are left to mock their own grinning—tho' Mr. Macklin stands firm, like the venerable old oak that shades the forest—and in the following Tablet it affects me, as if it were the history of a theatrical cathedral which
[Page 130] gives an account of the departed dead, or a transient view of the acter's tombs and monuments.
Now good gentleman, or lady, I will proceed, and introduce the
Actor's Tablet.
It is a tale told by an idiot,
Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
THIS Repository or Journal, is offered not only to young stage candidates, but at the same time to the attention of all amateurs of the Drama; as it will be a guide, and a more regular information to them, and indeed to the public in general, than any thing of the kind yet attempted—though I fear presented in a bungling manner: Still this account of old stagers must be in some degree venerable, as an old coin is in higher esteem with antiquarians than the new, though of less intrinsic worth.—I wish it had the advantage of a better head, but that is past praying for; yet it will be a kind of guide, and convey information by no means publicly known, wherein the reader will find almost an exact list of every theatrical event, with the date of most of the new or revived plays and farces produced—the performers' engagements and
[Page 131] desertions to and from Ireland to the London Theatres—their re-engagements, and the account of singers, dancers, burlettas, incidents, &c. from the year 1747, to the conclusion of 1757.
Mr. Garrick's establishment, as joint manager with Mr. Lacey, was in 1747, and few persons who have been readers of theatrical anecdotes have y
[...]t, since the time of Colley Cibber, had any accurate or regular account of those years more than in a general view, though there certainly has been able writers and men of genius who have treated on more important theatrical subjects.
I will here give a list of the companies at Drury-Lane and Covent-Garden in 1747, that the observant reader, unprejudiced, may see what a number of established actors were at that period in one company, and whether there are the same number of
equal eminence to be called so at present at either Theatre.
The modern critic and actor will undoubtedly admit that every fifty years will make havock and considerable alteration, and what is approved and applauded now, 1790, may not be sanctioned in 184
[...].—When Mr. Garrick undertook the mana
[...]ement, the company collected, was perhaps, take it for all in all, the most powerful ever mustered in the present century.
[Page 132] I will first give as correct a list as I can recollect, then present the cast of two or three plays, and then instance the cast of the same plays in 1789; by which means the unprejudiced reflector may draw a fair conclusion; and perhaps allow it not quite improbable but the play so acted might have been seen with equal pleasure then as now.
DRURY-LANE THEATRE, 1747-8.
-
MEN.
- Messrs. Garrick, Barry, Delane, Macklin, Sparks, Berry, Yates, Havard, Winstone, W. Mills, Arthur, Taswell, Neale, Mills, Sowden, Lowe, &c.
-
WOMEN.
- Mrs. Cibber, Pritchard, Woffington, Clive, Macklin, Hippesley, (Mrs. Green) Minors, Elmy, Pitt, (now Mrs. Pitt of Covent-Garden) Bennet, Cross, &c.
DRURY-LANE, 1747.
JANE SHORE.
-
Hastings, Mr. GARRICK.
-
Shore, Mr. BARRY.
-
Glo'ster, Mr. BERRY.
-
[Page 133]
Alicia, Mrs. CIBBER.
-
Jane Shore, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
N. B. Surely this play was at least tolerably acted.
DRURY-LANE, 1789.
JANE SHORE.
-
Hastings, Mr. KEMBLE.
-
Shore, Mr. BENSLEY.
-
Glo'ster, Mr. J. AICKIN.
-
Alicia, Mrs. WARD.
-
Jane Shore, Mrs. SIDDONS.
DRURY-LANE, 1747.
OTHELLO.
-
Othello, Mr. BARRY.
-
Roderigo, Mr. YATES.
-
Iago, Mr. GARRICK.
-
Emilia, Mrs. PRITCHARD.
-
Desdemona, Mrs. CIBBER.
DRURY-LANE, 1789.
OTHELLO.
-
Othello, Mr. KEMBLE.
-
Iago, Mr. BENSLEY.
-
[Page 134]
Roderigo, Mr. DODD.
-
Emilia, Mrs. WARD.
-
Desdemona, Mrs. SIDDONS.
Of the foregoing casts the reader will form an impartial judgment.
DRURY-LANE, 1747.
A set of very capital dancers was this year at Drury-Lane:—Mr. Cooke, Monsieur Grandchamps, Madam Auretti, (in the serious style) in great estimation, and Madamoiselle Janeton Auretti.
A favorite pantomime dance was served up often, called the Savoyard Travellers.
Madame Auretti continued only the season following, when her benefit was commanded by his Majesty George the Second.—Play, the Stratagem.—Mr. Garrick acted Archer.—After which she retired from the stage, and Mr. Cooke went over to Covent-Garden the season following.
The FOUNDLING, by Mr. Moore, was first acted in February, 1748.
-
Young Belmont, Mr. GARRICK.
-
Sir Charles Raymond, Mr. BARRY.
-
[Page 135]
Sir Roger Belmont, Mr. YATES.
-
Villiard, Mr. SPARKS.
-
Colonel Raymond, Mr. HAVARD.
-
Faddle, Mr. MACKLIN.
-
Rossetta, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
-
Fidelia, Mrs. CIBBER.
ALBUMAZER was revived in 1747, by Mr. Garrick, and did not succeed.—From which play the circumstance of the robbery is evidently stolen, and converted into Tony Lumpkin's principal scene of Dr. Goldsmith's very entertaining Comedy of "She Stoops to Conquer."
COVENT-GARDEN, 1747.
The Company was very weak indeed.—Mr. Rich, more from laziness than lack of genius, had not any pantomime in force, but the then very stale one of Merlin's Cave, or Harlequin Skeleton. They played in general only three or four times in the week in January, and often dismissed even in the month of February; for Garrick had swept most of the actors of merit from Covent-Garden to Drury-Lane, for his triumphal entry as manager—Quin had retired to Bath in disgust at Garrick's unparalleled success, and
[...]here remained with Mr. Rich only as follows:
[Page 136]
-
MEN.
- Messrs. Giffard, Beard, Ryan, Theophilus Cibber, Gibson, Collins, Bridgewater, James, Anderson, Paget, Padick, Marten, Bridges, Dunstall, Lalauze, Bencraft, Storer, Stopelear, Rosco, Oates, Leveridge, Lunn, (Mr. Rich as the Harlequin, who always went by that name in the bills) with Mr. Foote as an Auxiliary.
-
WOMEN.
- Mrs. Giffard, Horton, Storer, Vincent, Young, Falkner, Bland, (late Mrs. Hamilton) Morrison, Copin, Dunstall, Ferguson, Allen, Mullart.—
Dancers, Villeneuve, Desse, &c.
COVENT-GARDEN, 1747.
THE BUSY BODY.
-
Marplot, Mr. CIBBER.
-
Sir George Airy, Mr. RYAN.
-
Charles, Mr. GIBSON.
-
Sir Francis Gripe, Mr. COLLINS.
-
Sir Jealous Traffic, Mr. BRIDGES.
-
Whisper, Mr. JAMES.
-
Isabinda, Mrs. HALE.
-
Patch, Mrs. BLAND.
-
Miranda, Mrs. GIFFARD.
After which Mr. FOOTE gave TEA.
[Page 137]The RELAPSE.
-
Lord Foppington, Mr. CIBBER.
-
Loveless, Mr. RYAN.
-
Worthy, Mr. RIDOUT.
-
Lory, Mr. JAMES.
-
Syringe, Mr. COLLINS.
-
Amanda, Mrs. HALE.
-
Berinthia, Mrs. HORTON.
-
Miss Hoyden, Mrs. STORER.
-
Nurse, Mrs. JAMES.
With TEA.
LOVE MAKES A MAN.
-
Carlos, Mr. GIFFARD.
-
Clodio, Mr. CIBBER.
-
Duart, Mr. RYAN.
-
Charino, Mr. DUNSTALL.
-
Antonio, Mr. COLLINS.
-
Sancho, Mr. CUSHING.
-
Louisa, Mrs. HORTON.
-
Angelina, Mrs. HALE.
-
Elvira, Mrs. GIFFARD.
Plays so acted at Bath or York, now, would not be deemed more than decent.
The BEGGAR'S OPERA was repeated seveveral nights, and drew more money than any
[Page 138] other play to the deserted house of Covent-Garden at that time.
-
Macheath, Mr. BEARD.
-
Lockit, Mr. DUNSTALL.
-
Filch, Mr. CUSHING.
-
Peachum, Mr. ROSCO.
-
Polly, Mrs. STORER.
-
Mrs. Peachum and Diana Trapes, Mrs. DUNSTALL.
-
Jenny Diver, Miss ALLEN.
-
Lucy, Mrs. VINCENT.
Mr. Rich having been so negligent in his unrivalled pantomime department, was in consequence little prepared for unfortunate events from the loss of Mr. Garrick; Mr. Quin, Mrs. Pritchard, Mrs. Cibber, Mr. Woodward, (who went to Ireland) and others of eminence, having the preceding year left him, Covent-Garden remained in an abject ruined state.
WOMAN's A RIDDLE, was that season revived.
-
Courtall, Mr. GIFFARD.
-
Colonel Manly, Mr. RIDOUT.
-
Sir Amorous Vainwit, Mr. CIBBER.
-
Aspin, Mr. COLLINS.
-
Vulture, Mr. BRIDGES.
-
Miranda, Mrs. GIFFARD.
-
[Page 139]
Clarinda, Miss COPIN.
-
Necessary, Mrs. BLAND.
-
Lady Outside, Mrs. HORTON.
(N. B. Mrs. Bland went to Ireland, and on
[...]r return, from Mrs. Necessary she sustained the
[...] cast several years at Covent-Garden as Mrs. Hamilton.)
The season was so bad, that in February the benefits commenced; and late in March 1748, Mr. Rich brought forward APOLLO and DAPHNE, which drew good houses.—Harlequin, Mr. PHILLIPS, (who supplied that character as Mr. Rich's substitute, when he did not choose to perform, as Mr. Lun.) The scene of the sun rising had a fine effect; and I am astonished so superb a constructed piece of machinery is not made use of now at Covent-Garden, as introductory to some new pantomime: For the scene with Morpheus, Mystery, and Slumber, preparatory to the appearance of the sun in its meridian had a wonderful effect, and might be displayed in any other pantomime, and be a good opening one: Also that of Daphne's being turned into a tree by the pursuit of Apollo, from the assenting nod of Silenus, the rising Dome, the Lion in Perseus, the Snake, &c. would make good incidents.
[Page 140] In the Spring 1748, was a remarkable an
[...] dreadful fire in Cornhill, when Mr. Quin came purposely from Bath, and acted his favourite character of Cato, at Covent-Garden theatre, for the benefit of the poor sufferers, by that dreadful conflagration.
Drury-Lane season 1748-9, Mr. Macklin and wife quitted Drury-Lane for Ireland. Woodward returned to the old house from Dublin, and soon gr
[...]w into amazing popularity. This year was revived
ROMEO and JULIET.
-
Romeo, Mr. BARRY.
-
Mercutio, Mr. WOODWARD.
The play had a remarkable run. (Mr. Victor has not taken notice of this circumstance; for the strength of that play was the foundation for the desertion of Mr. Barry, in the year 1750, with Mrs. Cibber.)
Irene, by Doctor Johnson, was acted that season. Also Lethe, which was inimitably performed; not a part but was truly excellent. Merop
[...] was acted that year. Garrick looked and acte
[...] like an angel (as the ladies said) the part o Eumenes.
Mr. Lee and Mr. Palmer, promising actor
[...] were introduced that season.
[Page 141] The same year the Emperor of the Moon, written by Mrs. Behn, was revived at Drury-lane as a second piece.—Harlequin was tossed in a
[...]lanket with a good effect—he had two long slips
[...]y which he held—they were imperceptible to the a
[...] ience: So that Harlequin seemed to the eye
[...] violently tumbled; and the galleries, who
[...] the appearance of mischief, were vastly
[...].
That season Mr. King made his first attempt, as
[...] candidate, in the Herald in King Lear; his
[...] was not paid any attention to by Mr. Gar
[...]ck; he was, as is theatrically termed, laid up
[...] the shelf that year, but he was engaged for the
[...] season at Bristol; where Mr. Whitehead,
[...]e Poet Laureat, and Mrs. Pritchard, saw
[...] play the character of Romeo with great ap
[...]ause. He returned to London the winter sea
[...], and was astonished, without any notice
[...] given him, to see his name in large let
[...]s advertised for George Barnwell,—Millwood,
[...]rs.
[...]ritchard—He also played Valerius, in Mr.
[...]h
[...]tehead's Tragedy of the Roman Father—
[...]e continued there till the end of the season 1749,
[...] the autumn went over to Ireland, and ac
[...]ed a very liberal offer from Mr. Sheridan.—
[...] Dublin he continued till the second year after
[...]r. Woodward's desertion from Drury Lane, to
[...]w-street Theatre, in Dublin.
[Page 142] Mr. King returned to fill up Mr. Woodward
[...] department, and made his first appearance early i
[...] October 1759, in the character of Tom, in th
[...] Conscious Lovers: his second part was Atall, an
[...] his third Sir Amorous Vainwit.—In the characte of Brass, Churchill allowed him great merit.
The Play, Friendship in Fashion, was attempte
[...] to be played in the spring 1749—Mr. Woodwar
[...] and Mrs. Clive were to sustain the principal characters.—Be it noticed, Dame Clive was no blessed with beauty—though of infinite talents; ye she unfortunately in that Comedy was ideally ravished twice or thrice before the fourth act ended, whic
[...] the audience very properly judged to be too muc
[...] for that lady's feelings; and not knowing wha
[...] might truly happen in the fifth, they consequentl
[...] put a violent and final stop to all farther indecen
[...] proceedings.
The French ambassador was at the play, an
[...] seemed to enjoy John Bull engaged in a riot: Bu
[...] at last violation was offered to the King's arms ove
[...] the front box, at which he seemed much alarme
[...] at the imagined sacrilege, and precipitately retire
[...] from the theatre—What an alteration in th
[...] conduct of Frenchmen in forty years!
My true respect, duty, and veneration to hi
[...] Majesty, leads me to hope that no similar acciden
[...]
[Page 143] will ever occur at York, on any occasion; as I can b
[...]ast the best finished, and most elegant
royal arms, for neatness and perfection, as to workmanship, of any theatre in his Majesty's dominions.—All surpri
[...]e at this assertion will cease in Yorkshire, when I anounce they were executed by those ingenious and well-known artists, the deserving brothers, John and Samuel Fisher, of York.
COVENT-GARDEN, 1748-9.
Several theatrical alterations took place—Mr. Rich was roused from his slumber—Mr. Quin returned to the stage; and Mr. Delane, Mr. Sparks, Mr. Arthur, Mrs. Woffington, and Miss Pitt were engaged from Drury-Lane; also Miss Bellamy, (by Mr. Victor and others falsely related to have been drawn from her lucrative and splendid s tuation in Dublin, by Garrick) was actually
[...]ngaged by Mr. Rich.
Mrs. Bellamy's first appearance was in Belvi
[...]ra; which proves Mr. Victor's account of Covent Garden very erroneous.—
‘"Mr. Garrick, (says Mr. Victor and Mr. Hitchcock) from the many opportunities he had of seeing Miss Bellamy's abilities, when they performed together in
[Page 144] Dublin, 1746, was too well convinced of her merit, not to use every means to engage her.—Accordingly he made her proposals, which she immediately accepted; and she returned to London, where she remained some years in high estimation."’
That Mrs. Bellamy remained for some time in high estimation is well known—but her first appearance, after her departure from Dublin, was not at Mr. Garrick's theatre, but at Covent-garden, as before mentioned: a true and particular account of which, with Mr. Garrick's
refusal to engage her, is given in her Memoirs.
Mrs. Ward was also engaged—she was a handsome woman, and a good actress.
Coriolanus, by Thompson, was produced that season; in which Mr. Quin, Mr. Ryan, Mr. Delane, Mr. Sparks, Mr. Ridout, Mrs. Bellamy, and Mrs. Wo
[...]ington acted.
Perseus and Andromeda was also produced, and brought several houses—so that Mr. Rich then had three pantomimes on the stocks: the Skeleton, Apollo and Daphne and Perseus. The business of the
petit maitre in the last mentioned was inimitably done by Mr. Lalmaze; palpably stolen by Mr. Woodward, and placed in Queen Mab, at Drury Lane, in the year 1750. The scene of the
[Page 145] Dragon, and Perseus on his flying horse, with Andromeda chained to the rock, the rising Dome, and the Lion, were the principal parts of that entertainment; and all done well, as was all pantomime business under the direction of Mr. Rich.
Mr. Arthur did the clown in that pantomime, in which department he was unrivalled; and well understood all the
mechanical parts of those kind of productions.—Mr. Lowe was Perseus; Mr. Miles, Harlequin; Miss Falkener, Andromeda.—Mr. Quin's Falstaff, and several of his characters drew great audiences—Mrs. Bellamy was much esteemed—Mrs. Woffington was attractive in Sir Harry Wildair, &c.—and though Drury-Lane was fashionable, yet Covent-Garden was respectable as to entertainment, and in general well attended.
JANE SHORE was thus cast.
-
Glo'ster, Mr. QUIN.
-
Hastings, Mr. DELANE.
-
Dumont, Mr. RYAN.
-
Alicia, Miss BELLAMY.
-
Jane Shore, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
The entertainments of the theatre were in
[...]sed by the addition of two excellent dancers,
[Page 146] Mr. Cooke, and Miss Hilliard.—A Scotch danc
[...] was so pleasing, that it continued not only tha
[...] but three or four seasons after.
This was the year of the quart-bottle conjuror, at the Hay-market; where the joke drew such
[...] concourse at the expence of John Bull.—
[...] turned out advantageous to the proprietor of Covent-Garden, as at the latter part of that season, Harlequin, to the amazement of crowded audiences, not only went into the quart bottle, but after that Don Jumpedo jumped down his own throat.—These exploits were performed by Harlequin Phillips.
The Provoked Wife was acted with approbation that season at Covent-garden; for though Garrick was then performing Sir John Brute, yet there were many obstinate critics of opinion, that the character was better conducted by Mr. Quin. Indeed there cannot be any one part acted more differently than that character was by Mr. Garrick and Mr. Quin Yet had the author been then living I may venture to pronounce he would have allowed both right. Even the petticoat scene was as opposite in dress and manner as Othello and Desdemona. Yet had Mr. Quin attempted Garrick'
[...] mode, or Garrick Quin's, each would have certainly failed.
[Page 147] The play was thus cast at Covent-Garden:
-
Brute, Mr. QUIN.
-
Heartfree, Mr. RYAN.
-
Constant, Mr. RIDOUT.
-
Razor, Mr. ANDERSON.
-
Colonel Bully, Mr. LOWE.
-
Taylor, Mr. COLLINS.
-
Belinda, Mrs. HALE.
-
Mademoiselle, Miss MORRISON.
(Who played it inimitably.)
-
Lady Fanciful, Miss BELLAMY.
-
Lady Brute, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
In the spring 1749, Cato was acted (by order of
[...]is Royal Highness Frederick Prince of Wales) by the younger branches of the Royal Family:—His present Majesty spoke the prologue at Leicester-House on the occasion. The conducting of the performance was entirely under the direction of Mr. Quin. His present Majesty's father was a great advo
[...]ate for the stage, and a warm patron of Mr. Quin's: Indeed his attachment was such, that Quin's salary was equal to a thousand pounds his
[...]t season 1750. One political reason was, that a
[...] the commands of his Royal Highness (unless on so
[...]e very particular occasion) Covent Garden
[Page 148] theatre was honoured with, and chiefly out o
[...] compliment to Mr. Quin.
The Emperor of the Moon, wrote by Mrs. Behn, was revived at Covent Garden as a first piece, and at some expence. A tapestry scene of figures was very well executed—Doctor Bellardo, by Mr. Sparks; Harlequin, Mr. Cushing; Scaramouch, Mr. Dunstall:—Miss Bellamy, Mrs. Woffington, and Mrs. Ward were in it, but the piece did not succeed; and Harlequin is the fiddle of the piece, Mr. Woodward must have been excellent, and Mr. Cushing contemptible. I recollect seeing it as a farce, but very wretchedly supported as to decorations, scenery, &c. in Dublin, 1758, where Mr. King was truly whimsical in Harlequin.
The following comedies were thus cast, and acted with success at Covent Garden that season.
CONSTANT COUPLE.
-
Sir Harry Wildair, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
-
Standard, Mr. DELANE.
-
Vizard, Mr. RIDOUT.
-
Beau Clincher, Mr. CIBBER.
-
Young Clincher, Mr. COLLINS.
-
Smuggler, Mr. ARTHUR.
-
Tom Errand, Mr. BENCRAFT.
-
[Page 149]
Angelica, Miss COPIN.
-
Lady Darling, Mrs. COPIN.
-
Parly, Mrs. DUNSTALL.
-
Lady Lovewell, Mrs. WARD.
CARELESS HUSBAND.
-
Lord Foppington, Mr. CIBBER.
-
Sir Charles Easy, Mr. RYAN.
-
Lord Morelove, Mr. DELANE.
-
Lady Easy, Mrs. WARD.
-
Edging, Mrs. RIDOUT.
-
Lady Graveairs, Mrs. HALE.
-
Lady Betty Modish, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
The season concluded with the Constant Couple, and Apollo and Daphne.
DRURY LANE, 1749-50.
Mrs. Cibber did not play. That season Mr. Garrick (shameful to relate) encouraged Mrs. Ward to break articles with Mr Rich, which she was the easier tempted to do, as Miss Bellamy was in possession of most of the characters she wished to play. Edward the Black Prince was acted that season—Barry gained great ground and honour in Ribemont. Master Mattocks appeared that year in the Chaplet, a very pretty entertainment at that time.—Musical pieces then
[Page 150] (King Arthur and the Tempest excepted) were, on our English stage, confined to the common ballad farces.—Mr. Beard was, as a vocal performer, the best actor of SONGS I ever remember—Miss Norris was a charming singer—and Pastora cannot be known but by those who had the pleasure of seeing Mrs. Clive.
Mrs. Cibber having withdrawn was a severe stroke upon the Drury Lane tragedies, Mrs. Ward being but a cold and inanimate substitute; and it fell heavier on Mr. Barry's plays than Mr. Garrick's, as Lear, Macbeth, Richard, with Mrs. Pritchard's Lady Macbeth, &c. would do without Mrs. Cibber; but Castalio, Romeo, Varanes, &c. were ruined without her helping hand: Indeed Barry refused acting Romeo with Mrs. Ward. The Roman Father was brought out that season, where Barry in Publius by no means could appear as an actor (though it shewed his fine figure) in competition with Garrick. Gil Blas was produced that year and damned, and some other pieces, but none of note. Rich not having any thing new, and only repeating the old plays, Lady Jane Gray excepted and the pantomime of the Fair, Drury Lane, unless on particular nights, bore the beil. Garrick's comedy characters, as well as his tragedy, (such as Ranger, Benedick,
[Page 151] Archer, Bayes, Lear, Hamlet, &c.) were sure cards, and all those plays were thoroughly well acted.
COVENT GARDEN, 1749-50.
The company much the same as the year before, unless the loss of Mr. Theophilus Cibber: Mr. Dyer from Ireland was his substitute, a very good actor in sprightly comedy; not striking as to abilities, but sure to please, and never to offend. He played several parts of Mr. Garrick's, such as Ranger, &c. and in Tom was truly excellent;—that was his first part at Covent. Garden. Mr. Dyer's figure was very neat, not unlike that of Mr. Lewis's of Covent Garden; but it would be paying Mr. Lewis a very bad complement to draw a comparison in any other respect, as that gentleman's vivacity, neatness, spirit, and energy of expression, is so superior as to cast Mr. Dyer's abilities at a distance, were he now living; as wherever Mr. Lewis's Vapid, Twineall, Mercutio, &c. are ment oned, which he supports with a peculiar whim and vivacity, he by that means sends hundreds joyful to their respective homes: In truth he needs no eulogium, as the truest praise is deservedly thus, that whether Mr. Lewis had pleased the audience in 1700, 1790, or in 1810, he would have an equal claim to the generosity, protection,
[Page 152] and approbation of a sensible, generous, and discerning public.
Garrick's reasoning in verse will explain that idea when perhaps I should only perplex—
Your children cannot feel what you have known,
They'll boast of Quins and Cibbers of their own;
The greatest glory of our happy few
Is to be felt, and be approv'd by you.
Lady Jane Gray was revived by command of his Royal Highness Frederick Prince of Wales, as a second performance by the Royal Family, under the direction of Mr. Quin, at Leicester House. It added much to Mrs. Woffington's reputation. The parts were thus disposed of:—
-
Pembroke, Mr. DELANE,
-
Northumberland, Mr. SPARKS.
-
Suffolk, Mr RIDOUT.
-
Gardiner, Mr. QUIN.
-
Duchess of Suffolk, Mrs. HORTON.
-
Lady Jane Gray, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
The above play was performed a number of nights. The line of—
I hold no speech with hereticks and traitors,
used to strike my young imagination so forcibly at ten years old, that I remember it
perfectly to this very minute.
[Page 153] That year Mr. Rich produced a little sketch of a pantomime called the Fair, in which Mr. Lun (Rich) did Harlequin. Lun had been the name of the famous man who represented Harlequin at Paris; therefore whenever Mr. Rich appeared as Harlequin, the name of Lun was inserted in the bil
[...]s. Mr. Garrick paid a compliment to Mr. Rich's Harlequin in the following lines:—
But why a speaking Harlequin? 'tis wrong,
The wits will say, to give the fool a tongue!
When LUN appear'd with matchless art and whim,
He gave the pow'r of speech to ev'ry limb;
Tho' mask'd, and mute, convey'd his quick intent▪
And told in frolic gestures all he meant—
But now the motley coat and sword of wood
Requires a tongue to make them understood.
The famous Turk on the wire was at that time introduced by Mr. Rich in the pantomime of the Fair; and indeed that was the sole motive of his patching up that entertainment. Mr. Quin and Mrs. Woffington would not play during the representation of that piece, as they thought it degrading to the theatre to have wire-dancers, &c. but as it did not interfere with their plays, and they were paid, and as that trifle brought several good houses, by which means they would have appeared to advantage, they certainly acted wrong
[Page 154] in duty to the manager, the public, and their own intere
[...]t:—The public were the only proper judges to decide on the propriety or impropriety; and if THEY suffered the Grand Turk to exhibit, they should have acquiesced and not withdrawn and pointed out the fault; which might have worked up a fury against the theatre that would have fallen upon themselves.
Romeo and Juliet was revived in the interim between Quin and Woffington's playing—Romeo, Mr. Lee; Juliet, Miss Bellamy. Mr. Lee had broke his article and fled to Covent Garden.—Mr. Lee's very peculiar oddity of temper prevented him ever rising to any fixed public estimation.
DRURY LANE, 1750-1.
Miss Bellamy was engaged from Covent Garden, and trained as the Juliet—Woodward was the Mercutio. Mr. Garrick divided the opinion of the town as to his performance in Romeo—Mr. Rich's procession was very grand, and in those spectacles he never had been equalled, nor can be surpassed; but Garrick did not promise any procession or dirge in his bills, tho' they gave a striking effect and an agreeable surprise.—Mr. Woodward assisted Mr. Garrick with Queen Mab
[Page 155] that season, which eased Garrick much; and the comedies were so well sustained, where Mr. Woodward, Mr. Yates, Mr. Taswell, Mrs. Pritchard, and Mrs. Clive, were capital, that the fairy wand sailed with the old Drury hulk before the wind. A whimsical print was then produced, called the Steel Yards, in in which were placed Quin, Barry, Woffington, and Cibber; and in opposition Woodward and Queen Mab, which exultingly bore down all the greater load with the small. This season Mr. Shuter was coming forward greatly as a low comedian at Drury Lane—also Mr. Palmer in the gentlemen in comedy, who afterwards sustained a very consid
[...]rable cast of the celebrated Mr. Wilkes's comedy-gentlemen, as Sir George Airy, &c.—He some years afterwards married Miss Pritchard.
COVENT GARDEN, 1750-1.
Barry deserted to Covent Garden—Mrs. Cibber also, after a year's retirement, engaged at the same theatre—Macklin and wife came from Dub
[...] (also Mrs. Elmy) to that theatre—Quin and Woffington remained—Consequently Garrick f
[...]und the coalition so strong, that he wished to bri
[...] over Quin to his interest; but Quin having had the command at Covent Garden, did not
[...]sh to be controuled by Mr. Garrick; he therefore
[Page 156] stuck to his old master, Rich, but not without stipulating for one thousand pounds a year—the greatest salary ever then known to be complied with, or I believe since, except in the case of Mrs. Billington.
This collected body of Imperial forces might strike the boldest with dismay.—The whole conversation was, that Garrick would be ruined by such a powerful opposition; but they did not, or would not, comprehend that Garrick was really, as he expressed himself—
Arm'd cap-a-pee in self-sufficient merit.
His Macbeth, Lear, Hamlet, Richard, Bayes, &c. stood alone, nor, as he foretold, did his Lear or Hamlet lose their force:—Besides, he had industry, and his troops were under excellent discipline:—Woodward assisted him too in a material point—that of attacking Rich in his deemed invulnerable part—the harlequin department:—for tho' Rich despised actors, he for once in his life, in this season, relied on them, and had nothing to produce as to novelty in the pantomime way of any kind whatever.—Added to that, the performers at Covent Garden were not under any controul: they despised their master—he despised them—and they heartily hated each other.—Quin disliked Barry,
[Page 157] and Barry Quin—and Mrs. Cibber and Mrs. Woffington held each other in the highest contempt.—Mrs. Cibber, when called upon by the manager, was often feignedly or really ill; and though Mrs. Woffington was ever ready for any undertaking for the general welfare, yet that year her pride was touched and irritated so much, that by a refusal one night a great riot ensued, as before mentioned in Vol. III.
Quin and Barry were also averse to assist each other.—King John was called to rehearsal, and Barry was not there. Quin would not attend the next rehearsal; and what Barry settled, Quin was sure, when he came, to contradict.
The House opened that season September 24th, with the MISER.
-
Miser, Mr. MACKLIN.
-
Lappet, Mrs. MACKLIN.
Second Play was the BUSY BODY.
-
Marplot, Mr. MACKLIN.
-
Patch, Mrs. MACKLIN.
And on Friday, October 3, was the commencement of the scene of battle between the two houses with the run of Romeo and Juliet.
- Romeo, Mr. BARRY.—Juliet, Mrs. CIBBER.
[Page 158] KING JOHN was revived that season thus:
-
King John, Mr. QUIN.
-
King of France, Mr. RYAN.
-
Hubert, Mr. BRIDGEWATER.
-
Pandolph, Mr. SPARKS.
-
Dauphin, Mr. LACEY.
-
Prince Arthur, Miss MULLART.
-
Bastard, Mr. BARRY.
-
Queen Ellinor, Mrs. ELMY.
-
Constance, Mrs. CIBBER.
-
Lady Blanche, Mrs. VINCENT.
-
Lady Falconbridge, Mrs. BAMBRIDGE.
Two very odd incidents happened during th
[...] run of that play. They are in Mr. Davies's Miscellanies; but as I related them to Mr. Davies, I claim a right to insert them here.—For he was not in London at the time, as he played some seasons at York, Edinburgh, and Dublin; they were as follows:
"On Mr. Barry's endeavouring to repeat the following words in the first act of the play:—
"Well now I can make any Joan a lady—
"He was so embarrassed in the delivery of this single line, that not being able to repeat the words he was obliged to quit the stage amidst the genera
[...]
[Page 159] applause of the audience, who saw and felt his uneasiness. But what is still more surprising, after going off, and returning three several times, with the same kind encouragement of the spectators, he was forced to give it up; and I believe he did not recover himself till he was relieved by the entrance of Lady Falconbridge.
"Mrs. Cibber, during the representation of
[...]hat Tragedy at Covent-garden theatre, the year 1750, was suddenly taken ill.—The play was however announced in the bills.—Mrs. Woffington, who was ever ready to shew her respect to the public, and her willingness to promote the interest of her employer, came forward to the front of the pit ready dressed for the character of Constance, and offered, with permission of the audience, to supply Mrs. Cibber's place for that night. The spectators, instead of meeting her address with approbation, seemed to be entirely lost in surprise. This unexpected reception so embarrassed
[...]er that she was preparing to retire; when Ryan, who thought they only wanted a hint to rouse them from their insensibility, asked them bluntly
[...]f they would give Mrs. Woffington leave to act had Constance?—The audience, as if at once awakened from a fit of lethargy, by repeated plau
[...] strove to make amends for their inattention to
[Page 160] the most beautiful woman that ever adorned a theatre."
The Refusal was revived by Macklin that winter. Mr. Lee played Granger; but Mr. Garrick put the law in force for breach of his article, and he was obliged to return to Drury-Lane, where Garrick from that day held a rod of iron over him.
She Would if she Could was revived—a vile play indeed—not relished
then by any means—
now, to the credit of the audience, would not be tolerated.—The principal characters were performed by Mr. and Mrs. Macklin, and Mrs. Elmy.
Mrs. Cibber was ill great part of the season. It was the last year of Mr. Quin's playing.—His benefit was about the twelfth of March—Othello the play.—The Moor was ac
[...]ed alternately by him and Barry. When Barry acted Othello, Macklin played Iago: And when Quin acted Othello, Ryan was the Iago.—I wonder Quin's understanding would let him persist in acting Othello, where he was so inferior in every respect to Mr. Barry. Indeed for his last benefit the Prince of Wales commanded Othello.—Quin acted Iago to Barry's Othello; but strange to relate, with the change of characters, and the command, the house
[Page 161] to that old favorite was very bad. There was not any farce that night; nor any new play at Covent-garden from the year 1748 till 1753.
The last character Mr. Quin acted, as a regular engaged performer, was on the conclusive night but two in the season, May 20, 1751, Horatio, in the
[...]air Penitent—Lothario, Barry; and Calista Mrs. Cibber: the best Calista I ever saw, and most likely, at my time of life, that I ever shall.—Barry not happy in Lothario.
In March 1751—His Royal Highness Frederick Prince of Wales died; when the theatres wer
[...] shut up for three weeks; which proves Miss Bellamy's assertion wrong as to her being at Leicester-House, and the Princess of Wales patronizing her benefit, &c.—the play to be the Siege of Damascus, wishing to see their favourite veteran Quin, in his character of Caled; which if the reader will observe must be erroneous, for that year Miss Bellamy was at Drury-lane theatre; and Mr. Davies must be wrong in his date; for this was the year of the run of Romeo and Juliet, when Mrs. Cibber was at Covent Garden.
*
The day his Royal Highness died the tragedy of Jane Shore was appointed at Covent-garden, for the benefit of Mr. Ryan.
[Page 162]
-
Glo'ster, Mr. QUIN.
-
Shore, Mr. RYAN.
-
Hastings, Mr. BARRY.
-
Alicia, Mrs. CIBBER.
-
Jane Shore, Mrs. WOFFINGTON.
And that might certainly be admitted as tolerable.
So different was the practice between then and now, relative to the principal performers acting on benefit nights in London, that Mr. Garrick acted every year from the first to the middling class of performers in general.
Mrs Woffi gton the season following quitted Covent-garden for Dublin; where she was held in such high estimation as to have her salary of four hundred pounds doubled the second and third winter; which the manager, from an acknowledged sense of her value, judged a debt due to her merit and his own interest. She had also two benefits each season in Dublin. Mr. Victor gives the following description of that lady.—
‘"So generous was her conduct, though she seldom acted less than four nights a week, that she never disappointed one audience in three winters either by real or affected illness, and yet I have often seen her on the stage when she ought to have been in her bed."’
Mr. Hitchcock adds the following:—
[Page 163]
"To her honour be it ever remembered, that whilst thus in the zenith of her glory, courted and
[...]ressed by all ranks and degrees, it made no alt
[...]ation in her behaviour; she remained the same g
[...]y, affable, obliging, good-natured Woffington to every one around her. She had none of those occasional illnesses, which I have sometimes seen assumed by captial performers, to the great vexation and loss of the manager, and disappointment of the public: She always acted four times each week.
"Not the lowest performer in the theatre did she refuse playing for: Out of 26 benefits she acted in 24; and one of the other two was for a Mrs. Lee, who chose to treat the town with an exhibi
[...]i
[...]n of her own Juliet.—Such traits of character must endear the memory of Mrs. Woffington to every lover of the Drama."
Mrs. Cibber's benefit, early in March 1759, was Zara, revived.
-
Ozman Mr. BARRY.
-
Zara, Mrs. CIBBER.
Mr. Quin took Othello, as before-mentioned. Mr. Barry, Romeo and Juliet—Mrs. Woffington, the Constant Couple.—Mr. Cooke's benefit
[Page 164] was on Friday (previous to Prince Frederick's burial), when a capital blunder occurred.—as Mr. Quin's name was printed in capitals for the part of Young Bevil—but Mr Barry acted the part.—Indiana, by Mrs. Cibber, who hitherto has not been, and in all probability never will be matched in that character. Her manner of saying to Mr. Sealand,
‘"Sir, if you will pay the money to a servant it will do as well"’—and the whole of her last scene in that play, was so truly affecting, expressive, and natural, that she really caught the ball which all other Indiana's have been running after in vain.
I kn
[...]w it is said that first impressions do a great deal; but I can also assert that from Mr. Garrick, Mr. Quin, Mrs. Bellamy, Mrs. Crawford, and others, I could convey to any hearer a strong idea of their manners, tones, &c. which would be acknowledged and allowed as real traits by the most rigid observer now existing. But Mrs. Cibber's excellence was of that superior kind, that I can only retain her in my mind's eye. Not that all her characters were equally astonishing; for Mrs. Cibber was but a mere mortal: yet, her Alicia, Constance, Ophelia, Indiana, Juliet, &c. were truly her own. Neat simplicity of manners in comedy was equally so. But her fine Ladies, and
[Page 165] parts of striking humour, had better be (as they are) forgotten. This is a great character, but a just one.
The season concluded the two last nights with Romeo and Juliet, without any Farce, or Dance, &c.
DRURY-LANE, 1751-2.
Its worthy observation that what leads historical reg
[...]sters perpetually into error, is the confounding the seasons: For as the theatres always open in September, and do not close till early in the following summer, not only the public, but the performers themselves, are too apt to mistake one year for the other, from two dates being unavoida
[...]ly connected with one season. Many particulars of these times are related in my first volume.
The company remained much as the year before, as I do not remember any particular desertions. Mr. Mossop and Mr. Ross were added, and of great additional strength; for they promised greatly from their first appearances.—Mr. Mossop's
entrée was in Richard, then in Zanga—and much applauded. Mr. Ross in Young Bevil.—Mr. Dexter also made his appearance that year, and astonished every one in the character of
[Page 166] Oroonoko. His merit had such an effect at first as to promise wonders; and he was prognosticated a powerful adversary to Barry in the Lovers: but when he left his honest black, his white promised nothing; it was a vacuum, and he sunk into oblivion. He went to Dublin, from whence he came. He had been educated in the College there: was in high esteem as a gentleman; and though not an actor of the first class, was gentlemanlike in his deportment, had a pleasing voice, and played second to Mr. Sheridan; but he did not live many years. He was rather dejected at not succeeding on the stage in a more elevated style.
Mr. Wilder removed this year to Drury-Lane: did very little at either theatre; but was much applauded when he sung
"For women love kissing as well as the men."
N. B. Mr. Wilder played Macbeth forty nights in Dublin, 1756-7.
The Fair Penitent was often acted this season.
-
Horatio, Mr. MOSSOP.
-
Altamont, Mr. ROSS.
-
Sciolto, Mr. BERRY.
-
Lothario, Mr. GARRICK.
-
Calista, Miss BELLAMY.
[Page 167] Mr. Garrick was the only gentleman I ever saw make the character of Lothario truly conspicuous.
Alfred was revived at infinite expence, and succeeded. Likewise Eastward Hoe, for the Lord-Mayor's Day, (when the practice of acting the London Cuckolds was abolished at that theatre;) but the play was driven off the stage.
Every Man in his Humour was next revived, and with great success. That comedy increased in public estimation for some seasons. Indeed every part in that production of old Den's was so well acted, it was hard to point out how any one in that very difficult composition could be amended. It was a lucky stroke for Woodward's ad
[...]ancement with the town. His performance of Captain Bobadil was wonderful.
The Shepherd's Lottery, was a very pretty musical piece—Master Vernon (late Mr. Vernon) made his first appearance in that little Opera. The Duet of "By the pale light of the moon," was always encored at that time, when sung by Mr. Vernon and Miss Norris in that piece.—Harlequin Ranger also was much admired.—Woodward was an excellent Harlequin. In his youth he had been taught that motley character by Mr. Rich, and had well observed that gentleman's in
[...]ructions.
[Page 168]COVENT-GARDEN, 1751-2.
Mr. Quin had retired from the stage May 1751; in March 1752, and March 1753, he came from Bath purposely to play Falstaff in the first part of King Henry IV. for his friend Mr. Ryan's benefit: He after that left him a legacy, and made him a present; declaring he grew infirm, and would not
whistle Falstaff.
Mrs. Woffington continued in Ireland; so Mr. Barry and Mrs. Cibber had all their own sway.—The Siege of Damascus was revived—Barry, Phocyas; and Mrs. Cibber, Eudocia. Mrs. Cibber also played Lady Townly, (not much to her credit). Venice Preserved was likewise acted, when Barry made his appearance as Jaffier. He had usually played Pierre, and his figure was pleasing and commanding beyond description in that character. Mrs. Cibber's Belvidera was a non-such.—Mr. Rich revived that year the Necromancer, or Harlequin Doctor Faustus; the galleries liked such a dismal sight then, but I do not think it would be now tolerated. It was not pleasing to me at that time, who thought no paradise could exceed a playhouse.
[Page 169] Woodward revived Dr. Faustus, with new scenery and more liveliness several years after at Covent-garden, when it answered to the amusement of the public and the coffers of Covent-garden treasury.—In February, after several years' promise, out came Harlequin Sorcerer, which made old Drury tremble; for any thing like the rage after that pantomime I never remember.
In November 4, 1751, when Mr. Barry and Mr. Sparks were performing Bajazet and I amerlane, Arpasia, Mrs. Cibber, one of the gentlemen was so suddenly out in his part that the play could not proceed. After a considerable pause, Mrs. Cibber said,
‘"Gentlemen, it is not my turn to speak."’ After which the play proceeded without anv other blunder. This only is mentioned to prove great actors as well as
small are liable to
b
[...]n
[...]ers. Mrs. Cibber remains unrivalled in Arpasia, particularly in the frenzy speech of the last a
[...]t.
Miss Macklin that season played Lady Townly for her father's benefit; also Jane Shore twice, early in the season.
Mrs Cibber played Lady Macbeth the first time, for her own benefit.
The season closed with Romeo and Juliet, and the Sorcerer.
[Page 170]DRURY-LANE, 1752-3.
The Company much as before; only the los of Mrs. Ward, who was neither wanted nor regretted; as Miss Bellamy's youth, fashion, dress &c. aided with Mr. Garrick's powerful assistance enabled her to make a tolerable stand in tragedy against Mrs. Cibber, which Mrs. Ward was by no means equal to. Eugenia was acted, but did not succeed on the English stage, notwithstanding its being in great reputation then at Paris; and the Rev. Mr. Frances, the author, (or rather translator) was in high rank and esteem in London.
Mr. Foote's farce of Taste was produced that season—Lady Pentweazle, by Mr. Worsendale, a genius of much wit and humour, but it met with a similar fate to Gil Blas.—Mr. Garrick's speaking the prologue, (which he wrote for that farce of Taste) was judged a master-piece; and the prologue now speaks for itself, though alas! Garrick
cannot.
The Gamester was acted—Mr. Garrick wonderful—ay, most wonderful, in Beverley!—Boadicia—revived by Mr. Glover.—Also the Genii, a pantomime, the Silent Woman, and the Brothers, a tragedy, by Dr. Young; who gave the profits of his three nights, as an author, to a public
[Page 173] charity—but the amount not answering his wishes and expectations, he generously made up the sum to one thousand pounds.
COVENT-GARDEN, 1752-3.
Mr. Barry and Mrs. Cibber were in high estimation, and to particular plays drew good houses. But, unless to a pantomime, or something of particular attraction, the boxes were often very thin at the early part of the season; whereas Drury-Lane was constantly attended.—Thin boxes on any night was seldom seen there; as a neatness, decorum, and regularity, pervaded the whole. However Mr. Rich was very industrious that season.—Mrs. Bland was engaged from Ireland, who had made great progress on the Dublin stage. Mr. Giffard, junior, made his appearance in Lear, a very improper character; the play was wretchedly acted, when compared with the performance of the same piece at the rival theatre;—or indeed without any comparison at all.—Signor Ma
[...]anesi, and Signora Bugiani, were that season engaged; two inimitable dancers: the lady's countenance was the most expressive and strong that can be imagined. Their burletta manner, gave strong and neat conveyance
[Page 174] to whatever they attempted. They drew a great deal of money; and indeed that luck was not to be wondered at. I have never seen such good
comic dancers before or since.—Mr. Cooke, and Miss Hilliard, who were excellent as dancers in their way, were also continued. The dances were in such estimation as often to supply the want of a Farce.—The Fair was again revived that year, to introduce Mr. Madox, the famous man on the wire; who was in the year 1758 drowned on his passage to Ireland; as was Theophilus Cibber, and several performers.
Besides the dancers mentioned at Covent-Garden that season, there were several good ones, above mediocrity; Monsieur Grandchamps, and Madame Ca
[...]argo.—Saturday, January the thirteenth, the Sorcerer was again produced, and continued, with almost equal effect, to the finishing of the season. It was helped by an additional fountain scene; the machi
[...]ry of which I thin
[...] surpas
[...]ed any pantomime quirk I remember, and should be now intr
[...]duced.—Mr. Smith's fi
[...] appearance was on Monday, Jan. 8, 1753, i
[...] the character of Theodosius; acted four successive n
[...]ghts.—The
[...]arl of Essex, a tragedy written by Mr. Jones, (an Irish bricklayer,) was acted that year, and had a considerable
[Page 175]
[...]n.—Those who saw Mr. Barry in Essex,
[...]eed not be reminded, that for attitude, and pathe
[...]ic expression of voice and countenance, they have not beheld a parallel to that gentleman's pr
[...]nouncing in the last act, when the Lieutenant
[...]es the
[...]arl to proceed to immediate execution,
[...]ex turns to the Lieutenant, (pointing to his Countess fainting on the ground,) and replies—
‘"O lo
[...]k there!"’—the whole pit of critics actually burst into tears; and then shook the theatre with unbounded and repeated applause, accompanied wi
[...]h huzzas.—The play was well acted—Mrs.
[...]nd was happy in person and manner in Queen
[...]izabeth, which luckily placed her in a rank of
[...]nation—To relate that Mrs. Cibber, as the Countess of Rutland (though a short part) was ex
[...]llent, would be superfluous: Her Epilogue, w
[...]tten by Mr. Garrick, (to whom she was to re
[...]rn the winter following) was a powerful assistant to the play.—That was, to my supp
[...]sition, the
[...]est
[...]eason Mr. Rich had ever experienced in my m
[...]mory.
Mr. Barry was at that time in the prime of life, as to health and vigour; and Mrs. Cibber also at
[...]er best. No wonder such a pair of lovers obta
[...]n
[...]d the triumph they were entitled to: Indeed
[...] a pity they were ever separated; for no two persons were so calculated to assist each other by
[Page 176] voice, manner, and real feeling, as Mr. Barry, and Mrs. Cibber.
Mr. Smith's second part on the stage was Southampton, in the play of Essex.—Mrs. Cibber's benefit that year was All for Love, with her neat little piece of the Oracle.
On Saturday, May 26, 1753, the season closed with Romeo and Juliet, by Mr. Barry, and Mrs. Cibber; which proved a separation of two lovers, doomed never—no, never to meet again!
I here publish a bill of that season, to shew how difficult it must have been to satisfy eager claimants for being distinguished.—It occasioned much murmuring. Sometimes a lady took the lead, and her rival was bottomed; and the hero placed in the middle; but all would not do: And in the year 1757, the line of
performed was obliterated, and the great letters for the principal were continued; which Mr. Kemble, for his own ease, and quiet of the theatre, has entirely banished.
[Page 177]
For the BENEFIT of Signor MARANESI, and Miss HILLIARD,
THEATRE-ROYAL, in
Covent-Garden.
This present Monday, being the 30th of April, 1753,
THE DISTRESS'D MOTHER.
- The Part of PYRRHUS to be performed
By Mr. SPARKS.
- Pylades, by Mr. RIDOUT.—Phoenix, by Mr. ANDERSON.
- The Part of ORESTES to be performed
By Mr. BARRY.
- Cephisa, Mrs. BARRINGTON.—Cleone, Mrs. GRIFFITH.
- The Part of HERMIONE to be performed
By Mrs. BLAND.
- And the Part of ANDROMACHE to be performed
By Mrs. CIBBER.
With several Entertainments of DANCING by
Signor MARANESI, Signora BUGIANI,
Mr. COOK, and Miss HILLIARD, viz.
- End of Act Second, a New Dance, called
GUASTATORE;
By Signor MARANESI, and Signora BUGIA
[...]
- End of Act Third, the SCOT's DANCE
By Mr. COOKE, and Miss HILLIA
- End of Act Fourth, a MOCK MINUET,
By Sig MARANESI, and Signora
[...]UGIAN
[...]
- End of the Play, a MINUET, and LOUVRE,
By Mr. COOKE, and Miss
[...]ILLIARD.
To which will be added a Musical Farce, (acted there but twice) called
The LOVER his Own RIVAL.
- The Part of Clerimont, by Mr. LOWE.
-
-
[...], by Mr.
Collins.
- Frederick, by Mr.
Cushing.
-
[...]wood, by Mr.
Bennett.
- Lucy, by Miss
Pitt.
- And the Part of Harriet, by Mrs. CHAMBERS.
Boxes 5s—Pit 3s.—First Gall. 2s.—Upper Gall. 1s.
[Page 178]DRURY LANE, 1753-4.
Mrs. Cibber, at high terms, was engaged a
[...] Drury Lane:—Her first appearance was in Mo
[...]imia—Chamont, Mr. Garrick: Castalio, Mr. Ross; and it is certain in love characters Mrs. Cibber never
[...]ppeared to such advantage as when with Mr. Marry. Romeo a
[...]d Juliet was attractive when she and Mr. Garrick acted in those parts; but still in the love scenes she wanted her former Romeo. Mr. Garrick, indeed, in the scenes of fire, had the superiority; but as the lover, Barry was then, and is, unrivalled, and will be till such another starts up; but think I may prophecy that will not happen in my time, were I to double my years with renovated youth.—Indeed, let a theatrical historian look back, and he will not find an actor so excellent, as a lover, from the days of Betterton, as Mr. Barry, to the present stage-strut hour.
Miss Macklin was then engaged, and (her mother from Covent Garden:) Miss M. at that time was a v
[...]ry fashionable actress, accomplished, and seemed to promise well; but having acquired a sufficiency, and grown tired of the profession, she retired several years ago from the stage, and died in some degree of affluence.
That season Virginia was produced in February—Mr. Garrick did Virginius; Mossop, Ap
[...]us;
[Page 179] Mrs. Cibber, Virginia; and Marcia was the
[...]r
[...]t appearance of Mrs. Graham (the late Mrs. Yates) who afterwards stood forth as an honour to the British stage:—Her beautiful figure and merits are too well remembered to need enco
[...]m or repetition here. Mrs. Graham was not considered of much promise by Mr. Garrick, as s
[...]e was not retained:—But Mrs. Cibber's illne
[...]s, Mr. Murphy's incessant pains, with Mr. Garrick's necessities from Mrs. Cibber's indisposition, was a lucky circumstance for that lady and the p
[...]blic, and produced that charming and beautiful a
[...]tress, who otherwise had pined unknown from
[...]e first season, and never been more remembered, but, like a lily drooping, pined and died.
Mr. Garrick wrote the following introductory lines for her in February 1754.
If novelties can please, to night we've two—
Tho'
English both, yet spare 'em as they're new—
To one at least your usual favour show—
A female asks it, can a man say no?
Should you indulge our
* novice yet unseen,
And crown her with your hands a tragic queen;
[...]ould you with smiles a confidence impart,
To calm those fears which speak a feeling heart;
[...] each struggle of ingenuous shame
[...] curbs a genius in its road to fame,
[Page 180] With one wish more, her whole ambition ends—
She hopes some merit to deserve such friends.
Creusa was produced that season with a double epilogue—the one by Mrs. Pritchard, the other by Miss Haughton; the Knights, by Mr. Foote; and Fortunatus, a very pleasing pantomime, by Mr. Woodward—Madame Marriot was the Colombine
that and for several seasons—a beautiful and pleasing figure.
COVENT GARDEN, 1753-4.
Mr. Barry having lost Mrs. Cibber as his Juliet, lamented thus in his prologue:—
In such sad plight what could poor Romeo do?
Why faith, like modern lovers, seek a new;
And happy shall I think me in my choice,
If she's approv'd of by the public voice.
Miss Nossiter, on Wednesday, October 10, made her first appearance; she was not much more than the age of Juliet; was possessed of a handsome fortune and genteel education, strong sensibility and feeling, and what added to the performance, Romeo and Juliet were really in love, and well known to be so. She threw strokes in many passages that were not only genuine but forcible, and bad fair in time to supply the place of a Cibber;
[Page 181] but notwithstanding the advantages of youth, and meeting wonderful encouragement, Nature had not endowed her with voice and powers sufficient for the arduous task to stand against her rival, and they appeared weakened, the more she was seen, instead of gaining ground.—Indeed I think I never saw her play so well as the first season; neither was her voice musical, and her mouth was remarkably wide, but she drew to all her characters. She acted Juliet a number of nights. Her second part was Belvidera, and in the mad scene did wonders from tuition, attention, and strong understanding: Rutland the third; and Philoclea, brought forward and wrote purposely to shew her to advantage by Macnamara Morgan.—Mr. Barry took infinite pains with Pyrocles; Mr. Smith did Musidorus; but the tragedy was a strange, lame, sick play, and with difficulty languished till the ninth day, when poor Philoclea died a natural death, and was not basely and cruelly murdered, as Mrs. Bellamy falsely and invidiously relates, as Mr. Smith can testify; for, on the contrary, the applause was so violent the first night of representation, and the Irish gentlemen's party so strong in its support, that Mrs. Bland was obliged to repeat a coarse epilogue, which was as coarsely spoken.
Constantine was also produced at Covent-Garden that year, and shared an unhappy fate.
[Page 182] Miss Bellamy returned here from Drury Lane; but the relation in her book, relative to that matter, being far from authentic, for the sake of theatrical truth and history I give the following accounts: Thus far indeed she acknowledges, viz.
"The frequent mistakes which I find I have made in the chronology of my Theatrical Anecdotes, will, I hope, be imputed to my reciting them, as I have already observed, entirely from memory; and the deviation, I trust, will be excused by my readers, as the incidents themselves, though perhaps erroneous in point of time, are real facts. And was I now to set about co
[...]recting the error by an alteration of the d
[...]tes, I fear, as many of the
[...] happened at so distant a period, such a step would only be productive of greater m
[...]stakes.
"I have received some corrections on this head from Mr. Wilkinson, manager of the York company, for which I acknowledge myself much obliged to hi
[...], though I cannot, for the reason just given, avail
[...]yself of them."
As
[...]ate Wilkinson I here note, that Constantine was acted that season, and shared an unhappy fate. Mi
[...]s Bellamy's situation was, as she has described, in Fluvia, TRUTH; but the play was acted to a fi
[...]e house on its first night of representation, and the third act received loud applauses, particularly from Barry's conclusion of it;
[Page 183] he also received three plaudits from his manner of pronouncing these two lines in the prologue—
Their heroes seem of a superior state,
Great in their virtues, in
their vices GREAT.
After the third act it grew very languid, and the c
[...]rtain dropped, with the audience more fatigued than enraged.
Miss Bellamy must have been determinably wrong as to her account of Constantine being damned the first night of representation: It was first acted on Saturday, February 23, 1754; also on the Monday and Tuesday following: The third
[...]ght, as usual, for the benefit of the author; but the play was unfortunately so ill attended and disapproved, that it was again put up on Thursday, February 28, the fourth night, for the benefit o
[...] the author.—The following insertion was at the bottom of the bill:—.
N. B. The receipt of last night not answering, Mr. Rich has taken it to himself.
On Saturday next (by his Majesty's command)
VENICE PRESERVED.
Which significantly insinuated Constantine was in
[...] decline. Had the play met a better fate, Miss Bellamy's situation was such as must have precluded it
[Page 184] some time, as that tragedy was with difficulty hurried thro', the Empress Fulvia being brought to bed that very fourth night, and like a woman of spirit she appeared soon after in the penitent Jane Shore for her own benefit: Mr. Foote acted in the Knights that said evening, and gave an imitation of Mr. Garrick in the prologue, who had wrote and spoke that season the following lines:—
I read no Greek, Sir—When I was at school
Terence wrote prologues—Terence was no fool.
Which lines Foote thus ridiculed, and in manner very like the Garrick, and with effect:—
I read no Greek, Sir—When I was at school
The usher wrote prologues—the usher was no fool.
Miss Bellamy mentions also the great expence Mr. Rich was at in reviving Busirus, which is a dream of her own invention, as Mr. Barry revived that play Monday, March 22, 1756, for his own benefit, two years LATER than her account, and was acted to a very indifferent house. The stage was built, but the seats were empty. Mr. Foote acted Hartop in the Knights that evening, to oblige and serve Mr Barry.
Mrs. Bellamy also relates, that on her return to Covent Garden, on her appearing in Juliet with Barry, that the tragedy had a run exceeding
[Page 185] that of opposition 1750. It is so little connected with truth, and is so very erroneous, that on the contrary, when she returned to Covent Garden on the season's opening in the autumn 1754, Miss Nossiter was, as before-mentioned in my Memoirs, the Juliet; which character Miss Bellamy at that time never had acted with Mr. Barry, nor ever did till so late as the 26th of December 1755. Her first appearance in 1753, on her return, was on Tuesday the 20th of November, in a very improper character; as was her second on Thursday, November 22 (her situation considered): She was thus announced in the bills,
‘"Athenais, by Miss Bellamy, her first appearance this stage these three years."’ After the chaste Athenais, the pure Monimia followed, which led to strange ideas that Castalio most certainly had been acquainted with that lady long before the third act. After that season (and not before it was necessary) she wisely changed the appellation of
Miss to
Mrs. Bellamy.
That lady's life being published, my own remarks, and intimacy with her as an acquaintance, friend, and actress, will not, I hope, make the following genuine letters unexceptionable, as it draws as near to the finish of that once admired
[Page 186] character as the feeling heart or eye would wish to penetrate.
I HAVE been so out of spirits that I have not been able to do any thing but correct my Apology, which I have finished with an address to her Grace of Devonshire, who has honoured me with a pension. Thalia has not yet visited me, therefore I have laid my comedy in lavender for so
[...]e favourite of the laughing muse to fi
[...]ish. I am engaged in a polemical controversy, which I hope to gain reputation by, tho' my language is rather severe. My leg is very bad, my pocket very low, and my spirits quite gone. I have had a bill just brought me of sixty-eight pounds for Mr. Willet's
amicable suit, as well as some bi
[...]ls I gave, which makes me very uneasy; one to Usher for twenty-nine for which he chose to introduce an officer to escort me once more to Parsons, and absolutely must get the rules of the King's-Bench if I do not pay the money on Saturday. I have not heard from Mr. —; I suppose his letter and visit were only a spurt of feeling, which soon subsided. My son has settled a hundred pounds a year, but a guinea more I cannot expect, as he is really distressed himself, and he was inconvenienced
[Page 781] by advancing ten pounds. Could I have got a frank, which I will try again for, I will send you the lines to her Grace; but you must not shew them. I fear I shall never be able to walk without assistance; and, to add to my comforts, I have a cough that tears me to pieces. I am removed to my Doctor's, No. 6, Cleveland-Row, St. James's, and am so highminded as to lodge up two pair of stairs, which really may be compared to Jacob's ladder. It
[...]ives me singular pleasure to hear you are better. Your friend Mrs. — has kicked down the pail I find. Miss Brunton bids fair to share reputation with Mrs. Siddons. I had the great honour or being wrote to by Mr. Digby to wait upon her Majesty on Thursday, but my indisp
[...]sition prevents my having that happiness at present, which is doubly distressful, as I am in real want on all sides at present; yet with all my calamities I have the happiness of being regarded by men of the first sense, whose friendship I am proud of—among the number you are s
[...]t down. Return my regard by taking care of your health, which no person more sincerely wishes than, my dear Tate,
your friend and servant, G. A. BELLAMY.
[Page 188] The gentleman alluded to in the foregoing letter sent her 50l. yet she wanted ditto, ditto, as the instant it was got, the same instant was it squandered.
I SHOULD immediately have thanked you for your last favour, but have been so afflicted with the rheumatism in my right arm I can hardly hold a pen, which impedes my sixth volume. Were I to make so many alterations as you point out necessary as to facts, I must write the whole over again, as I wrote merely from memory; and as I have acknowledged your wishedfor alterations in print, my incorrectness I hope will be excused. I hope to see you soon in London, and in a happier situation than at present, as every being to whom I was the least indebted has called upon m
[...] by arrest and copies of writs, which has accumulated my demands to above four times what they were originally. As to Bell, I have no cause of complaint in money affairs, as he stood forth for me in my distress; and as the success of the books was precarious, I only am concerned he did not, according to promise, give me the stipulated sets for the subscribers before he disposed of his. I desire you will not pay postage,
[Page 189] for I shall always be happy to hear from you, as I am, most sincerely,
with great esteem, your humble servant, G. A. BELLAMY.
Charles-street,
April the 12th.
I WROTE some months ago to thank you for your ham, but have had no answer. After having parted with my last guinea, and even my necessaries, to avert my present unpleasing residence, in order to obtain the rules, I was obliged to draw upon my son, and my lovely patroness, the Duchess of Devonshire, up to Michaelmas quarter. The impositions are incredible, as the people live by the distresses of others. I am obliged to give sixteen shillings a week for an apartment—a chandler's shop in front, backwards a carpenter's; and what with the s
[...]wing of boards, the screaming of three ill-natured brats, the sweet voice of the lady of the mansion, who is particularly vociferous with all the gossips who owe her a penny, with a coffee-mill which is often in use, and is as noisy as London-bridge when the tide is coming in, makes such unpleasing sounds, it is impossible to think of any thing; added to this, I have not a place for a servant. Could I raise sufficient
[Page 190] to furnish me an apartment, I should be tolerably easy, as I have begun a work which seems to flatter success, though a great undertaking,
The Characters of my own Times.
Could I raise by subscription to enable me to obtain
quiet, I could live at half the expence, and be as easy as my situation would admit.
They tell me it is my birth day, that is,
the day of the month, for I see nobody, not even the person I most esteem upon earth, and who flatters me he is my friend, Mr. A—. If you should happen to see Mr. —, perhaps upon this occasion he might stand my friend. Could I borrow about thirty or forty pounds for a year, I could with certainty repay it, as I am determined to receive no visits, and to live as frugal as possible. Indeed for want of exercise I have no appetite, and am reduced to one old cotton gown.—Oh! what a falling off is there? But I regret it less as I cannot stir alone without difficulty.
If you write, direct to No. 37, Eliot's-Row, St. George's Fields, and believe me, most sincerely yours,
G. A. BELLAMY.
May 4, 1786.
I RECEIVED yours yesterday, and am surprised at your losing so many of your performers. In
[Page 191] answer to my not changing my lodging—I cannot without furniture, for the place is over
[...]tocked, and I pay sixteen shillings a week for a
[...]g-kennel, and have not even a bed for my
[...]id. I have been obliged to draw for my annuity till Christmas, as every thing here is p
[...]id for before-hand. I do not see Bell, but will convey your request to him. Dodsley I purpose for my man, if I cannot get a friend to pay the expence upon my own account: It is the characters of the time since forty-five, and hope to have permission to dedicate it to Royalty,—
not his Royal Highness again. How can you ask me how I came to be involved? I told you before, I paid part of my old debts, and renewed securities for the remainder; which indiscretion has been productive of every distress as well as reproach, in lieu of their being sensible that I paid all I received, and was most cruelly deceived in the expectation of paying every body. I am as lame as ever, and as the bone can never be set, shall never be able to w
[...]lk without assistance. I suppose Mrs. Crawford will bring you money—such unprincipled people are generally lucky
*. I fear it would be only losing time to apply to Mr. —,
[Page 192] as he answered neither of my letters. If I could get furniture I could get a house for a trifle, where at least I should enjoy quiet.
I am, most sincerely, your affectionate humble servant, G. A. BELLAMY.
Eliot's-Row,
May the 13th.
*
A strange remark from my friend Bellamy.
↵
I have the pleasure to inform you Mr. Woodward gained his cause the twenty-fourth of last month; by which I have not got any thing but the credit of confuting Willet. If you read the Morning Chronicle of the fourth of August, you will find my letter to the Rev. Mr. Gaboll, which will explain the affair. I have wrote an answer to Willet's pamphlet, but am advised not to publish it till winter. I was in hopes to have been able to furnish an apartment, which would have enabled me to have lived cheap, and enjoy quiet, which is impossible in my present residence: But nothing but disappointment and vexation attends me; nor can I settle to any thing of consequence where I am. I am greatly afraid I have some how offended Mr. — which would give me more pain, than his withdrawing his assistance. In almost the certainty of money, I took a small house, and disposed of her
[Page 193] Grace of Devonshire's quarter to put up fixtures, &c. but credit I cannot hope in the predicament I now stand; and my annuity will not be clear till Christmas. I hope Mr. Bell has sent you the beginning. I very seldom see him; but had I had the power I should have saved him the trouble. I hope the races will bring you a good harvest.—You may see me, as I really am, (an old woman) in this day's Chronicle, and soon as a Magdalen. Mr. Woodfall is an old acquaintance, and has all my leisure hours.—When you have time let me hear from you; as
[...]ou have no correspondent who has a more sincere regard for you.
I am, with esteem, your humble servant, G. A. BELLAMY.
No. 39, Eliot's-Row, St. George's Fields,
August 11.
I shall in winter present you with your epitaph: But let the galled horse wince, you have no occasion.
You need not enforce my error; I am too sensible of it: For though the debts I have given
[...]resh security for were such as would not have oppressed me, yet with the unexpected ideas I had
[Page 194] of security in being able to pay, I indiscreetly not only paid every guinea I received from a generous public, but gave fresh securities. What I shall do is now a matter of great vexation:—But God's will be done.—I am concerned to hear of your ill state of health. I sincerely wish I had the power, as I have the inclination to shew myself essentially your
friend; which epithet you have favoured me with. You do not inform me if Mr. — received my letters: If he has, there is little hopes I fear from that quarter. I wish you had shewn him my letter; the one I received, with only the words,
God for ever bless you, seemed by the great care i
[...] the envelope, to speak more than the simple benediction, but nothing more by the care of the messenger. I did imagine it came from my worthy benedictor. If you have an opportunity mention this event, as I
[...] write to a person utterly unknown.—
[...] correct the affair of Chalmers
*;
[...] understand your
[...] I imagine you do not attend to
[...] e se I would send you
[...] soon to publish. I have
[...] answered perhaps in
[...] but his ignorance and
[...] Let me intreat you
[Page 195] to take care of yourself, for the sake of your family and intimates; for few indeed, deserve the appellation of; but believe me most sincerely so, and with esteem, while
*
The
[...] meeting in Scotland is
[...] sixth volume.
↵
A few months after the last letter, the good-natured and unthinking Bellamy, by her death, paid all her debts.—I hope she is happy; as she
[...]deavoured to promote to the comforts of others, and never employed either riches or talents, when
[...] affluence and splendor, to render any one mise
[...]ble.
Bellamy's letters lead me to fear that too many reasons, performers, and others, may look back on
[...]
their former days, and pronounce, the only comfort the review affords is, that
they are
past!—Ill fate
[...]en attends geniusses, for as they possess more sal
[...]es of quickness, they are more subject to frailties;
[...]hich occasions them to feel at times a want of
[...] more substantial than good spirits to feed and
[...] them; as the following well-fancied epistle
[...] prove:—It is an original, for the which favor
[...] st
[...]nd indebted to the ingenious Dr. Miller, of Doncaster; who is now busily employed on a
[...]ame composition for psalmody. It was wrote by
[...]e late true son of Momus, the well-known George Alexander Stevens, and I trust the insertion
[Page 196] of it will be acceptable, as the novelty of his ideas will entertain, his genius being at that time in its full vigour.
When I parted from you at Doncaster, I imagined, long before this, to have met with some oddities worth acquainting you with. It is grown a fashion of late to write lives:—I have now, and for a long time have had, leisure enough to undertake mine—but want materials for the latter part of it: For my existence now cannot properly be called living, but what the painters term
still life; having, ever since February 13, been confined in this town gaol for a London debt.
As a hunted deer is always shunned by the happier herd, so am I deserted by the company
*, my share taken off, and no support left me, save what my wife can spare me out of hers.
"Deserted in my utmost need,
"By those my former bounty fed"—
With an oeconomy, which till now I was a stranger to, I have made shift hitherto to victual
[Page 197] my little garrison; but then it has been with the aid of my good friends and allies—my clothes—This week's eating finishes my last waistcoat; and next I must atone for my errors on bread and water.
Themistocles had so many towns to furnish his table; and a whole city bore the charge of his meals. In some respects I am like him; for I am furnished by the labours of a multitude.—A wig has fed me two days—the trimmings of a waistcoat as long—a pair of velvet breeches paid my washer woman, and a ruffled shirt has found me in shaving.—My coats I swallowed by degrees: The sleeves I breakfasted upon for weeks—the body, skirts, &c. served me for dinner two months.—My silk stockings have paid my lodgings, and two pair of new pumps enabled me to smoke several pipes. It is incredible how my appetite (barometer like) rises in proportion as my necessities make their terrible advances. I here could say something droll about a good stomach; but it is ill jesting with edge tools, and I am sure that's the sharpest thing about me.—You may think I can have no sense of my condition, that while I am thus wretched, I should offer at ridicule: But, Sir, people constitutioned like me, with a disproportionate levity of spirits, are always most merry,
[Page 198] when they are most miserable; and quicken like the eyes of the consumptive; which are always brightest the nearer a patient approaches to dissolution.—However, Sir, to shew you I am not entirely lost to all reflection, I think myself poor enough to want a favour, and humble enough to ask it here.—Sir, I might make an encomium on your good-nature and humanity, &c.—but I shall not pay so bad a compliment to your understanding, as to endeavour, by a parade of phrases, to win it over to my interest. If you could, any night at a concert, make a small collection for me, it might be a means of obtaining my liberty; and you well know, Sir, the first people of rank abroad will perform the most friendly offices for the sick: Be not, therefore, offended at the request of a poor (though a deservedly punished) debtor.
From this facetious letter of George Stevens's, and Mrs. Bellamy's latter account, we must remember in this stage-journal I was busily employed a few pages back, with an account of th
[...] season 1753-4; where I still am supposing mysel
[...] giving an account, though I have been wandering on matters not relative thereto: But from Mrs.
[Page 199] Bellamy, and the other personages mentioned of at that time, I must add, that Mrs. Gregory also made her first appearance on any stage, in the character of Hermione, Thursday, January 10, 1754. It was falsely reported, that Mr. Barry refused playing Orestes, fearing her success should interfere with Miss Nossiter's.—The story gained such credit, that he judged it necessary to publish an advertisement in all the papers, contradicting the malicious propagation. That lady grew into the highest fashion afterwards at the Dublin theatre: She married a gentleman bred to the bar in Ireland; a Mr. Fitzhenry, a gentleman of family and abilities; and took leave of the public at Dublin, within these four or five seasons; having wisely provided, from her gains on the stage, to live decently and comfortably off.—After all
[...]he storms of a theatrical life, I ever cast a wi
[...]hful eye, whenever I read success accompanied with such comfortable finishings.
This was the first winter also for Italian
[...] at Covent-Garden theatre.—Signora Nicolina (better known and remembered from the character of Spilletta, which she inimitably performed, in the opera of Gli Amanti Gelosi) wa
[...] particularly admired in the Italian song
[...] the hat, which some years since has been translated, introduced, and sung by Diana, in the pleasing
[Page 200] opera of Lionel and Clarissa. The burlettas that year brought Mr. Rich a great deal of money.
Mr. Garrick thus alludes to their success:
I, as your cat'rer, would provide you dishes,
Dress'd to your palates, season'd to your wishes—
Say but you're tir'd with boil'd and roast at home,
We too can send for
niceties from Rome:
To please your taste will spare not pains nor money,
Discard
Sirloins, and get you
Maccaroni.
Whate'er new
Gusto for a time may reign,
Shakspeare and beef will have their turn again.
The season again closed at Covent-Garden, Wednesday, the twenty-second of May, with Romeo and Juliet, and Harlequin Sorcerer.
Mr. Shuter had quitted Drury-Lane for Covent-Garden; where he grew weekly, ay nightly,
[...]nt
[...], favour with the public. Mrs. Bland was become Mrs. Hamilton.—It is very strange, but true, that Shuter was only looked upon as a young man of tolerable merit at Drury-Lane, (the Old Man, in Lethe, his principal part)—but at Covent-Garden he seemed a sudden blaze of light.—This certainly must be allowed an instance, that, with genius, opportunity is every thing; but the misfortune is, without talents and genius, actor
[...] will be cla
[...]ming the same right of ascending th
[...]
[Page 20] throne of merit; but the ladder suddenly breaks, and down drops Dido.
DRURY-LANE, 1754-5.
The company remained much as the year before. Mr. Garrick was truly inimitable in Don John.—Mrs. Clive was equal in the Mother. Mr. Yates in the old whimsical character of Don Antonio—and the whole comedy was supported, as it might be wished every play should be.
Barbarossa was produced that year, and was much followed.—The Chances, revived and altered by Mr. Garrick, at the command of his late Majesty, had a great run;—and Coriolanus was g
[...]t up; in which character Mr. Mossop raised his reputation. Mr. Garrick was a quick general, and it is most probable Mr. Mossop would not have had the luck of that play being produced at such expence, but that Mr. Garrick was eager to get the start of the rival theatre, where it was preparing with infinite pomp and splendour. The very idea of a triumphal procession at Covent-Garden, struck terror to the whole host of Drury, however big they looked and strutted on common occasions.
[Page 202] The Sabatinis were engaged this year at a great expence, as dancers. They appeared in two new Ballads, the one called the Pandours, the other, the Italian Fishermen; but they were both utterly disapproved, and did not appear six nights during the whole winter.—The Drummer also was revived; and tolerably well received and followed.
The Fa
[...]ries, an opera, from Shakspeare's Midsummer Night's Dream, was that year introduced. It was well performed, and with good success; aided not a little by an excellent prologue, and as excellently spoken by Mr. Garrick.—Giordani and Passerini were of great additional service, a
[...] Lysander and Hermia.
The Mistake was revived for Woodward's benefit.
-
Don Carlos, Mr. GARRICK.
-
Sancho, Mr. WOODWARD.
-
Lopez, Mr. YATES.
-
Jacin
[...]ha, Mrs. CLIVE.
-
Leonora, Mrs. PRITCHARD.
Mercury Harlequin was the new pantomim
[...] that season.
COVENT-GARDEN, 1754-5.
Barry was invited to Dublin, on a salary of 800l. and two benefits. Mr. Victor and Mr. Sowden,
[Page 203] were the desperate undertakers after Sheridan's abdication.—Miss Nossiter, (Mr. Barry's favourite Juliet) made a point of having five hundred pounds; and Mrs. Gregory (who had only appeared in two characters the winter before, at Covent-Garden; once in Hermione, and in Alicia twice; once for Mr. Sparks, and another night for Mrs. Bellamy), at three hundred pounds.—Barry on his departure from England denounced ruin on Mr. Rich by his desertion; but such threats were weak in the extreme: It is true, Mr. Sheridan's Romeo was vain and ridiculous, immediately after Barry's; but Barry forgot that with the aid and n
[...]velty of new performers, and Mr. Rich's neverfailing support, pantomime, and with a theatre in London, (where the metropolis can pour in such incredible numbers) it must be the manager's own fault indeed, if he be ruined by the loss of any performer whatever.
Mr. Sheridan, by the great riot in Dublin, being obliged to leave that city, occasioned by the representation of Mahomet in February 1754; in which perturbation Mrs. Woffington was supposed to have aided, as a party concerned in
real state politics, which certainly has not any connection or business within the walls of a theatre, that lady was also obliged to retire from Ireland, at the same time, with Mr. Sheridan.
[Page 204] It is one of the most remarkable riots that ever occurred in any theatre, and well worthy of being read by every admirer of theatrical history. It would be impertinent to introduce it here, as it must be well known, or should be, to all theatrical persons. Those who have not been made acquainted with that period of the early part of the established Irish stage, will find it all fully explained in a modern volume lately printed, by Mr. Hitchcock; a gentleman of great ability and integrity of the Dublin theatre:—It gives a general view of the Irish theatre, from its commencement, down to the year 1757, and will well repay the trouble of a little attention. I can answer, as for myself, that I often take Mr. Hitchcock's book up for information.
Mr. Sheridan this year came over, and was engaged by Mr. Rich in the autumn 1754. The season opened with some of Mr. Rich's stock comedies, very ill acted indeed, and as dingily dressed.
October 11, 1754, Mrs. Green made her appearance from Dublin, in the character of Lappet; a good comic actress—much the best in chambermaids, Mrs. Heidelbergs, &c. since the time of Mrs. Clive.
On Friday, October 18, 1754, Othello was announced, with an occasional prologue, spoke by Mrs. Hamilton, for the introducing Mr. Murphy.
[Page 205] (A gentleman well known and admired for his talents as an author, and many very respectable qualities; and often mentioned in the course of my Memoirs.) He was to appear in the difficult and dangerous part of Othello; rendered at that time more hazardous than the present, by the well known excellence of Mr. Barry in that character. Mr. Murphy had many other reasons to be alarmed; as he had long waged his pen of war as author of the Gray's-Inn Journal, and had been the terror of poets, and the scourge of players.
The novelty held out was a charm irresistible to attend Covent-Garden theatre.—Mr. Murphy's judgment, then or now, would be absurd to call in question; and I hold that gentleman in true regard; but on the stage, he certainly wanted, what we behind the scenes call powers, &c.
for great effect.
After that gentleman's novelty of three nights, on Tuesday, October the twenty-first, the Nonjuror was advertised.—Doctor Wolf, Mr. Cibber (his first appearance for four years); and Maria, Mrs. Woffington (her first appearance for three years); which drew a great house.—So favourite an actress, and so well acquainted with persons in higher life, will easily gain credit to my account. She was of course greatly received, and played that character as well as i
[...] could be played.
[Page 206] On Wednesday the 23d of October, Mr. Sheridan made his first appearance in his esteemed character of Hamlet: Judicious without doubt; but when compared to the combined excellencies of a Garrick, and the pleasing powers of the winning Barry, he was not by any means established from that night's performance as a darling of the London audience—Tho' in Dublin not any one performer whatever, even the Garrick, at that time would not have been universally crowned with laurel, as to preference, or perhaps equality; but (as Mr. Macklin has
[...]a
[...]d) that opinion had been jerked into the Irish audience from his father Dr. Sheridan the schoolmaster. He next appeared in Richard, without any remarkable applause till the dying scene, where he was equal to any actor, if not superior to any I had then, or have since seen, without the aid of a flounder-like flouncing, as the modern Richard's practice, to the great pleasure, approbation, and universal plaudits from the
galleries. Till I broke my leg I was much attached to that tumb
[...]ing exhibition and surprising feat-like agility.
In November, 1754, Phaedra and Hippolitus was revived:—Theseus, Sheridan; Hippolitus, Smith; Phaedra, Mrs. Woffington; and had not any farce ta
[...]ked to i
[...], though a play consisting of five characters only. It was the custom on revived
[Page 207] plays, and invariable with new ones, not to have any entertainment for the first nine or twelve nights—it would have been judged disgraceful: nor did any play whatever intervene, unless from illness or an unforeseen cause. Phaedra had not any success that year. Indeed, though the poetry is elegant, it is too learned and too languid. The performers and audience seemed half asleep, and the candles burned dim, unless at the following passage; which, with the advantage of Mrs. Woffington's figure and new dress, prepared them for the chace—
Come, let us hunt the stag and chace the foaming boar▪
Come rouse up all the horrid monsters of the wood,
For there, even there Hippolitus will guard me.
After which rouse all parties on and off the stage, as by mutual consent, unanimously returned to their evening's nap.
Mr. Moncrife's Appius was acted that season, on the same story of Virginia, produced the year before by the Rev. Mr. Crofts at Drury-Lane, but destitute of every comparative merit, either as to plot, incident, writing, or any other claim to preference, and as to acting lamentably deficient. One speech of Mr. Sheridan's (though I never saw the play but the first night out of the six i
[...]
[Page 208] was acted) I never can forget, he delivered the following lines so energetic:—
O! by the gods! I hunger for revenge,
I thirst, I thirst for blood—for blood of Appius.
Coriolanus was revived with great pomp:—Mr. Sheridan conveyed a masterly knowledge of the character and his immortal author, old Shakspeare. That play drew several houses; but his OEdipus, Romeo, Zanga, Lord Townly, Sir Charles Easy, Osmyn, &c. did not bear equal credit. Italian burlettas were attempted by a new set of Italians, but met with very little attraction or applause:—The first was L'Arcadia in Brenta, on Monday the 18th of November 1754; the second, entitled, La Famiglia de Bertoldi. Mr. Murphy performed Jaffier only between his first appearance and the benefits in March, when he acted Archer, Young Bevil, Hamlet, Macbeth, &c.
Mr. Clarke made his first appearance that season in Osman in Zara, on Thursday the 30th of October; an actor that must be at this time well remembered by his brethren and the public, tho' his talents were not strong enough to let him live long after death.
A Mrs. Glen also made her appearance that year in Rutland, Monday, February 24, 1756.
*—
[Page 209] That lady I can only remember being apt to have
[...]its on the stage—Indeed strange fits off the stage, ladies and gentlemen are often subject to—I have sometimes been so affected myself.
Mr. Rich revived Orpheus and Eurydice, that season, Wednesday, January 29, which drew crowds, but not equal to the Sorcerer, nor held in great estimation. That pantomime has been tried twice or thrice since then, but without success.
Mr. Poitier (an excellent dancer indeed) wa
[...] introduced that year, and greatly admired: He came from the Opera House at Paris; his first appearance was on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1754.—I do not recollect any very particular incidents that season.—Mrs Bellamy revived Alzira for her benefit—Zamor, Mr. Murphy: and the season concluded on Thursday, May 22, with the Constant Couple; Sir Harry, of course, by Mrs. Woffington; the entertainment was Orpheus and Eurydice.
DRURY-LANE, 1755-6.
Mr. Mossop was this year enticed (partly owing to an affront mentioned in my Memoirs) over to Dublin, by Mr. Victor and Mr. Sowden, to play on shares and two benefits; where he only
[Page 210] acted twenty-four nights, finding he could obtain more profit for himself by acting twenty than forty nights for his employers:—So in fact Mr. Mossop's great drawings
in, was on the other nights the inevitable occasion of great drawings
out from the treasury of that theatre. Mr. Garrick, from the unexpected loss of Mossop, engaged Mr. Murphy to supply that bulwark the other's absence had occasioned to give way. Mr. Murphy's first appearance was on Tuesday the 30th of September, 1756, in Osmyn in the Mourning Bride. Mr. Holland started forth in the month of October, (Monday the 13th, 1755) in the character of Oroonoko, supported by Mrs. Cibber in Imoinda. He was a shining ornament, and an honest, truly agreeable man, was universally beloved, but death snatched him in the bloom of life and improvement, and deprived the stage of an actor of merit and a worthy character.—He was too apt to
out-herod Herod—by which false judgment (mistaking it for genuine fire) the big manly voice became too often harsh and unpleasing. In consequence, when Powell came in view, (tho' a suckling) he soon threw Holland at a distance, by keeping within the bounds of Nature and
true spirit. This sacrifice of sense and sound (which I glaringly gave way to for the sake of catching momentary applause) would be less practised than
[Page 211] it is, would we once consider, that the opinions of the principal leaders of fashion in every place will influence the million in a great measure, and by them will be allowed, followed, and adopted. The following lines on this subject were wrote on Holland:—
When GARRICK, by whatever motive led,
Fatal to taste, took travel in his head,
Griev'd, for I knew the players of the age,
Griev'd, I foresaw the ruin of the stage!
No more, said I, o'erleaping vulgar awe,
Shall Shakspeare terror raise, or pity draw.
Catching the spirit with the poet caught,
The very pith and marrow of his thought,
Our GARRICK acted as our Shakspeare wrote;
But now scarce understood without a note,
Of all his more than manly vigour gelt,
Holland must rant and whine where GARRICK felt.
Thus, anxious for the widow'd stage, my mind
With much too perfect augury divin'd:
Holland, poor man! in Hamlet makes appear
What cause, what mighty cause we had to fear.
But though no acting-merit he displays,
His modesty must sure deserve our praise;
Which, that the piece in all points should agree,
Desir'd that
Hopkins might Ophelia be.
Athelstan was produced that year, written by Doctor Brown. Mr. Garrick did his very best to support it, and the play certainly had merit,
[Page 212] and was well acted; but it never recovered the chilness of the spring, nor has ever taken root, budded or flowered, from that time to this.
The Winter's Tale, introduced with an excellent prologue by Mr. Garrick, had a very considerable run. Mrs. Cibber's neat simplicity in singing the song wrote by Mr. Garrick—
Come, come, my good shepherds, our flocks we must shear, &c.
made little Perditta appear of the greatest consequence.—It was well cast, and the performance justified Mr. Garrick's judgment in so ordering the characters. Catherine and Petrucio was altered into three acts on the same occasion: Petrucio, Mr. Woodward; Catherine, Mrs. Clive.—He threw her down on the exit of the second act, which had very near convinced the audience that Petrucio was not so lordly
[...]s he assumed; for Mrs. Clive was s
[...] enraged at her fall, that her talons, tongue, and passion, wer every expressive to the eyes of all beholders, and it was with the utmost difficulty Kate suppressed her indignation.—The first representation of these pieces was on the 21st of January 1756.
The Apprentice was introduced that year, January, 2d by Mr. Murphy; who spoke a prologue to that farce, which was afterwards inimitably
[Page 213] and constantly repeated by Mr. Woodward in the character of Dick, in which part he was excellent. The farce had a great run, and still continues in full effect, and ever
[...]ill, while a clever spirited comedian like Mr. Lewis or Mr. Banister, jun. has the Apprentice intrusted to his care and guardianship.
The Tempest as an opera in three acts, with recitative, &c. was introduced that season, with a paltry dialogue, as may be seen in the magazine, of Feb. 1756: Signora Curioni, an Italian singer, performed in it, but it was dreadfully heavy.—It went through with great labour eight nights, but not without the aid of the garland dance, well performed by sixty children, at the end of the second act, and the pantomine of Fortunatus, or the Genii, after that.
All's Well that Ends Well was revived—I imagine to please Woodward, who was
[...]ond of acting Parolies.—He revived that play at Dublin, and also when last at Covent Garden; but I never remember any remarkable success or pleasure received from the representation of that play; though here and there, it must be confessed, there are scenes of merit, whimsicality, and genius: but it never will be like the master productions of Shakspeare, a standing dish or an alluring spectacle to the public eye.
[Page 214] The Fair Quaker was also revived that winter, and was well acted, but the comedy of itself has not much sterling merit, and its humour and the characters are too coarse for the nice discrimination of the present age. However, Mr. Garrick made the play stand its ground from the good acting of Woodward, and Mr. Yates in Beau Mizen and Flip, and the parts in general not a little reinforced by the good and popular pieces the manager added as a support, and the new song of
‘"Hearts of oak are our ships,"’ by Mr. Beard.
The CHINESE FESTIVAL, at an immense expence, was produced on Saturday, November 8, 1755,
(by command of his Majesty King George the Second).
*—It was in the time of the war with France.—The multitude conceived it was purposely got up by Mr. Garrick to introduce Frenchmen to eat up all the bread, the beef, and the pudding from the Englishmen; and they were, by artful incendiaries, (which are never wanting to do evil) so inflamed, and the hydra-headed monster was so powerful, as not to let the presence even of majesty secure a decent representation: It was again attempted, and strongly supported, on Wednesday, Nov. 12, after the comedy of the Inconstant; but the fatal night of the Great Riot, and entire overthrow of the FESTIVAL, was on the
Tuesday following
[Page 215] Nov. 18.—Essex was the play that night, the Earl by Mr. Murphy:—The nobility mustered all their forces, drawn swords, &c.; but the
mobility, against reason and their own rational entertainment, like a torrent bore down all before them; Mr. Garrick's house had nearly been torn to pieces; infinite mischief was done the theatre; and John Bull was exulting with triumph. Some nights after Mr. Garrick advertised his performance in Archer, when, on his entrance, something murmured like—Pardon! pardon! on which he advanced with great respect, and as great firmness, explained how ill he had been treated by the wanton and malignant conduct of wicked individuals, both in his property, fame, and character.—He acknowledged all favours received, but unless he was that night permitted to perform his duty to the best of his abilities, he was above want, superior to insult, and would never,
never appear on the stage again.—While he was speaking all tumult ceased:—It was indeed a calm after a storm:—They seemed so struck with the truth which he asserted and addressed to them, the propriety of his conduct, and the injury from illiberality and wicked wantonness he had actually sustained, that from the idea of censuring Mr. Garrick unmeritedly, they felt the reproach deservedly on themselves, and, like true-hearted Britons, burst into such an universal according
[Page 216] applause, as for several minutes shook the fabric of Old Drury.—Harmony was settled before and behind the curtain to the mutual gain and credit of all parties, as Mr. Garrick after that for years enjoyed deservedly the well-earned smiles and unbounded favours of the public; and that public in return had the happiness of seeing him in a
[...]onstant round of characters three times in the week on an average—the first actor that ever did so variously and excellently perform such a contrast of capital chara ters, who but for this
[...]ucky accident, perhaps might have been lost, to the great regret of his admirers, who never did, or will, take him for all in all, lock upon his like again.—Wherever there are many enemies, there will always be merit to create such envy.
The particulars of the riot, relative to the Chinese Festival, may be seen in Mr Victor's second volume, page. 131 to 135.
I do not remember any other remarkable occurrence that year at Drury Lane theatre, except that on Saturday, March 27, Mr. Garrick gave his first performance of Lord Chalkstone (for Mrs. Clive's benefit), which had a great run, and kept the house open later than usual. The season concluded with Mr. Garrick's Benedick and Lethe.
[Page 217]
Not acted these TEN YEARS.
For the Benefit of Mrs. CLIVE.
At the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane,
On Saturday next being the 27th of March, 1756,
Will be revived a Comedy called
The LADY's LAST STAKE:
Or, The WIFE's RESENTMENT.
(Written by COLLEY CIBBER,
Esq)
- Lord GEORGE BRILLIANT, Mr. WOODWARD.
- Lord Wronglove, by Mr. PALMER.
- Sir Friendly Moral, by Mr. BERRY.
- Lady Gentle, by Mrs. PRITCHARD.
- Mrs. Conquest, by Mrs. DAVIES.
- Miss Notable, by Miss MACKLIN.
- Hartshorn, by Miss MINORS.
- Lady Wronglove, by Mrs. CLIVE.
(Being the First Time of their Appearance in those Characters).
To which will be added, a DRAMATIC SATIRE called
LETHE.
In which will be introduced,
A NEW MODERN CHARACTER, to be performed
By Mr. GARRICK.
The Fine Lady, Mrs. CLIVE.
In which will be introduced a New Mimic Italian Song.
Part of the Pit will be laid into the Boxes.
[Page 218] COVENT-GARDEN, 1755-6.
Mr. Sheridan's success at Covent-Garden the preceding winter, (where he had not taken any benefit-night) did not occasion inducement from Mr. Rich to propose, or Mr. Sheridan to offer, his services.—Mr. Barry returned from Ireland, after the harvest of a well-fought field—and in his hand, Miss Nossiter. Mrs. Bellamy, then in reputation as an actress, continued still with Mr. Rich—also Mrs. Woffington.—She and Bellamy were imp
[...]acable enemies.—Negotiations were off and on between Barry and Rich, till November, before any thing definitive occurred; and Mr. Rich, as usual, went dreaming on with Volpone, Way of the World, Country Lasses, &c. while Drury-Lane seemed as secure as if only one theatre was permitted in the capital of London.—However, on Wednesday, November the twelfth, Mr. Barry acted Hamlet, to a numerous audience, and was deservedly received with rapture.—But the loss sustained by Mrs. Vincent being the Ophelia, (a useful, but an affected actress) in lieu of Mrs. Cibber, made a woeful comparative play to that of Mr. Garrick's at Drury-Lane, with Ostrick, Mr. Woodward, and Ophelia and the Queen, by Mrs. Cibber and Mrs. Pritchard. Indeed,
[Page 219] the only person of sterling abilities, I can remember, in that highly finished character of Opheha, since Mrs. Cibber, is Mrs. S. Kemble. That lady has infinite merit in a variety of playing; but where the artless, the feeling, and the impressive, to reach the soul is requisite, she, need not in such departments fear the most Critical Review; for her natural representations must live on stage record, and may fearless bid defiance to satire or
[...]—If Sterne's Maria was properly introduced (as an opera character) I think it would prove lucky for the author to have Mrs. S. Kemble for her representative.
Mr. Barry, on the Friday following his Hamlet, acted Jaffier; and strange to relate, with so wonderful and so deserved a favourite, and in a character where he was so truly excellent, there actually were only twenty persons in the upper gallery; a bad pit, (and I may suppose many orders) and only two ladies in the side-boxes on one hand, and
[...]ot three gentlemen on the other side. However,
[...]he season on the whole was great, as was Mr. Barry's success; though I now recollect his acting Henry the Fifth, Wednesday, December the third, (where his performance was enchanting) to much the same kind of house as I have mentioned to his Jaffier.
Miss Nossiter did not make her appearance till
[Page 220] late in the season; on Friday, December the twelfth, in the character of Monimia, which she performed to a crowded audience. Barry acted Castalio, so excellently, that he was the only one I wish to remember.—Some aspiring youth will smilingly observe, that when folks grow ancient they pronounce excellencies, and paint beauties of their
old favorites which never existed, because those of the present day cannot contradict them; but I have proved myself far from being insensible of the high merits of the present race of performers, in many instances; and wish not, because I praise
Barry's Castalio, to see him, were he now living, in the
Count of Narbonne; as Mr. Kemble there is himself
alone, and shews
‘"like a great sea-mark, standing every flaw, and pleasing those that eye him."’
Alexander was revived with very great pomp, of which Mrs. Bellamy's books give a very full account, and also of her quarrel with Woffington.—It drew crowded audien
[...]es for many nights; was first acted on Thursday, January the fifteenth; where Barry really appeared himself the leading God.—
King Lear was revived also that year; in which he was highly received: and a critic pronounced,
‘"To Barry they gave loud huzzas,"—"To Garrick only tears."—’
[Page 221] Barry, in the pathetic scenes, had infinite me
[...]t, and acted all well.—But the character, taken in general, was never seen, in my opinion, truly depicted with that fire, neatness, energy, quickness, and every various requisite, as by the inimi
[...]able Garrick. In tragedy, King Lear was his master-piece, (his Macbeth excepted.)
Italian Burlettas were tried a third season, but did not meet with success after the first year.—They had then the same set of comic s
[...]ers, viz. Signora Nicolina,
(alias Spiletta) her
[...] &c. as the two years preceding. Spiletta drew money it must be granted; but her first year
[...]e ha
[...] been universally allowed the inimitable, the
[...]rming, the expressive SHE. Be it observed, that
[...]rlettas had not been introduced at the King's Theatre in the Hay-Market; the entertainments co
[...]sisted only of the serious opera, and the grand da
[...]ng; not any comic performers whatever, ei
[...]her as singers or dancers.—The first comic opera, was on Monday the 12th of January, La Comediante Fatta Cantatrice; the second, (and the b
[...]) was Gli Amanti Gelosi.
Mr Foote, on Tuesday, February the second,
[...]ter the play of Lady Jane Gray—(Lady Jane, Mrs. Woffington) produced his new farce of the Englishman returned from Paris.—It was well
[...]ed; was much followed; and filed the pockets
[Page 222] of manager and performer.—Mr. Rich did so well with Barry, Foote, and the revived plays, that he had less dependence on pantomime that season than usual. Mr. Foote shared the nights of his farce as Author and Actor. He performed Sir Charles Buck, and acted Sir Paul Pliant, in the Double Dealer, and other characters to help his farce.—His benefit, as the author of the Englishman Returned, was on the 8th of March Hamlet was the play—Hamlet, Mr. Barry;—Queen, Mrs. Woffington;—Polonius, Mr. Foote;—and was by every one thought a man of talents, but a very bad statesman. He was so convinced of his error, that the day before his benefit he resigned his place at court; and Mr. Arthur was his substitute for Lord Chamberlain.
Mr. Barry's benefit that year was on Monday, March the 22;—Busiris; with the Knights:—Hartop, Mr. Foote.—Mrs. Woffington's was Ulysses; and the Frenchified Lady. Mr. Smith, on Saturday, April 3, again chose the Siege of Damascus, and acted Abudah.—That performer was known then and now by the appellation of
Gentleman Smith, from that upright conduct with which he set forward, and has stedfastly walked in the same path to this day; by which perseverance he has reached the snug retreat of content: He was at that time rising rapidly into fame as an actor;
[Page 223] therefore possessed a double claim to applause and encouragement. He had supported most of Mr. Barry's characters the winter preceding; and his long continued good reception and deservings are so well known, that my panegyric would be futile and impertinent.
Wednesday, May 26, 1756, the season concluded with the usual old bill of fare—Woffington's Sir Harry; and Orpheus.
DRURY-LANE, 1756-7.
Mr. Mossop returned to his allegiance, and Mr. Sheridan was reinstated in his Irish government; not without numerous spies, and lurking enemies;
[...]s Barry and Mossop, on their trips, during his absence, had infused different seeds of discord, which rankled and kept up the smothered flames of party, and ended in mutual ruin: For (as mentioned in my Memoirs) Sheridan was defeated, and obliged for a time to seek refuge in England.
Barry at Covent-Garden, was sinking for want of variety of characters; he playing only in tragedy: (Young Bevil, and Lord Townly excepted.) And though he may be equalled in judgment, or inferior to some performers in 1790; yet his voice and countenance can neither be purchased, surpassed, nor acquired,
for the lovers.—Garrick being reinforced with Mossop, gave his
[Page 224] company the undoubted superiority; and the little tyrant—
"Look'd, spoke, fought, and was himself a war."
Barry's novelty, was worn out in some degree, and though a darling of the public's, (and next to impossible he should be otherwise) yet Garrick carried all before him.
Harlequin Proteus, or Harlequin in China, was the pantomime of that year.
Miss Pritchard's promised appearance, 1756, caused much conversation and expectation this season; her features fixed the eye of every beholder off the stage, the face was so exquisitely handsome. She was not much older than a young lady
now a candidate for stage favour 1790: I mean Miss Wa
[...]s. Her public merits, cannot, with any pr priety, be here introduced; as it would be out o
[...] all ti e and place, and subversive to the plan I have adopted and observed relative to others
[...]or the present publication. Yet I cannot refrain, for the credit of the stag, to be her herald; and with th trumpet of
[...]ruth
[...]ound forth, that her purity and good conduct may challenge the breath of Slander,
[...] nvy, or Detraction; and her undeniably good character is such, that the more it is investigate—
Like
[...] in open air,
'Twill blea
[...] the more, and whiten to the view—
[Page 225] Mr. Garrick's Lear seemed to have gained additional strength, lustre, and fashion.—Mr. Shuter had the year preceding, revived the Wonder
[...] at Covent-Garden theatre, for his benefit, which became in consequence a stock comedy. Gibby, by Mr. Shuter; who was there the leading char
[...]er.—Don Felix, the hero, was execrably per
[...]
[...]ated by a Mr. Gibson. Mr. Garrick revived r eal
[...]y in the season, Saturday, Nov. 6, 1756;
[...] the play was so well conducted, (Gibby excepted, by Johnson, who could speak the dialect, but not act) that the play was perpetually called f
[...], and relished as a perfect performance, partic
[...]
[...]ly Mr. Garrick's Don Felix; and it was equ
[...] ly attractive every year, when he performed that
[...]aracte
[...], (which had never before been noticed in the list of
capital parts.) He valued him
[...]el
[...] on his reputation in performing Don Felix to much, that he fixed on it as the last mark of genius he ever gave; which was on Monday;
[...]ne 10, 1776, for the benefit of the theatrical
[...] On which night, after the comedy, he took his farewell of the stage; when more tears were fi
[...]ed from box, pit, and gallery for the loss of that truly inimitable actor, than at the representa
[...]on of any tragedy, seen in ancient or modern
[...] Don Felix died that night, and I fear without issue to claim
true right, and do his name
[...] honour and justice.
[Page 226] The Male Coquette (written by Garrick) was also well received. The Reprisal, and Proteus, or Harlequin in China, (by Woodward) were both well approved, but not very attractive.
Miss Pritchard's was a most remarkable first appearance, Saturday, Oct. 9, 1756:—The partiality for her mother, from the most respectable and indulgent audience in the world, Mr. Garrick's patronage and tuition, and her own beautiful face, which was fascinating to a degree, occasioned curiosity in shoals.—The mother, (Mrs. Pritchard,) leading her daughter on in Juliet, as
Lady Capulet—the tears of the young lady—the good wishes and tenderness of the town, all combined, made an affecting and pleasing scene.—But that partiality dwindled away in the early part of the season.
Her second appearance was on the 25th of October, 1756, in the character of Lady Betty Modish, where Mrs. Pritchard had been often seen, and was incomparable, in spite of person;—but the daughter wanted the mother's soul, her feeling, her fire, her whim, her imagination: which here plainly shews, that teaching and teaching will never do, unless Providence has given genius and nature to be moulded.—In that case the master may justly claim credit, and perhaps more than is his due; but without that precious gift,
talents, which must come from the universal Maker
[Page 227] alone, no master can bring a pupil, (however learned) beyond a dull languid mediocrity, to public view with eclat.
I do not recollect more particulars that year, except Mr. Foote's producing the Author, which had a great run indeed; not only from the good acting of Mr. Foote, in Cadwallader, (the out
[...]
[...]es of which character he had taken from a private family) in which he gave great proof of humour, satire, &c. but from Mrs. Clive being not
[...]
[...]ver in Mrs. Cadwallader. The piece had great
[...]ss: And wherever it is perfectly acted, and t
[...]e parts of Mr. and Mrs Cadwallader are done
[...] to in the performance, that farce will ever be a
[...]and of entertainment to all who are susceptible
[...]true comic
force.—It is not so local and
[...] as many of Mr. Foote's pieces; but is so near Nature, (though extravagantly drawn) that the piece whenever done justice to, and a favourite actor and actress in the two parts, it will live on the stage for an age to come.
Near this period, or indeed, two years later, the stage was favoured with a new candidate for fame; the eldest son of the late Mr. Fleetwood, formerly proprietor of Drury-Lane theatre.—His person was elegant and handsome: To his under
[...]tanding and education he also possessed intrepidity with coolness; and never, on any occasion, was
[Page 228] thrown off his guard, so as for any opponent whatever to look or speak to him but as a gentleman.—This was of infinite service to Mr. Fleetwood as a billiard player; at which amusement, he was by all allowed so excellent, that few would venture to hazard with him.—His well-known abilities were so highly rated by all who knew him, that great expectations were formed of his stage success. He performed Romeo, at Drury-Lane, 1758, as I recollect, on his first appearance; and had a grace and
[...]ase, that seemed not only to obtain, but command applause: Yet with all these advantage, his voice seemed consumptive, and his powers deficient, and the more he played, the less he pleased either the audience or himself, except in Young Bevil: however, tho' little accustomed to the stage, there was an
[...]ase, accompanied with elegance and native dignity in his deportment, that, take it from the first rising of the curtain to its f
[...]ll, he displayed more merit, and gentlemanlike judgment, than any first rate performer I either had at that time seen, or since, in that difficult first rate, and accomplished character.—Being ambitious, and of strong discernment, he soon found the
drama would not answer in that style of lucrative superiority, at which he only aimed; he therefore in less than two years' experiment of stage enterprise, retired
[...]rom the theatre, and engaged, (I have been informed) in an undertaking
[Page 229] in the West-Indies, where he has rapidly made a considerable fortune, and is, I believe, at this time living in that climate, enjoying the fruits of ingenuity and industry; points, which conjoined, seldom fail eing the reward of talents and strong genius.—The Ambitious Step Mother was revived for him at Drury-Lane, in 1758, to perform Artaxerxes, but without approbation.
Not having collected this work from notes, but merely from memory, Mr. Fleetwood had not occurred to my remembrance, but from having lately seen a ridiculous situation on the stage at the York
[...]heatre, from beholding Romeo's having a real sword, instead of a foil, to grace his
[...]gh. A circumstance very wrong to trust to, even
[...]er the guide of the most cautious, as hurry,
[...]attention, the stage
[...]uror, and a thousand accidents, may, for want o
[...] instant reflection, occasion m
[...]t alarming accidents—we often receive
[...]ts
[...]rom our
[...]tage battles; I myself can bear
[...]
[...]mony to an honourable
[...]car obtained in
[...]
[...]e
[...]d.—
[...]a
[...] fencers one cause, and blades,
[...] well tem
[...]ere
[...], too often another, which oc
[...]on
[...] hiet; but to incur the hazard o
[...] certain dangerous weapons is surely neither par
[...]ab
[...] nor
[...]ufferable
[...] lately
[...]aw Romeo with a real sword, which the fiery I
[...]balt no sooner viewed, than he kept
[Page 230] not only a preposterous,
prudent, distance, but
[...]e
[...] down dead, without an attempt at battle. Another instance, was when Mr. Fleetwood, just mentioned, was acting Romeo, at Drury-Lane: He had forgot his foil; Mr. Austin was the Paris, and not knowing his danger, was determined to be courageous, and fought like a lion; till Mr. Romeo, who fenced well and elegantly, being determined to conquer, (in reality) whipped Mr. Austin through the guts
sans ceremonie: Swords were
then prohibited in consequence, and a severe penalty inflicted for wearing one on any account. Accidents of that sort were more likely then to happen than at present; as not any gentleman of the
London theatres, when dressed, was ever seen without a sword by his side.
A misfortune of a similar kind to that lately mentioned, is that of the late celebrated Mr. Farquhar, who after being on the stage as an actor, ob
[...]ained a commission in the army, in which situation he wrote several well known and entertaining comedies; the Beaux Stratagem, Constant Couple, the Recruiting Officer, and several others, which at that time, and the present, are in deserved high estimation: but an unlucky accident, in the year
[...]697, put a period to his performing.—Being to play Guyamor, in the Indian Emperor, who kills Vasquez; and having
[Page 231] forgot to change his sword for a foil, he wounded a Mr. Price, who acted Vasquez, dangerously, though not fatally. The impression which this accident made on a mind so sensible, and the reflecting on what might have been the consequences, determined him to relinquish a profession, which might, perhaps, expose him to like mistakes in future.—I have merely introduced this matter here, for every performer seriously to consider, that it is no reason, but that what has not yet befallen him, may, unhappily, at some future period, ensue; and not trusting to the hazard, is a certain preventive to the danger.
From the peril of swords,
permit me to return to my stage calendar, and relate, that Miss Bar
[...]n (now Mrs. Abington)'s first appearance at Drury-Lane, was on Friday, the twenty-ninth of October, 1756, in Lady Pliant.—Sir Paul Pliant, Mr. Foote.—Her second appearance was on the third night of the Wonder, in the Virg
[...]n Unmasked.—Lilliput, a Satire, written by Mr. Garrick, was excellently acted by children: And the season concluded with Mr. Garrick's performance of Lord Chalkstone.—After the play of Essex, Mrs. Pritchard's Queen Elizabeth, (from indisposition) was read by Mrs.
[...]net (now living.) That night was appropriated for
[Page 232] the benefit of a Mrs. Horton, a celebrated actress, for some seasons after the decease of Mrs. Oldfield; but I am sorry to relate, though it was on a charitable occasion, and Mr. Garrick aided the performance with his powerful assistance, that neither first nor half price gave any appearance of help or spirit to support the once admired Mrs. Horton.—It was no more than
sans box—sans pit—sans gallery—sans every thing.—
COVENT GARDEN, 1756-7.
This season opened rather languid.—Mr. Barry's Lear was not attractive.—Alexander did something. Nossiter was the Statira; as Bellamy was ill, and had broke her arm. Woffington was on the decline; but she never neglected her business, tho' her health, spirits, and beauty, were visibly de
[...]aying.—
[...]wo plays of Beaumont and Fletcher's, (W
[...]t without Money; and the Humorous Lieutenant) were revived at a great expence; they were well conducted and met with some success:—
[...]he Humourous Lieutenant was performed at the command of his present Majesty, then Prince of Wales, on Friday the 10th of December:—Also Mrs. Centlivre's comedy of the Rover was produced, and commanded by his Majesty—A
[...]tered this year, 1790, by Mr. Kemble; which alterations
[Page 233] were requisite: as in 1757, Ned Blunt actually undressed to his drawers.—The London Cuckolds was acted, (for the last time, I believe) on the lord mayor's day.—The Englishman returned from Paris being published, (as was ever the custom in those days—not locked up as at present, as if afraid to see the light) was acted, and stood its ground tolerably; assisted by Mr. Dyer, in Sir Charles Buck; Miss Nossiter the Lucinda. Bellamy did not play that season, except Almeria, for the benefit of Mr. Sparks, in March.—Mrs. Woffington that year acted Lothario and the Frenchified Lady for her own benefit.
That winter Mrs. Gregory's fame had increased
[...]o much in Ireland, that she ventured over to play on shares a few nights at Covent-Garden.—Her Calista did the most for her. She had great merit, an
[...] much fire.—Her Hermione was in some scenes very capital.
Mrs. Gregory, (now Mrs. Fitzhenry) some years after, tried Drury-Lane boards, and was in
[...]nded as a curb on Mrs. Yates. This was suspected by Mrs. Yates's friends and the public, and Mrs. Fitzhenry's person stood no chance against the beautiful Mrs. Yates's: The Irish gentlemen were too sanguine—In consequence, a violent opposition took place; and Mrs. Fitzhenry, (notwithstanding her good character and great
[Page 234] abilities) was severely and cruelly treated: A circumstance seldom happening from a London audience.—But what will not spleen effect?—This had nearly proved of fatal consequence to her
[...]ame as an actress in Dublin; the ill report being
tr
[...]bled to greet her return. But real worth, and the high esteem she was held in by the worthy, baffled her enemies—She was soon reinstated in her former enviable situation of public applause and private esteem; and for years her emoluments were such, as to make happy the remainder of her days by a laudable and well-earned independence; and she now lives beloved, and feels the rapture of daily testimonies of regard paid to her unfullied reputation.
Performers of the old and new school may here take a hint respe
[...]ting Mrs.
Fitzhenry's good and ill treatment, as it plainly shews how little the stability of the best audience is to be depended upon: For in my space of memory I do not recollect a more favourable reception than was that lady's in Hermione; and though of their own London planting, yet malevolence, party, and spleen, wished to cast her public merit and her private worth,
like a loathsome weed, away. Hence we may gather and surmise, it is highly needful we should
[...]urb our vanities,
[...]or every one has more or less) so as to prevent the over-powering
[Page 235] our wits: For the
entire reliance on public favour, it is plainly evident, too much resembles trusting to what we judge the fast gripe of a strong s
[...]ppery eel, which is vanished when we fondly imagine it is most secure. Audiences, I fear, resemble each other, in a more or less degree, all the world over; and have, like actors on the expanded stage of life, their different change of opinions, their caprices, and their contradictions. If that be really the case, and that they do not know their own minds, but are unsteady, patronize one year, and abandon the next, what a flaming
prudent beacon should it exhibit to theatrical reflection to warn against trusting too implicitly to public applause, or of depending too far on our fancied or real abilities, as too surely the breaths that raise can sink us; and we who hold the mirror should recollect, that in the wide world's drama the ring of fickle changes are wholly comprised in that established ever-running play called
The Follies of a Day; wherein all act their parts with applause, approbation, disgrace, or sink into
oblivion. The stage, with all its attractive brilliancies, which at a certain time of life renders it improving and bewitching, (for in youth even its vexations are reconciled and connected with its pleasures yet in its highest meridian, had I a dozen
[...]ns, it would be the last profession I should advise or wish
[Page 236] any one of them to adopt, (though I never would prevent genius or strong inclination in its pursuits for li
[...]e) to
many are called but few are chosen. My advanced reasons do not arise from a mean opinion of the art, (quite the reverse) but from the too frequent affronts
[...]as observed in my second volume) its professors are often liable to receive from the supercil
[...]ous and the domineering; and what is more grating to feeling dispositions, they are sometimes offered from those we have been taught t
[...] believe and look on as (what are termed) friends and acquaintances.—And surely it is the same composition of mind, the same resolution and courage, which make the greatest friendships, and the greatest en
[...]ties; and he who is too lightly reconciled after high provocation (which in a little time
I really am) may recommend himself to the world
[...]s a Christian, but should hardly
[...]e trusted as a friend
[...]he Italians (I am told) have a proverb to the purpose, which is,
‘"To forgive the first time shews a good man, the second time a fool:"’—For I ve once past is, at the best, forgotten, but
[...]tener sours to hate.
I have been led to this digression by the having someti es met with in
[...]ul
[...]ing superiority
[...]uriting with dignity, when, perhaps, such persons could not dictate a better letter than m felt, (nd that is bad enough every body knows). It certainly
[Page 237] will be admitted as truly provoking to hear those who are neither possessed of talents, wit, or humour, yet authoritatively (as arrogantly) casting sarcastic sneers; but, as Cibber observes, the consolation should be, that such illiberal behaviour seldom or never proceeds from persons remarkable for good qualities:—And assuredly, such superficial critics should note, that it would be con
[...]dered rude (not to add impudent) in a degree, were a player to tell an eminent brewer at table, (with a mixed company) that his la
[...]t ca
[...]k of
[...]all-beer was trashy or verjuice; or the wine mer
[...]ant, that his wine was mu
[...]ty; or the woollen-
[...]per, that his cloth was rotten: for such real
[...] will unavoidab
[...]y happen to the most ing
[...]ous and upright trader; and there cannot be a
[...]ore honourable or est
[...]mable character. The best mechanic is as often put out of his workman
[...]hip by an unlucky wheel going wrong, as plays, from un
[...]ore
[...]een cau
[...]es, are too often ill-acted. Besides, good actors and actresses are not to be picked or gathered as easy as hops; for very good
[...]es are much scarcer than pine apples:—Nor should a piece, condemned by one snarler,
(as murdering his precious time) be admitted as a reason that others must think like him, and neither approve nor applaud because such a play or
[...]arce is condemned, and labours unfortunately
[Page 238] under the disapprobation of one or more overbearing and dissatisfied critic. And surely no great condescension even for the advantage o
[...] untwisting the features, if such flinty hearts were to yield, and sometimes approve and shew a benevolent face, as if actuated by
charitable motives. I am aware (and sorry to say) that it is next to impossible to avoid creating enemies; and real judgment freely investigated, I fear, is more apt to err, and be warped in the wisest understandings, than will be readily allowed or admitted as to matters of opinion. But my experience leads me to suggest, that it is enforcedly implanted in our natures to be swayed by our interests and partial
[...]t
[...]es, our likings and d
[...]likings, and too oft we know not why. As for my own part, I have frequently found it next to impossible, when perchance, on beholding t
[...]o entire strangers boxing in the street, or two game cocks fighting, but that I, impulsively, an
[...], as it were, inconceivably, have felt a pity and a strong pre
[...]ilection in favour of one in preference to the other.
Ruminating on theatric usage has, however, produced one good effect, and affords comfort to my peace of mind, when I consider that (after a toilsome task of thirty-three years hard duty in the theatric field, with many hair-breadth scapes) I have been inured and reconciled to the
[Page 239] sufferings I have undergone from my fracture and severe illness, which threatened dissolution; as its consequences has relieved me from the
constant stage acting before the period it would probably (with consistency) otherwise have happened: And now I rehearse
solus, like Major Sturgeon, and cry,
‘"It is all over with me.—Farewell the plumed steeds and neighing troops, (as the black man in the play says) for, like the Roman
Censurer, I shall retire to my
Savine field and cultivate cabbages;"’ and can say with Foote—
Not but there are who merit all my care,
Pleas'd to applaud, benevolent to spare.
And of such noble minds, (which are as nice in their judgments, as in their censures they are light and right) I of my audiences with truth can boast. Now like a truant (which I often was in my youth) and old boy like, I have stretched far beyond my bounds, and justly fear the rod of deserved correction due on coming back to my proper place, where I must, as in duty bound, repeat my task as well as I am able, and turn back from my fault of digression, to my account of the season at Covent Garden in 1756-7.
Mr. Barry, in the month of January, attempted to encounter with the difficult character of Richard
[Page 240] the Third, and am sorry to relate, that he was lamentably deficient in every point in his representation of that spirited and designing monarch; the which occasioned no little exultation to his rival Garrick.
Mrs. Stot (a
[...]ias Lesingham) made her first appearance in Desdemona, on Thursday, November 18, 1756, but quickly retired, and did not appear on the stage again for a considerable time after
Mr. Rich's Harlequinade of the Rape of Proserp
[...] was also produced, and attended with good fortune, as it filled the houses for several nights to the we
[...]kest plays.
Douglas was
[...] presented in February 175
[...], and was w
[...]ll, but not greatly received or followed. Mr Barry's performance was good, but his figure too u
[...]h for that of the stripling; and he looked worse for the youth by havi
[...]g o
[...]rated the simpl
[...] sh p
[...]erd in a rich puckered white
[...]atin shape bre ches, &c. Mrs. Woffington, in tragedy, certainly had great merit—in Hermione, Jane Shore, &c.—but the woe-felt gr
[...]ef of Lady Randolph, n
[...]it
[...]er her fine person no
[...] accomplishments, aided by novelty, could reach as Mrs. Crawford has done. The play plea
[...]e, but no more. Mr. Sparks was approved in Old Norval, but was not more
[Page 241] than tolerable. At that time I did not expect to see what has turned out so contrary—that Douglas is and will be, for the credit of the stage, a lasting ornament. The story is simple, natural, and affecting, its language elegant and beautiful; and the lessons that may be observed from many passages are worthy the attention and retention of the learned, the gay, the giddy, and the wise.
I will here drop my Tablet, as occurrences from this season begin my own particular stage
[...]story, to which volumes I re
[...]er for many theatrical anecdotes,
[...]ither of others or myself. The T
[...]bl
[...]t I have sketched to a considerable length,
[...]t being meant as an informant for any reader of quality or no quality, actor or no actor, to know, (
[...]t desirous) in any year, from 1747 to 1757, w
[...]at has happened either as to traged
[...], comedy, p
[...]storal, pantomime, theatrical revolutions, &c. The production has given me an amazing deal
[...] t
[...]ouble, p
[...]rplexity, and labour. I wish all the materials had been in abl
[...]r hands, I think
[...]ome entertaining and improving might have been then collected; as it is, I can only once more repeat, that I am conscious of m
[...] own def
[...]e
[...]y, and entreat for the many nece
[...]ary all
[...]wances from the publi
[...], also from my brethren
[...] the Sock and Buskin. I s
[...]t nothing down in
[Page 242] malice—I truly and anxiously wish them all well: And that the theatres may continue to flourish, the performers be deservedly graced and favoured while living, then handed down with respect and pleasing history for ages to come, with laurels
ever green, is the sincere desire of theirs, and the stage's much honoured and obliged humble servant,
TATE WILKINSON.
York,
Sept. 1790.
END OF THE TABLET.
‘VELUTI IN SPECULUM.
There I see my own FIGURE—
A FOOL OR A CYPHER.’