English Theatrical Anecdotes, 1660-1800 explores the theatrical anecdotes role in the construction of stage fame in Englands emergent celebrity culture during the long eighteenth century, as well as the challenges of employing anecdotes in theatre scholarship today. Chapters in this book discuss anecdotes about actors, actresses, musicians, and other theatre people.
The essays in English Theatrical Anecdotes, 1660-1800 explore the theatrical anecdotes role in the construction of stage fame in Englands emergent celebrity culture during the long eighteenth century, as well as the challenges of employing such anecdotes in theatre scholarship today. This collection showcases scholarship that complicates the theatrical anecdote and shows its many sides and applications beyond the expected comic punch. Discussing anecdotal narratives about theatre people as producing, maintaining, and sometimes toppling individual fame, this book crucially investigates a key mechanism of celebrity in the long eighteenth century that reaches into the nineteenth century and beyond. The anecdote erases boundaries between public and private and fictionalizing the individual in ways deeply familiar to twenty-first century celebrity culture.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Miniature Stages of Celebrity: English Theatrical Anecdotes,
16001800
Heather Ladd and Leslie Ritchie
PART I
ACTING BADLY: MISBEHAVING PERFORMERS
1 Killing Delane; or, Mimickry and the Anecdota obscura
Leslie Ritchie
2 Violent Afterlives: The Anecdote in Eighteenth-Century Theater Biographies
MĮire Macneill
3 Samuel Foote, Esq.: Caricature, Class, and the Comic Theatrical Anecdote
Heather Ladd
PART II
ANECDOTAL BODIES
4 Pregnancy and the Late Stuart Stage, 16611702
Chelsea Phillips
5 A High Treat to the Anecdote Hunters!: The Body of Mrs. Sophia Baddeley
Nevena Martinocvi
6 A Bellyful of Nightingales: Seven Stories of Seven Singers
Michael Burden
PART III
ACTING CAREERS AND THE PROFESSIONAL ANECDOTE
7 Anecdote and the Regional Actress: A History of the Farren Family in
Several Anecdotes
Fiona Ritchie
8 Neither Confirmed nor Refuted: The Anecdotal Elizabeth Barry
Seth Wilson
PART IV
ANECDOTES AFTERLIVES: SCHOLARLY ENCOUNTERS
9 Anecdotal Origin Stories: Mary Ann Yatess Trip to Drury Lane
Elaine Mcgirr
10 The Vanishing Subject in Anecdotal Abridgments of Theatrical
Biographies
Amanda Weldy Boyd
11 Queering Roxane from Davenant to Richardson
Danielle Bobker
Coda: Whither Theatrical Anecdote?
Heather Ladd and Leslie Ritchie
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
HEATHER LADD is a former associate professor in the Department of English at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta, Canada. She is the co-editor of this collection and has published on many eighteenth-century writers, including Charlotte Smith, Ann Radcliffe, John Gay, Thomas DUrfey, and Elizabeth Craven. She is now located in Vancouver, British Columbia.
LESLIE RITCHIE is a professor of English at Queens University in Kingston, Ontario. She is the author of David Garrick and the Mediation of Celebrity and Women Writing Music in Late Eighteenth-Century England: Social Harmony in Literature and Performance.