Gay was the Pit. The Life and Times of Anne Oldfield, Actress. 1683-1730.

By Robert Gore-Browne

Printed: 1957

Publisher: Max Reinhart. London

Dimensions 15 × 22 × 2 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 15 x 22 x 2

£38.00
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Description

In the original dust jacket. Red cloth binding with gilt title on the spine.

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For conditions, please view our photographs. A nice clean rare first edition copy from the library gathered by the famous Cambridge Don, computer scientist, food and wine connoisseur, Jack Arnold LANG.

First Edition. Fine cloth copy in a very good, very slightly edge-nicked and somewhat dust-dulled dw. Remains particularly and surprisingly well-preserved; tight, bright, clean and sharp-cornered. ; 192 pages; Subjects: Oldfield, Anne, 1683-1730. Theater –England –London

Anne Oldfield (1683 – 23 October 1730) was an English actress and one of the highest paid actresses of her time. She was born in London in 1683. Her father was a soldier, James Oldfield. Her mother was either Anne or Elizabeth Blanchard. Her grandfather owned a tavern and left her father several properties, he however mortgaged these which resulted in Anne and her mother being placed in financial difficulty when he died young. It appears that Oldfield received some education because her biographers state that she read widely in her youth. Oldfield and her mother went to live with her aunt, Mrs Voss, in the Mitre tavern, St James. In 1699, she attracted George Farquhar’s attention when he overheard her reciting lines from Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher’s play The Scornful Lady (1616) in a back room of her tavern. Soon after, she was hired by Christopher Rich to join the cast of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. A year later she was cast in her first small role as Candiope in John Dryden’s Secret Love; or, The Maiden Queen (1699). After her success in a minor role, she was given the lead in John Fletcher’s The Pilgrim (1647). In the summer of 1703, Oldfield replaced Susanna Verbruggen when her contract was terminated before the company travelled to Bath to perform for Queen Anne and her court. Oldfield became one of Drury Lane’s leading actresses. Colley Cibber acknowledged that she had as much as he to do with the success of his The Careless Husband (1704), in which she created the part of Lady Modish. Speaking of her portrayal of Lady Townly in his The Provoked Husband (1728), Cibber was to say, “that here she outdid her usual Outdoing”. She also played the title role in Ben Jonson’s Epicoene, and Celia in his Volpone.

Contemporary gossip is recorded that there were rivalries between Oldfield, Anne Bracegirdle, Jane Rogers and Susannah Centlivre, all of whom were supposedly vying for the best roles. In 1706 Oldfield came into conflict with the Drury Lane’s management over benefits and salary she believed she had been promised, but which the theatre refused to pay. Oldfield left and joined the competing acting company at Haymarket Theatre before returning to Drury Lane shortly after with a fresh contract and a new position as joint-sharer of the Drury Lane Theatre. On a separate occasion, Oldfield was offered to become manager of the Theatre, “but her sex was thought to be an objection to that measure” thus being asked to name her own terms to stay in her old position, Oldfield received 200 guineas salary, which was ultimately raised to 500 guineas resulting in Oldfield becoming the highest paid actress of her time.

Robert Francis Gore-Browne was a British author, biographer, and radio and television scriptwriter. He is the creator of ‘Lucien Clay’, a painter and amateur sleuth.

Condition notes

Some foxing

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