10 February 1786

Event Information
Theatre: Covent Garden
Theatrical Season: 1785-1786
Volume: 5
Comments: Benefit for Mrs Abington. Pit and Boxes will be laid together. Ladies and Gentlemen are most earnestly requested to come early, to prevent Inconvenience in getting to their Places, and to send their Servants to keep them by Four o'clock. "At the close of the entertainment Mrs Abington came forward, and delivered a short poetical address to her fashionable auditory [written by Maurice Morgann (Monthly Mirror, Nov. 1797, p. 263)], apposite to her feelings on the present occasion" (Morning Herald, 11 Feb.). "The character [of Scrub] throughout was well conceived, and executed with a sprightliness and degree of humour that kept the house in a continual roar of laughter" (Public Advertiser, 11 Feb.) "Mrs Abington's voice was in its usual tone; her manners and deportment were inattentive and torpid, rather than active and interesting" (Morning Post, 11 Feb.). "With all her endeavours to give new points to the character, she entirely failed. Her appearance en culottes, so preposterously padded, exceeded nature. Her gestures to look comical could not get the least hold of the audience, though they had seen her before in men's clothes, when playing Portia in The Merchant of Venice, where her figure, dressed as a lawyer in his gown, gave effect to her excellent delivery on mercy, and the audience had been always delighted. But this leu de benefice, comparatively speaking, was disgusting and absurd as she dressed the character ... However, I have heard it originated in a bet she had previously made" (Henry Angelo, Reminiscenes, 11, 281-82). Receipts: #406 13s. 6d. (249/9/6; 1/9/0; tickets: 155/15/0) (charge: free)

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  • Original Data

    Source: OCR from HathiTrust PDFs

    *p1786 02 10 cg The Beaux Stratagem. As 19 Nov. 1785, but Scrub (for that night only)-Mrs Abington; Mrs Sullen-Mrs Warren (1st appearance in that character). Also Three Weeks after Marriage. As 19 Oct. 1785. dancing. As 7 Oct. 1785. COMMENT. Benefit for Mrs Abington. Pit and Boxes will be laid together. Ladies and Gentlemen are most earnestly requested to come early, to prevent Inconvenience in getting to their Places, and to send their Servants to keep them by Four o'clock. "At the close of the entertainment Mrs Abington came forward, and delivered a short poetical address to her fashionable auditory [written by Maurice Morgann (Monthly Mirror, Nov. 1797, p. 263)], apposite to her feelings on the present occasion" (Morning Herald, 11 Feb.). "The character [of Scrub] throughout was well conceived, and executed with a sprightliness and degree of humour that kept the house in a continual roar of laughter" (Public Advertiser, 11 Feb.) "Mrs Abington's voice was in its usual tone; her manners and deportment were inattentive and torpid, rather than active and interesting" (Morning Post, 11 Feb.). "With all her endeavours to give new points to the character, she entirely failed. Her appearance en culottes, so preposterously padded, exceeded nature. Her gestures to look comical could not get the least hold of the audience, though they had seen her before in men's clothes, when playing Portia in The Merchant of Venice, where her figure, dressed as a lawyer in his gown, gave effect to her excellent delivery on mercy, and the audience had been always delighted. But this leu de benefice, comparatively speaking, was disgusting and absurd as she dressed the character ... However, I have heard it originated in a bet she had previously made" (Henry Angelo, Reminiscenes, 11, 281-82). Receipts: �406 13s. 6d. (249/9/6; 1/9/0; tickets: 155/15/0) (charge: free).
  • Cleaned Data

    *p1786 02 10 cg The Beaux Stratagem. ^As17851119^, but Scrub (for that night only)-Mrs Abington; Mrs Sullen-Mrs Warren (1st appearance in that character) .hathi.*a1786 02 10 cg Three Weeks after Marriage. ^As17851019^ .hathi.*d1786 02 10 cg ^As17851007^ .hathi.*c1786 02 10 cg Benefit for Mrs Abington. Pit and Boxes will be laid together. Ladies and Gentlemen are most earnestly requested to come early, to prevent Inconvenience in getting to their Places, and to send their Servants to keep them by Four o'clock. "At the close of the entertainment Mrs Abington came forward, and delivered a short poetical address to her fashionable auditory [written by Maurice Morgann (Monthly Mirror, Nov. 1797, p. 263)], apposite to her feelings on the present occasion" (Morning Herald, 11 Feb.). "The character [of Scrub] throughout was well conceived, and executed with a sprightliness and degree of humour that kept the house in a continual roar of laughter" (Public Advertiser, 11 Feb.) "Mrs Abington's voice was in its usual tone; her manners and deportment were inattentive and torpid, rather than active and interesting" (Morning Post, 11 Feb.). "With all her endeavours to give new points to the character, she entirely failed. Her appearance en culottes, so preposterously padded, exceeded nature. Her gestures to look comical could not get the least hold of the audience, though they had seen her before in men's clothes, when playing Portia in The Merchant of Venice, where her figure, dressed as a lawyer in his gown, gave effect to her excellent delivery on mercy, and the audience had been always delighted. But this leu de benefice, comparatively speaking, was disgusting and absurd as she dressed the character ... However, I have heard it originated in a bet she had previously made" (Henry Angelo, Reminiscenes, 11, 281-82). Receipts: #406 13s. 6d. (249/9/6; 1/9/0; tickets: 155/15/0) (charge: free) .hathi.
  • Parsed Data

    Event: 44251 | 17860210 | cg | hathi | Benefit for Mrs Abington. Pit and Boxes will be laid together. Ladies and Gentlemen are most earnestly requested to come early, to prevent Inconvenience in getting to their Places, and to send their Servants to keep them by Four o'clock. "At the close of the entertainment Mrs Abington came forward, and delivered a short poetical address to her fashionable auditory [written by Maurice Morgann (Monthly Mirror, Nov. 1797, p. 263)], apposite to her feelings on the present occasion" (Morning Herald, 11 Feb.). "The character [of Scrub] throughout was well conceived, and executed with a sprightliness and degree of humour that kept the house in a continual roar of laughter" (Public Advertiser, 11 Feb.) "Mrs Abington's voice was in its usual tone; her manners and deportment were inattentive and torpid, rather than active and interesting" (Morning Post, 11 Feb.). "With all her endeavours to give new points to the character, she entirely failed. Her appearance en culottes, so preposterously padded, exceeded nature. Her gestures to look comical could not get the least hold of the audience, though they had seen her before in men's clothes, when playing Portia in The Merchant of Venice, where her figure, dressed as a lawyer in his gown, gave effect to her excellent delivery on mercy, and the audience had been always delighted. But this leu de benefice, comparatively speaking, was disgusting and absurd as she dressed the character ... However, I have heard it originated in a bet she had previously made" (Henry Angelo, Reminiscenes, 11, 281-82). Receipts: #406 13s. 6d. (249/9/6; 1/9/0; tickets: 155/15/0) (charge: free)
    Performance: 95660 | 44251 | p | The Beaux Stratagem | As17851119, but Scrub (for that night only)-Mrs Abington; Mrs Sullen-Mrs Warren (1st appearance in that character) .
    AsSeeDate: 95660 | cg | p | As | 17851119
    Cast:
    166576 | 95660 | Scrub | Mrs Abington
    166577 | 95660 | Mrs Sullen | Mrs Warren
    601385 | 95660 | Archer | Lewis
    601386 | 95660 | Aimwell | Wroughton
    601387 | 95660 | Father Foigard | Johnstone
    601388 | 95660 | Boniface | Booth
    601389 | 95660 | Sullen | Fearon
    601390 | 95660 | Gibbet | Cubitt
    601391 | 95660 | Sir Charles Freeman | Davies
    601392 | 95660 | Cherry | Mrs Martyr
    601393 | 95660 | Dorinda | Mrs Bates
    601394 | 95660 | Lady Bountiful | Miss Platt
    601395 | 95660 | Gipsy | Miss Stuart
    Performance: 95661 | 44251 | a | Three Weeks after Marriage | As17851019 .
    AsSeeDate: 95661 | cg | a | As | 17851019
    Cast:
    601396 | 95661 | Sir Charles Racket | Lewis
    601397 | 95661 | Lovelace | Palmer
    601398 | 95661 | Woodley | Cubitt
    601399 | 95661 | Drugget | Quick
    601400 | 95661 | Dimity | Mrs Wilson
    601401 | 95661 | Mrs Drugget | Mrs Pitt
    601402 | 95661 | Nancy | Mrs Morton
    601403 | 95661 | Lady Racket | Mrs Abington
    Performance: 95662 | 44251 | d | As17851007 | hathi.
    AsSeeDate: 95662 | cg | d | As | 17851007

Mainpiece

Comments:
As17851119, but Scrub (for that night only)-Mrs Abington; Mrs Sullen-Mrs Warren (1st appearance in that character) .
Cast:

Afterpiece

Comments:
As17851019 .
Cast:

Dance

Comment: As17851007

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