Event Comment: Benefit for
King. [This was
Smith's last appearance on the stage, from which he had officially retired on 9 June 1788.] Broadside in
Kemble playbills announcing this benefit: Mr King most respectfully informs the Public that his Night is fixed for Friday the 18th of May, when will be presented
The School for Scandal. Mr King has the pleasure to add that
Mr Smith, who was so long
and so worthily applauded by the Public,
and was the original performer of
Charles Surface in the above, distinguished Comedy, at the particular request of Mr King, backed by a strong assurance from many admirers
and encouragers of the Drama that it will not only add to Mr King's emolument but highly gratify the
Town, has kindly consented to return to the Theatre for one night,
and resume his favourite Character. "We had been told that
Smith pourtrayed the Manners of a finished gentleman with more delicacy
and characteristic propriety than any actor of his day; but this did not appear to us to be his particular excellence; he st
ands too wide to be graceful,
and his deportment gains no advantage from a perpetual application of his h
and to the lower part of the waist. These habits are far from elegant. His Charles, however, is a favourable specimen of that sort of acting which commonly falls under the denomination of the old school: light, airy,
and natural; which excites applause without any anxious endeavour to produce it; which suffers the points to tell of themselves,
and does not place them as so many traps to ensnare the injudicious part of the audience" (
Monthly Mirror, May 1798, p. 299). "He was received with the most heart-felt gratulations by an audience who did not expect any apology for such acting, though he saw fit to deliver one at the conclusion of the play" (
Monthly Visitor, May 1798, p. 72).
Times, 4 May: Tickets to be had of
King at his house,
New Store-street,
Bedford-square. Receipts: #674 6s. (388.0.6; 55.17.6; 2.0.0); tickets: 228.8.0) (charge: #212 5s. 6d.)