Event Comment: Benefit for
Shuter and
Miss Haughton. Tickets at stage door. [For criticism of Shuter and
Miss Haughton, see
Genest, IV, p. 363, from
The Present State of the Stage in Great Britain and Ireland, 1753. Nineteen of
the Fifty-five pages of this pamphlet defend
the stage on classicial authority and moral grounds from attacks by
the religious bigots, and present an ideal picture of a manager, laying under some contribution, it would seem,
the character of a manager presented ten years earlier (1743) in
Queries to be Answered.
The author especially likes
the moral of
Tate's alteration of
Lear.
The remaining pages give a paragraph or two of criticism to
the leading actors and actresses in some of
their most affecting parts (sixteen pages to
Drury Lane Performers, all of whom appear in
the author's eye to be ei
ther "Excellent" or "Very Good.")
The remaining space is devoted to
the performers at
Covent Garden and at
the Theatre Royal in Dublin. All those spoken of fare well in
the hands of this bound-to-be pleased critic. Shuter is here commended for ability to play an Old Man convincingly though he was but 22 years old, and to play at all considering his lack of education. He possesses a great fund of drollery, and bids fair to be as great in low comedy as it is possible for man to conceive.'
Miss Haughton described as an actress of promise. Seems never to have got
the better of a lisp, and a
Newcastle manner of pronouncing
the letter 'r.'] Receipts: #290 (
Cross)
Performances
Mainpiece Title: The Stratagem
Performance Comment: As17521123, but Scruch-Shuter, first time; Aimwell-Havard; Gibbet-Ackman; Foigard-Yates; Cherry-Miss Haughton.Afterpiece Title: Miss in Her Teens
Dance: IV: Country Amusements-Devisse, Mlle Auretti; End: A Hornpipe-Mathews, the Little Swiss