Memoirs of the late Mrs. Robinson (1801), vols I-II

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Bibliographic Information

Memoirs of the late Mrs. Robinson (1801), vols I-II

Mary Robinson ; edited by Sharon Setzer

(Chawton House library series, . Women's memoirs . Women's theatrical memoirs ; pt. 1, v. 1)

Pickering & Chatto, 2007

Other Title

Women's theatrical memoirs

Memoirs of the late Mrs. Robinson

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Note

Reprint. Originally published: London : Printed by Wilkes and Taylor for R. Phillips, 1801

Bibliography: p. xix-xxiii

Description and Table of Contents

Description

By the close of the Eighteenth Century, the theatrical memoir had become a popular and established genre. This ten-volume facsimile collection offers accounts of the late eighteenth-century stage, which provide insights into contemporary constructions of gender, sexuality and fame.

Table of Contents

Part I Volume 1 Mary Robinson, Memoirs of the Late Mrs Robinson (1801) In 1779, Robinson captured the heart of the young Prince of Wales as Perdita in The Winter's Tale. Her account is one of the highlights of her Memoirs, written almost twenty years later, amid the furore that erupted over William Godwin's publication of Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman. The unfavorable reception of Godwin's intended tribute to Wollstonecraft provided Robinson with the impetus to rewrite the unsympathetic stories that followed her affair with the Prince of Wales. Volumes 2 & 3 James Boaden, The Life of Mrs Jordan (1831) Playwright and theatrical critic James Boaden's Life of Mrs Jordan promised its readers 'a more perfect picture' of the actress and 'a truer representation of her colourful "private life"' than any previous biographer had attempted. Both an admiring account of Dorothy Jordan's career on the stage and a sympathetic treatment of her life as mistress of Prince William Henry, Duke of Clarence (later William IV) and mother of his ten children, this remained the definitive biography of the actress for many years. Volumes 4 & 5 Thomas Campbell, Life of Mrs Siddons (1834) Thomas Campbell's biography offers an affectionate portrait of the most celebrated tragic actress of her generation. Based on correspondence, memoranda and personal recollections of the biographer's long-standing friendship with Siddons, Campbell's Life presents a compelling account of the actress's meteoric rise to fame following her appearance as Isabella in Thomas Southerne's Fatal Marriage at Drury Lane in 1782.

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