Exit the Actress (7 page)

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Authors: Priya Parmar

 

By Most Particular Desire

T
HEATRE
R
OYAL,
C
OVENT
G
ARDEN

Audiences Brilliant and Overflowing

Are Invited to Attend the Revival of

T
HE
H
UMOUROUS
L
IEUTENANT

A Tragicomedy by Mr. Beaumont and Mr. fletcher

This Present Wednesday, May 7, 1663

It will be repeated tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday next

P
RESENTED
B
Y MR.
T
HOMAS
K
ILLIGREW,
L
EASEE AND
R
OYAL
P
ATENT
H
OLDER

To be Performed by:

T
HE
K
ING’S
C
OMPANY
(E
STABLISHED
1660)

With: Mr. John Lacy, Mr. Michael Mohun,

Mr. Theophilus Bird,

And: Mr. Nicholas Burt, Mrs. Margaret Hughes,

and Mrs. Anne Marshall

P
ERFORMANCES
B
EGIN AT
3
O’CLOCK DAILY

When I Begin to Work

Friday, May 8, 1663 (day after the opening, and my second day!)

We stand with our backs to the stage. We line up and face out, and as the audience piles in—we begin. Each girl has her own technique. Alice Winthrop tugs down her bodice until she is nearly bursting out, leans low over the young men in the pit, and, breathing in their ears, asks them if they might care for an orange.
Of course
they might—unless she has been eating onions. Lily Beale (Mad Lil) used to sell oranges at the Duke’s Theatre (the Opera) and so is known to the regulars and has her patter down perfectly. She targets couples: “Go on, Mr. Weathercombe, buy your lady a lovely China orange! Don’t you be too cheap to treat her to something sweet.” Lil could sell water to a fish.

Meg, her skirts pinned high on her stocky frame to allow her greater mobility, is
everywhere
up and down the aisles, selling oranges, delivering messages, chatter, chatter, chatter: hats with the ladies, hunting with the men—and spreading gossip faster than any news sheet. She keeps a close eye on her girls, deciding where we stand and how many we sell, and when she feels like a pitch isn’t working she invents a new one. Laughing at my inexperience, she calls from the aisles: “You don’t have to do much. You’ve got the goods. Little bit sweet, little bit sharp: always honest, and pretty as a peach. Just get out there, and they’ll flock to you!”

And they
did
flock to me. I sold my basket before the end of the first act! I also sold some of Alice’s share, as she got waylaid on Jack Parson’s knee in Fop’s Corner through much of the second act—Mrs. Parson had stayed home with a head. I sold twenty-six oranges, ferried three love notes—one was rejected unopened by a thick-necked woman in a sour green dress—and brought a lovely girl in a lavender lawn gown a rose from a man in the
gallery with a bushy moustache. Then I got to watch the third act from the footlights. It was
marvellous.

LONDON GAZETTE

Sunday, May 10, 1663

Most Deservedly Called London’s Best and Brilliant Broadsheet

The Social Notebook

Volume 73

Ambrose Pink’s recollections of an evening of theatre

Darlings,

On Thursday last, London’s beau-monde witnessed the King’s Company’s first performance in its new and delightful Theatre Royal in Bridges Street (so much better than the fragrantly cramped hard-benched ex–tennis court of old). Sumptuously cushioned boxes with thick curtains
(très privé)
, a hidden musicians gallery—somewhere under the floor-boards—ingenious but a bit muffled, a veritable constellation of wax candles (
mon Dieu,
the cost!), delicious fruit sellers, and lavish curling gilt galleries gave one the feeling of being entertained inside an enormous and very pleasant golden egg. Dear Tommy Killigrew has outdone himself. Light-footed Lacy in the title role and naughty little Nan Marshall in the role of Celia only added to the entertainment. A triumph.

In the audience: the dashing Prince Rupert (in a pink lutestring coat with silver lace), seen
tête-à-tête avec
clever Dickie Rider, the master builder of the theatre. In the centre box was the Great Mrs. Hester Davenport, old Roxelana herself (peach taffeta—rather too many ruffles, I felt); and tucked in a corner box was crafty Will Davenant, rival manager of the Duke’s Company (in his habitual black silk kerchief and low-brimmed
chapeau
—surveying the competition, no doubt). Tommy Killigrew, beware!

À bientôt,
dearests,

Ever your eyes and ears,

Ambrose Pink, Esq.

Saturday, May 23—Theatre Royal (rainy)

Titania, Bottom, Helena, Demetrius, Hermia, Lysander, Oberon, Puck. Act One: Enchanted Forest. Act Two: Titania’s Bower. These words are
beautiful.

P
ALAIS
R
OYAL
, P
ARIS

T
O
M
Y BROTHER
, K
ING
C
HARLES II D’
A
NGLETERRE

F
ROM
P
RINCESSE
H
ENRIETTE
-A
NNE,
D
UCHESSE D’
O
RLÉANS, THE
M
ADAME OF
F
RANCE

29 M
AI 1663

My dearest,

For shame, my darling. I know that you have been “supplementing” your wife’s English lessons, for there are several filthy words that your queen included in her last letter that could have
only
come from you. That is terrible, Charles, to teach her such things and not tell her what they mean. However much it amuses you, you must correct this!

Bon anniversaire,
my dear!

Je t’embrasse,
Henriette-Anne

Note—
The doctors say I am in good health.

Saturday, May 30 (Midsummer Night’s Dream)

Tonight, just before the audience came in, Peg Hughes, in her costume as the honest fairy Puck (deep green hose, moss-green tunic, pale golden wings), came out from the tiring rooms and, leaning down from the stage, bought an orange from me. Meg saw it and refunded the money immediately—actors, actresses, and Mr. Killigrew get complimentary fruit.
Always.
A terrible mistake I shall not make again. Still, we spoke for a few minutes, and then Mr. Booth hurried her away for places.

P
ALAIS
R
OYAL
, P
ARIS

À
MON FRÈRE,
K
ING
C
HARLES II D’
A
NGLETERRE

F
ROM
P
RINCESSE
H
ENRIETTE
-A
NNE
, D
UCHESSE D’
O
RLÉANS, THE
M
ADAME OF
F
RANCE

3 J
UIN 1663

My dear,

Have you listened to none of my admonishments, and not only added Lady Castlemaine to your queen’s household but also moved her apartments closer to your own? I was given to understand that her apartments faced the street on the
other
side of the Privy Garden from your own. Are they now
adjoining? Mon Dieu!
I know you care for your new wife’s feelings. Would you treat her as Philippe treats me? He is forever parading his young men before me.

With my love,

Henriette-Anne

Tuesday—Theatre Royal (hot and sticky and smelly)

So, what I know:

The Actors

Charles Hart and John Lacy:
the two great leads. Hart, a man hung on an enormous frame, with thickly waved brown hair (although he often wears a periwig), has a booming voice and says he is the great nephew of Shakespeare—but then everybody says that. Lacy, a surprisingly nimble, bluff Yorkshire man was trained as a dancer before the war and never keeps still.

Theophilus (Theo) Bird and Edward (Teddy) Kynaston:
before the war, both trained in the old style to play the female parts, although Theo, with
his great drifts of snowy hair, must be at least sixty and so trained a half century ago. Theo is married to comely Anne, the actor and manager Will Beeston’s daughter, and she is forever patching everyone’s costumes and blacking their boots. Teddy is delicately featured, sweet-tempered, and very fond of Theo.

Nicholas (Nick) Burt:
also trained to play ladies but plays the hero very well (a good thing, since he is well over six feet high). He is pleased that King Charles has brought height back into fashion.

Michael Mohun:
also a leading man but smaller and somewhat owlish. He is married to Theo’s daughter Eliza.

Robert (Rob) Shatterell:
lives quite close to us in Playhouse Yard.

William Cartwright:
haven’t met him yet.

The Actresses

Mrs. Ann (Nan) Marshall and Mrs. Rebecca (Becka) Marshall:
sisters. Becka is the elder. Apparently, they are the daughters of a Presbyterian minister. One would never guess with their lewd talk and constant flirting. They are neither subtle nor pretty enough to make it endearing.

Mrs. Elizabeth Weaver:
the eldest of the women. She takes pains to hide her enormous hands and feet.

Mrs. Elizabeth (Lizzie) Knep:
small and bird-like. Teddy says she has a risqué past, but I have yet to see evidence of it. She does have an invalid husband who is always gambling away her money.

Mrs. Kathleen (Kitty) Mitchell:
pretty brunette with a sweet disposition and a fine actress (specialising in doomed heroines) but softly spoken and
impossible
to hear beyond the pit.

Mrs. Margaret (Peg) Hughes:
direct, popular, bright, and full of fun. And, they say, the first woman to act upon the stage—Desdemona.

Later

This afternoon, Peg and Teddy heard me on the stairs and called me in to join them in the tiring room. Teddy was having trouble fixing his wig (he swears his head is too small to carry off a man’s wig, but I thought he looked splendid), and Peg needed me to help lace her into her silk wings. I did my best to appear nonchalant, but in truth I was delighted. Everything about their world fascinates me.

Note
—Peg loved the new way I tied her wings (crossed over in the back with a bow) and has asked me to help her dress again tomorrow!

When I Glimpse Grandeur

June 7, 1663 (Whitsunday)

In the tiring rooms:

Theo, who tried to sit quietly while Teddy painted his face with Venetian ceruse, announced, “The queen is with child.” Teddy heralded his announcement with trumpet noises and ended up spitting on Lizzie.

Kitty, applying more
crayon bleu
to her eyelids, looked up and said, “Maybe now she will settle in and stop being so … so … foreign.”

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