- Elizabeth Barry
Elizabeth Barry (1658 –
November 7 ,1713 ) was an English actress of theRestoration period.She worked in big, prestigious
London theatre companies throughout her successful career: from 1675 in theDuke's Company , 1682 – 1695 in the monopolyUnited Company , and from 1695 onwards as a member of the actors' cooperative usually known as Betterton's Company, of which she was one of the original shareholders. Her stage career began 15 years after the first-ever professional actresses had replacedShakespeare 's boy heroines on the London stage. The famous actorThomas Betterton said that her acting gave "success to plays that would disgust the most patient reader", and the critic and playwrightJohn Dennis described her as "that incomparable Actress changing like Nature which she represents, from Passion to Passion, from Extream to Extream, with piercing Force and with easy Grace".Early career
A frequently repeated anecdote holds that the 17-year-old Barry at first performed so unskillfully that she was fired from the company several times, but was transformed into a brilliant actress by the coaching of her lover,
John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester . While multiple sources confirm that Rochester was Barry's lover, the only source for the coaching story is a "Life" of Barry published in 1740 – 65 years after the events – byEdmund Curll , well-known for his fanciful and inaccurate biographies.Barry was a successful comedienne who created a variety of
Restoration comedy heroines throughout her career, but her greatest impact onRestoration drama was as a tragic actress. Her capacity for projecting pathos was an inspiration to playwrightsThomas Otway and ' as a popular genre." Barry was always described as being a plain woman. Portraits suggest intelligence but heavy features, and the playwright Thomas Shadwell writes in a letter in 1692 that it would have been better to have staged Nicholas Brady's "The Rape" in Roman dress, "and then w'th a Mantle to have covered her hips Mrs Barry would have acted ye part." Apparently none of this mattered to contemporaries. Even though Barry was "the ugliest Woman" in the world off stage, wrote the anonymous "A Comparison Between the Two Stages" (1702), she was "the finest Woman in the World upon the Stage."Later career
Barry worked for the
Duke's Company from 1675 to 1682, taking the role of Cordelia oppositeThomas Betterton 's Lear inNahum Tate 's 1681 adaptation of Shakespeare's "King Lear". After the Duke's and the King's companies were amalgamated in 1682, she continued as one of the star performers of the newUnited Company , which remained for 12 years the only theatrical company in London. The absence of rival companies left the actors in a weak bargaining position in relation to management, and when the United Company fell under the mismanagement ofChristopher Rich in the 1690s, "as sly a Tyrant as ever was at the Head of a Theatre," the senior actors including Barry, Betterton andAnne Bracegirdle left to form their own collaborative company. Barry was one of the original patent-holders of the actors' company, which opened at Lincoln's Inn Fields with the smash hit of William Congreve's "Love For Love" in 1695 and continued to successfully challenge Rich's United Company.Barry achieved remarkable public approval and business success for a single woman in London in the late 17th century, especially considering that she was generally known to have a daughter by Rochester and another by the playwright
George Etherege . Many actresses at this time achieved the prize of respectability by being married, usually to actors, but Barry never married. In 1709 she retired from the stage.Fictional portrayals
Barry is a supporting character in "The Libertine", Stephen Jeffrys' play about John Wilmot's life, as well as its 2005 film adaptation, in which she is portrayed by
Samantha Morton .ee also
*
John Vanbrugh References
*Cibber, Colley (first published 1740, Everyman's Library ed. 1976). "An Apology for the Life of Colley Cibber". London: J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd.
*Highfill, Philip Jr, Burnim, Kalman A., and Langhans, Edward (1973–93). "Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Actresses, Musicians, Dancers, Managers and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660–1800". 16 volumes. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.
*Howe, Elizabeth (1992). "The First English Actresses: Women and Drama 1660–1700". Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
*Milhous, Judith (1979). "Thomas Betterton and the Management of Lincoln's Inn Fields 1695–1708". Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.