Nell Gwyn

Nell Gwyn
Nell Gwynn was one of the first English actresses and a mistress of King Charles II of England

Eleanor "Nell" Gwyn (or Gwynn or Gwynne) (2 February 1650 – 14 November 1687) was a long-time mistress of King Charles II of England. Called "pretty, witty Nell" by Samuel Pepys, she has been regarded as a living embodiment of the spirit of Restoration England and has come to be considered a folk heroine, with a story echoing the rags-to-royalty tale of Cinderella. Elizabeth Howe, in The First English Actresses, says she was "the most famous Restoration actress of all time, possessed of an extraordinary comic talent."[1] Gwyn had two sons by King Charles:

The surname of her sons is pronounced 'Bo-Clare'. Charles was created Earl of Burford and later Duke of St. Albans.

Contents

Early life

The details of Nell's background are somewhat obscure. Her mother's name was either Helena or Eleanor Gwyn, née Smith, and she was referred to by contemporaries as "Old Madam", "Madam" Gwyn, and "Old Ma Gwyn". Madam Gwyn was born within the parish of St Martin-in-the-Fields, London, and is thought to have lived most of her life in the city. She is also believed, by most Gwyn biographers, to have been "low-born". Her descendent and biographer Charles Beauclerk calls this conjecture, based solely on what is known of her later life. Nell Gwyn's father was, according to most sources, Thomas Gwyn, a captain in the Cavalier army during the English Civil War, however this is uncertain.[2]

Three cities make the claim to be Nell Gwyn's birthplace: Hereford, London (specifically Covent Garden), and Oxford. Evidence for any one of the three is scarce.[3] The fact that "Gwyn" is a name of Welsh origin might support Hereford, as its county is on the border with Wales; The Dictionary of National Biography notes a traditional belief that she was born there in Pipe Well Lane, renamed to Gwynne Street in the 19th century. London is the simplest choice, perhaps, since Nell's mother was born there and that is where she raised her children. Alexander Smith's 1715 Lives of the Court Beauties says she was born in Coal Yard Alley in Covent Garden and other biographies, including Wilson's, have followed suit. Beauclerk pieces together circumstantial evidence to favor an Oxford birth. The location may remain a mystery, but the time does not: a horoscope cast for Nell Gwyn pinpoints it as Saturday, 2 February 1650, at six o'clock in the morning.[4]

One way or another, Nell's father seems to have been out of the picture by the time of her childhood in Covent Garden, and her "dipsomaniac mother, [and] notorious sister", Rose, were left in a low situation.[5] Old Madam Gwyn was by most accounts an alcoholic whose business was running a bawdy house (or brothel). There, or in the bawdy house of one Madam Ross, Nell would spend at least some time. It is possible she worked herself as a child prostitute; Peter Thomson, in the Oxford Illustrated History of Theatre, says it is "probable". A rare mention of her upbringing from the source herself might be seen to contradict the idea: A 1667 entry in Samuel Pepys' diary records, second-hand, that

Here Mrs. Pierce tells me [...] that Nelly and Beck Marshall, falling out the other day, the latter called the other my Lord Buckhurst's whore. Nell answered then, "I was but one man's whore, though I was brought up in a bawdy-house to fill strong waters to the guests; and you are a whore to three or four, though a Presbyter's praying daughter!".[6]

However, it is not out of the question that Gwyn was merely echoing the satirists of the day, if she said this at all.

Various anonymous verses are the only other sources describing her childhood occupations: bawdyhouse servant, street hawker of herring, oysters or turnips, and cinder-girl have all been put forth.[7] Tradition has her growing up in Coal Yard Alley, a poor slum off Drury Lane.

Around 1662, Nell is said to have taken a lover by the name of Duncan or Dungan. Their relationship lasted perhaps two years and was reported with obscenity-laced acidity in several later satires; "For either with expense of purse or p---k, / At length the weary fool grew Nelly-sick".[8]) Duncan provided Gwyn with rooms at a tavern in Maypole Alley[9], and the satires also say he was involved in securing Nell a job at the theatre being built nearby.

During the decade of protectorate rule by the Cromwells, pastimes regarded as frivolous, including theatre, had been banned. Charles II had been restored to the English throne in 1660, and quickly reinstated the theatre. One of Charles' early acts as king was to license the formation of two acting companies and to legalize acting as a profession for women. In 1663 the King's Company, led by Thomas Killigrew, opened a new playhouse, the Theatre in Bridges Street, which was later rebuilt and renamed the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.

Mary Meggs, a former prostitute nicknamed "Orange Moll" and a friend of Madam Gwyn's, had been granted the licence to "vend, utter and sell oranges, lemons, fruit, sweetmeats and all manner of fruiterers and confectioners wares," within the theatre.[10] Orange Moll hired Nell and her older sister Rose as scantily clad "orange-girls", selling the small, sweet "china" oranges to the audience inside the theatre for a sixpence each. The work exposed her to multiple aspects of theatre life and to London's higher society: this was after all "the King's playhouse", and Charles frequently attended performances. The orange-girls would also serve as messengers between the men in the audience and the actresses backstage; they received monetary tips for this role and certainly some of these messages would end in sexual assignations. Whether this activity rose to the level of pimping may be a matter of semantics.[11]

Actress

Portrait of Nell Gwyn by Simon Verelst, circa 1680

The new theatres were the first in England to feature actresses; earlier, women's parts were played by boys or men. Gwyn joined the rank of actresses at Bridges Street when she was fourteen, less than a year after becoming an orange-girl.

If her good looks, strong clear voice, and lively wit were responsible for catching the eye of Killigrew, she still had to prove herself clever enough to succeed as an actress. This was no easy task in the Restoration theatre; the limited pool of audience members meant that very short runs were the norm for plays and fifty different productions might be mounted in the nine-month season lasting from September to June.[12]

Gwyn was illiterate[citation needed] her entire life (signing her initials "E.G." would be the extent of her ability to read or write), adding an extra complication to the memorization of her lines.

She was taught her craft of performing at a school for young actors developed by Killigrew[13] and one of the fine male actors of the time, Charles Hart, and learned dancing from another, John Lacy; both were rumored by satirists of the time to be her lovers, but if she had such a relationship with Lacy (Beauclerk thinks it unlikely), it was kept much more discreet than her well-known affair with Hart.

Gwyn was slated to play a part in Killigrew's Thomaso, or The Wanderer in November 1664, but the play seems to have been cancelled.[14] Instead, she made her first recorded appearance on-stage in March 1665, in John Dryden's heroic drama The Indian Emperour, playing Cydaria, daughter of Montezuma and love interest to Cortez, played by her real-life lover Charles Hart.

Pepys, whose diary usually has great things to say about Gwyn, was displeased with her performance in this same part two years later: "...to the King's playhouse, and there saw 'The Indian Emperour;' where I find Nell come again, which I am glad of; but was most infinitely displeased with her being put to act the Emperour's daughter; which is a great and serious part, which she do most basely."[15]

Gwyn herself seems to agree that drama did not suit her, to judge from the lines she was later made to say in the epilogue to a Robert Howard drama:

We have been all ill-us'd, by this day's poet.
'Tis our joint cause; I know you in your hearts
Hate serious plays, as I do serious parts.[16]

It was in the new form of restoration comedy that Nell Gwyn would become a star. In May 1665, she appeared opposite Hart in James Howard's comedy All Mistaken, or the Mad Couple.[17] This was the first of many appearances in which Gwyn and Hart played the "gay couple", a form that would become a frequent theme in restoration comedies.

The gay couple, broadly defined, is a pair of witty, antagonistic lovers, he generally a rake fearing the entrapment of marriage and she feigning to do the same in order to keep her lover at arm's length.

Theatre historian Elizabeth Howe goes so far as to credit the enduring success of the gay couple on the Restoration stage entirely to "the talent and popularity of a single actress, Nell Gwyn".[18]

The Great Plague of London shut down the Bridges Street theatre, along with most of the city, from the summer of 1665 through the autumn of 1666. Gwyn and her mother spent some of this time in Oxford, following the King and his court.[19]

The King's Company is presumed to have mounted some private theatrical entertainments for the court during this time away from the virulent capital. Gwyn and the other ten "women comedians in His Majesty's Theatre" were issued the right (and the cloth) to wear the King's livery at the start of this exile, proclaiming them official servants of the King.[20]

After the theatres reopened, Gwyn and Hart returned to play role after role that fit the mold of the gay couple, including in James Howard's The English Monsieur (December 1666), Richard Rhodes' Flora's Vagaries, an adaptation of John Fletcher's The Chances by George Villiers, and then in their greatest success, Secret Love, or The Maiden Queen.[21]

This play, a tragicomedy written by the theatre's house dramatist, John Dryden, was performed in March 1667. It was a great success: King Charles "graced it with the Title of His Play"[22] and Pepys' praise was effusive:

... to the King's house to see 'The Maiden Queen', a new play of Dryden's, mightily commended for the regularity of it, and the strain and wit; and the truth is, there is a comical part done by Nell, which is Florimell, that I never can hope ever to see the like done again, by man or woman. The King and the Duke of York were at the play. But so great performance of a comical part was never, I believe, in the world before as Nell do this, both as a mad girl, then most and best of all when she comes in like a young gallant; and hath the notions and carriage of a spark the most that ever I saw any man have. It makes me, I confess, admire her.[23]

After seeing the play for the third time, Pepys writes, "It is impossible to have Florimel’s part, which is the most comical that ever was made for woman, ever done better than it is by Nelly.” [24] Killigrew must have agreed with Pepys’s opinion. Once Nell left the acting profession, it would be at least ten years before his company revived The Maiden Queen and even the less favored The Indian Emperor because “the management evidently felt that it would be useless to present these plays without her.”[25]

The Maiden Queen featured breeches roles, where the actress appeared in men's clothes under one pretense or another, and as Bax supposes "was one of the first occasions upon which a woman appeared in the disguise of a man"[26] ; if nothing else this could draw an audience eager to see the women show off their figures in the more form-fitting male attire. The attraction had another dynamic: the theatres sometimes had a hard time holding onto their actresses, as they were swept up to become the kept mistresses of the aristocracy. In 1667, Nell Gwyn made such a match with Charles Sackville, titled Lord Buckhurst at that time. She supposedly caught his eye during an April performance of All Mistaken, or The Mad Couple, especially in one scene in which, to escape a hugely fat suitor able to move only by rolling, she rolls across the stage herself, her feet toward the audience and her petticoats flying about. A satire of the time describes this and also Hart's position now, in the face of competition from the upper echelons of society:

Yet Hart more manners had, then not to tender
When noble Buckhurst beg'd him to surrender.
He saw her roll the stage from side to side
And, through her drawers the powerful charm descry'd.[27]

Beauclerk describes Buckhurst: "Cultured, witty, satirical, dissolute, and utterly charming".[28] He was one of a handful of court wits, the "merry gang" as named by Andrew Marvell. Sometime after the end of April and her last recorded role that season (in Robert Howard's The Surprisal), Gwyn and Buckhurst left London for a country holiday in Epsom, accompanied by Charles Sedley, another wit in the merry gang. Pepys reports the news on 13 July: "[Mr. Pierce tells us] Lord Buckhurst hath got Nell away from the King's house, lies with her, and gives her £100 a year, so she hath sent her parts to the house, and will act no more."[29] However, Nell Gwyn was acting once more in late August, and her brief affair with Buckhurst had ended.[30]

Early years with King Charles II

Nell Gwyn as Cupid c. 1672; engraving by Richard Thomson, of a painting by Peter Cross. Pepys owned a copy of this engraving and displayed it over his desk at the Admiralty.[31]

Late in 1667, George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham took on the role of unofficial manager for Gwyn's love affairs. He aimed to provide King Charles II with someone who would supplant Barbara Palmer, his principal current mistress (and Buckingham's cousin), moving Buckingham closer to the King's ear. The plan failed; reportedly, Gwyn asked £500 a year to be kept and this was rejected as too expensive. Buckingham had an alternative plan, however, which was to set the King up with Moll Davis, an actress with the rival Duke's Company.[32] Davis would be Nell's first rival for the King. Several anonymous satires from the time relate a tale of Gwyn, with the help of her friend Aphra Behn, slipping a powerful laxative into Davis' tea-time cakes before an evening when she was expected in the King's bed.[33]

The love affair between the King and Gwyn allegedly began in April of 1668. Gwyn was attending a performance of George Etherege's She Wou'd if She Cou'd at the theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields. In the next box was the King, who from accounts was more interested in flirting with Nell than watching the play. Charles invited Nell and her escort (a Mr. Villiers, a cousin of Buckingham's) to supper, along with his brother James, Duke of York. The anecdote turns charming if perhaps apocryphal at this point: the King, after supper, discovered that he had no money on him; nor did his brother. Gwyn had to foot the bill. "Od's fish!" she exclaimed, in an imitation of the King's manner of speaking, "but this is the poorest company I ever was in!"[34]

Previously having been the mistress of Charles Hart and Charles Sackville, she jokingly titled the King "her Charles the Third". By the summer of 1668, Gwyn's affair with the King was well-known, though there was little reason to believe it would last for long. She continued to act at the King's House, her new notoriety drawing larger crowds and encouraging the playwrights to craft more roles specifically for her. June 1668 found her in Dryden's An Evening's Love, or The Mock Astrologer, and in July she played in Lacy's The Old Troop. This was a farce about a company of Cavalier soldiers during the English Civil War, based on Lacy's own experiences. Possibly, Nell Gwyn's father had served in the same company, and Gwyn's part — the company whore — was based on her own mother.[35] As her commitment to the King increased, though, her acting career slowed, and she had no recorded parts between January and June of 1669, when she played Valeria in Dryden's very successful tragedy Tyrannick Love.[36]

King Charles II had a considerable number of mistresses through his life, both short affairs and committed arrangements. He also had a wife, Portuguese Queen consort Catherine of Braganza, whose pregnancies all ended in miscarriages, and she had little or no say over Charles' choice to have mistresses. This had come to a head shortly after their 1662 marriage, in a confrontation between Catherine and Barbara Palmer which became known as the "Bedchamber crisis". Ostracised at Court and with most of her retinue sent back to Portugal, Catherine had been left with little choice but to acquiesce to Charles' mistresses being granted semi-official standing.

During Gwyn's first years with Charles, there was little competition in the way of other mistresses: Barbara Palmer was on her way out in most respects certainly in terms of age and looks and others, such as Moll Davis, kept quietly away from the spotlight of public appearances or Whitehall. Nell gave birth to her first son, Charles, on 8 May 1670. This was the King's seventh son — by five separate mistresses.

Louise de Kérouaille. Painting by Pierre Mignard, c. 1681.

Several months later, Louise de Kérouaille came to England from France, ostensibly to serve as a maid of honour to Queen Catherine, but also to become another mistress to King Charles, probably by design on both the French and English sides. She and Gwyn would prove rivals for many years to come. They were opposites in personality and mannerism; Louise a proud woman of noble birth used to the sophistication of Versailles, Nell a spirited and pranking ex-orange-wench. Gwyn nicknamed Louise "Squintabella" for her looks and the "Weeping Willow" for her tendencies to sob. In one instance, recorded in a letter from George Legge to Lord Preston, Nell characteristically jabbed at the Duchess's "great lineage," dressing in black at Court, the same mourning attire as Louise, when a prince of France died. Someone there asked, "What the deuce was the Cham of Tartary to you?" to which Nell responded, "Oh, exactly the same relation that the French Prince was to Mademoiselle de Kérouaille."[37] The Duchess of Portsmouth's only recorded riposte was, "anybody may know she has been an orange-wench by her swearing"[38] Their relationship was not strictly adversarial; they were known to get together for tea and cards, for example. Basset was the popular game at the time, and Gwyn was a frequent — and high-stakes — gambler.[39]

Gwyn returned to the stage again in late 1670, something Beauclerk calls an "extraordinary thing to do" for a mistress with a royal child. Her return was in Dryden's The Conquest of Granada, a two-part epic produced in December 1670 and January 1671. This may have been her last play; 1671 was almost certainly her last season.[40] Nell Gwyn's theatrical career spanned seven years and ended at the age of 21.

After the stage

In February 1671, Nell moved into a brick townhouse at 79 Pall Mall.[41] The property was owned by the crown and its current resident was instructed to transfer the lease to Gwyn. It would be her main residence for the rest of her life. Gwyn seemed unsatisfied with being a lessee only – in 1673 we are told in a letter of Joseph Williamson that "Madam Gwinn complains she has no house yett." Gwyn is said to have complained that "she had always conveyed free under the Crown, and always would; and would not accept [the house] till it was conveyed free to her by an Act of Parliament." In 1676, Gwyn would in fact be granted the freehold to the property, which would remain in her family until 1693; as of 1960 the property was still the only one on the south side of Pall Mall not owned by the Crown.

Nell Gwyn gave birth to her second child by the King, James, on 25 December 1671. Sent to school in Paris when he was six, he would die there in 1681. The circumstances of the child's life in Paris and the cause of his death are both unknown, one of the few clues being that he died "of a sore leg", which Beauclerk (p. 300) speculates could mean anything from an accident to poison. Her family's history has been published in the authoritative book: The House of Nell Gwyn (1974).

There are two variations about how the elder of her two children by Charles was given the Earldom of Burford, both of which are unverifiable: The first (and most popular) is that when Charles was six years old, on the arrival of the King, Nell said, "Come here, you little bastard, and say hello to your father." When the King protested her calling Charles that, she replied, "Your Majesty has given me no other name by which to call him." In response, Charles created him Earl of Burford. Another is that Nell grabbed Charles and hung him out of a window of Lauderdale House in Highgate, where briefly she resided, and threatened to drop him unless Charles was granted a peerage. The King cried out "God save the Earl of Burford!" and subsequently officially created the peerage, saving his son's life. On 21 December 1676, a warrant was passed for "a grant to Charles Beauclerc, the King's natural son, and to the heirs male of his body, of the dignities of Baron of Heddington, co.Oxford, and Earl of Burford in the same county, with remainder to his brother, James Beauclerc, and the heirs male of his body." [42] A few weeks later, James was given "the title of Lord Beauclerc, with the place and precedence of the eldest son of an earl." [42]

Shortly afterwards, the King granted Burford House, on the edge of the Home Park in Windsor, to Nell and their son. She lived there when the King was in residence at the Castle. In addition to the properties mentioned above, Nell had a summer residence on the site of what is now 61-63 King's Cross Road, which enjoyed later popularity as the Bagnigge Wells Spa. According to the London Encyclopedia (Macmillan, 1983) she "entertained Charles II here with little concerts and breakfasts". An inscribed stone of 1680, saved and reinserted in the front wall of the present building, shows a carved mask which is probably a reference to her stage career.

Just after the death of Henry Jermyn, 1st Earl of St Albans at the turn of the year, on 5 January 1684, King Charles granted his son Charles, Earl of Burford, the title of Duke of St Albans, gave him an allowance of £1,000 a year, and granted him the offices of Chief Ranger of Enfield Chase and Master of the Hawks in reversion (i. e. after the death of the current incumbents). [43]

King Charles died on 6 February 1685. James II, obeying his brother's deathbed wish, "Let not poor Nelly starve," eventually paid most of Gwyn's debts off and gave her a pension of 1500 pounds a year. He also paid off the mortgage on Gwyn's Nottinghamshire Lodge at Bestwood, which would remain in the Beauclerk family until 1940.[44] At the same time, James applied pressure to Nell and her son Charles to convert to Roman Catholicism, something she resisted.

In March of 1687, Gwyn suffered a stroke that left her paralysed on one side. In May, a second stroke left her confined to the bed in her Pall Mall house; she made out her will on 9 July. Nell Gwyn died from apoplexy "almost certainly due to the acquired variety of syphilis" [45] on 14 November 1687, at ten in the evening, less than three years after the King's death. She was 37 years old. Although she left considerable debts, she left a legacy to the Newgate prisoners in London.

She was buried in the Church of St Martin-in-the-Fields, London. By one of Gwyn's final requests Thomas Tenison, the Archbishop of Canterbury, preached a sermon on 17 December from the text of Luke 15:7 "Just so, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance." [46]

Legacy

Though Nell Gwyn was often caricatured as an empty-headed woman, John Dryden said that her greatest attribute was her native wit, and she certainly became a hostess who was able to keep the friendship of Dryden, the playwright Aphra Behn, William Ley, 4th Earl of Marlborough (another lover), John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester and the king's other mistresses. She is especially remembered for one particularly apt witticism, which was recounted in the memoirs of the Comte de Gramont, remembering the events of 1681:

Nell Gwynn was one day passing through the streets of Oxford, in her coach, when the mob mistaking her for her rival, the Duchess of Portsmouth, commenced hooting and loading her with every opprobrious epithet. Putting her head out of the coach window, "Good people", she said, smiling, "you are mistaken; I am the Protestant whore."[47]

The Catholic whore was still the Frenchwoman Louise de Kérouaille, who had been created Duchess of Portsmouth in 1673.

The author of her 1752 biography relates a conversation (more than likely fabricated) between Nell and Charles II in which he, feeling at a loss, said, "O, Nell! What shall I do to please the People of England? I am torn to pieces by their clamours."
"If it please your Majesty," she replied, "there is but one way left, which expedient I am afraid it will be difficult to persuade you to embrace. Dismiss your ladies, may it please your Majesty, and mind your business; the People of England will soon be pleased".[48]

She is noted for another remark made to her coachman, who was fighting with another man who had called her a whore. She broke up the fight, saying, "I am a whore. Find something else to fight about."

In stage works and literature

Nell Gwynne's life has inspired numerous stage works, including the following:

  • An 1884 operetta, Nell Gwynne, by Robert Planquette and H. B. Farnie.
  • Two plays, one by Paul Kester called Sweet Nell of Old Drury (1900), and a competing play, "Mistress Nell" by George Hazelton.
  • In 1900, an Edward Rose play called English Nell, later retitled Nell Gwynne, starring Marie Tempest, adapted from Anthony Hope's book Simon Dale.
  • A 1924 musical was called Our Nell by Harold Fraser-Simson and Ivor Novello and starred Jose Collins and Walter Passmore (a rewrite of 1919's Our Peg, replacing Peg Woffington with Nell Gwynne. The 1922 Broadway musical by George Gershwin, also called "Our Nell, was not based on the Nell Gwynne story.
  • She appears in Bernard Shaw's late play In Good King Charles's Golden Days.
  • She's a character in Kathleen Winsor's best-selling 1944 novel "Forever Amber."
  • Jeanette Winterson's novel Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit opens with a Nell Gwynn quote, that gives the title of the novel: Oranges are not the only fruit.
  • The historical fiction novel The Perfect Royal Mistress by Diane Haeger.
  • The historical novel The King's Favorite by Susan Holloway Scott.
  • The historical novel The Darling Strumpet (2011) by Gillian Bagwell.
  • The historical novel Exit the Actress (2011) by Priya Parmar.
  • Gwynne appears in the book Dark Angels by Karleen Koen as Charles II's mistress.
  • Mary Hooper's children's historical novel Eliza Rose, where Gwyn is a central character.
  • Neal Stephenson's historical fiction trilogy, The Baroque Cycle, where Gwyn is a minor character.

In film and television

  • In the 1911 film, Sweet Nell of Old Drury (based on the play of the same name described above), Nell is portrayed by Nellie Stewart
  • In the 1915 film, Mistress Nell, Nell is portrayed by Mary Pickford
  • In the 1922 film, The Glorious Adventure, Nell is portrayed by Lois Sturt
  • In the 1926 film, Nell Gwynne, Nell is portrayed by Dorothy Gish
  • In the 1934 film, Love, Life and Laughter, Nell is portrayed by Gracie Fields
  • In the 1934 film, Nell Gwyn, Nell is portrayed by Anna Neagle
  • In the 1941 film, Hudson's Bay, Nell is portrayed by Virginia Field
  • In the 1949 film, Cardboard Cavalier, Nell is portrayed by Margaret Lockwood
  • In the 1954 film, Lilacs In The Spring, Nell is portrayed by Anna Neagle
  • In the 1964 film, Father Came Too!, Nell is portrayed by Vanda Hudson
  • In the 1969 mini-series, The First Churchills, Nell is portrayed by Andrea Lawrence
  • In the 1983 film, The Wicked Lady, Nell is portrayed by Teresa Codling
  • In the 1995 film, England, My England, Nell is played by Lucy Speed
  • In the 2003 mini-series, Charles II: The Power & The Passion, Nell is played by Emma Pierson
  • In the 2004 film, Stage Beauty, Nell is portrayed by Zoe Tapper

Notes

  1. ^ Howe p. 67.
  2. ^ "Eleanor vs. Helena": Wilson, p. 13; "Mrs. Gwyn's birthplace": Beauclerk, p. 10
  3. ^ Beauclerk, p. 9
  4. ^ Beauclerk, p. 5.
  5. ^ Wilson. pp. 13. 
  6. ^ Pepys' diary for 26 October 1667 at www.pepys.info
  7. ^ Beauclerk, pp. 37–38
  8. ^ From The Lady of Pleasure, quoted in Beauclerk, p. 40
  9. ^ http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=45135
  10. ^ Beauclerk. p. 56.
  11. ^ See Howe, p. 67: "She began, as has become legendary, selling oranges (and probably herself as well)..."
  12. ^ Beauclerk p. 74.
  13. ^ Dasent. pp. 43. 
  14. ^ Beauclerk p. 73.
  15. ^ Pepys' diary, 22 August 1667.
  16. ^ Quoted in Beauclerk p. 78 from the epilogue to Robert Howard's Duke of Lerma.
  17. ^ Howe p. 66. There is some debate over the year The Mad Couple debuted, with earlier authorities believing it to be 1667.
  18. ^ Howe p. 66
  19. ^ Dasent. pp. 60. 
  20. ^ Beauclerk p. 85
  21. ^ Howe pp. 67–70
  22. ^ According to Dryden's preface to the first printed edition, 1668. (Beauclerk p. 97.)
  23. ^ Pepys diary for 2 March 1667; spelling and punctuation from Beauclerk p. 97.
  24. ^ Melville. pp. 74. 
  25. ^ Bax. pp. 141. 
  26. ^ Bax. pp. 89. 
  27. ^ Anonymous, The Lady of Pleasure. Quoted in Beauclerk p. 105.
  28. ^ Beaclerk p. 103.
  29. ^ Quoted from Beauclerk p. 106.
  30. ^ Beauclerk pp 108–109
  31. ^ Beaclerk p. 62
  32. ^ Beauclerk p. 121–122
  33. ^ Beauclerk pp. 126–127.
  34. ^ Beauclerk pp.127–128
  35. ^ Beauclerk pp 131–137.
  36. ^ Beauclerk p. 148.
  37. ^ Melville. pp. 268. 
  38. ^ Melville. pp. 270. 
  39. ^ Beauclerk p. 249.
  40. ^ Beauclerk (pp. 182–183) dismisses reported appearances in the late 1670s and early 1680s as non-credible, noting "the publicity that would have attended such a comeback is absent".
  41. ^ Details and quotes about the house from Sheppard
  42. ^ a b Wilson, p. 158
  43. ^ Wilson, p. 209
  44. ^ Beauclerk pp. 317, 358.
  45. ^ Bax. pp. 232. 
  46. ^ MacGregor-Hastie. pp. 190. 
  47. ^ Beauclerk, p. 307, gives a slightly different quote.
  48. ^ Melville. pp. 273. 
References
  • Bax, Clifford (1969). Pretty Witty Nell. New York/London: Benjamin Blom. ISBN 0405082436. 
  • Beauclerk, Charles (2005). Nell Gwyn: Mistress to a King. Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN 0-87113-926-X. 
  • Cunningham, Peter. The Story of Nell Gwyn: and the Sayings of Charles the Second, New York, John Wiley's Sons, 1888.
  • Dasent, Arthur (1924). Nell Gwynne. New York/London: Benjamin Blom. 
  • Ford, David Nash (2002). Royal Berkshire History: Nell Gwynne. Nash Ford Publishing.
  • Howe, Elizabeth (1992). The First English Actresses: Women and Drama, 1660-1700. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-42210-8. 
  • Lynch, Jack (2007). Becoming Shakespeare: The Strange Afterlife That Turned a Provincial Playwright into the Bard. New York: Walker & Co.
  • MacGregor-Hastie, Roy (1987). Nell Gwyn. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 0 7090 3099 1. 
  • Melville, Lewis (1926). Nell Gwyn. New York: George H. Doran Company. 
  • HRH Princess Michael of Kent (2006). Cupid and the King. Simon & Schuster UK.  Chapter one, "Nell Gwyn" available online.
  • Sheppard, F.H.W., ed. (1960). "Pall Mall, South Side, Past Buildings: No 79 Pall Mall: Nell Gwynne's House". Survey of London: volumes 29 and 30: St James Westminster, Part 1. pp. 377–78.  Online at www.british-history.ac.uk. (URL accessed 10 June 2006.)
  • Williams, Hugh Noel (1915). Rival Sultanas: Nell Gwyn, Louise de Kéroualle, and Hortense Mancini. Dodd, Mead and company.  Entire book available from Google Books.
  • Wilson, John Harold (1952). Nell Gwyn: Royal Mistress. Dell Publishing Company, Inc., New York. 
  • The House of Nell Gwyn. The Fortunes of the Beauclerk Family, 1670-1974; Donald Adamson and Peter Beauclerk Dewar, London: William Kimber, 1974.

External links

  • Nell Gwyn (WikiTree), a biographic genealogy of the King's mistress and her many descendants.
  • The House of Nell Gwyn. The Fortunes of the Beauclerk Family, 1670-1974; Donald Adamson and Peter Beauclerk Dewar, London: William Kimber, 1974.


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