In this Book

Fashioning Celebrity: Eighteenth-Century British Actresses and Strategies for Image Making

Book
2011
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summary
This volume takes a new approach to the study of late eighteenth-century British actresses by examining the significance of leading actresses’ autobiographical memoirs, portraits, and theatrical roles together as significant strategies for shaping their careers. In an era when acting was considered a suspicious profession for women, eighteenth-century actresses were “celebrities” in a society obsessed with fashion, gossip, and intrigue. Fashioning Celebrity: Eighteenth-Century British Actresses and Strategies for Image Making, by Laura Engel, considers the lives and careers of four actresses: Sarah Siddons, Mary Robinson, Mary Wells, and Fanny Kemble. Using conventions of the era’s portraiture, fashion, literature, and the theater in order to create their personas on and off stage, these actresses provided a series of techniques for fashioning celebrity that still survive today. By emphasizing the importance of reading narratives through visual and theatrical frameworks and visual and theatrical representations through narrative models, Engel demonstrates the ways in which actresses’ identities were imagined through a variety of discourses that worked dialectically to construct their complex self-representations.

Table of Contents

Cover

pp. 1-1

Title Page, Copyright

pp. 2-3

Contents

pp. iii-iv

Illustrations

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-viii

Introduction

pp. 1-25

One: Sarah Siddons’s Diva Celebrity

pp. 26-58

Two: Mary Robinson’s Gothic Celebrity

pp. 59-97

Three: Mary Wells’s Notorious Celebrity

pp. 98-134

Epilogue: Fanny Kemble’s Inherited Celebrity

pp. 135-148

Notes

pp. 149-170

Bibliography

pp. 171-177

Index

pp. 178-184
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