For more information on William Charles Macready, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: William Charles Macready |
For more information on William Charles Macready, visit Britannica.com.
| American Theater Guide: William Charles Macready |
Macready, William Charles (1793–1873), actor and director. A great, if controversial, English tragedian, he was lauded for his forceful, albeit somewhat formal acting, and despised for his arrogance and explosive temper. His American debut came at the Park Theatre in 1826 in one of his greatest roles, Virginius, and prompted the Mirror to remark, “It is said there is no actor living who unites as much power and original genius with correct taste and cultivated talents as Macready. . . .His person is tall and commanding—his carriage noble—his face, though not technically a first rate stage face, is wonderfully expressive, and his voice peculiarly fine, deep and mellow.” He followed his Roman with his Damon, William Tell, Macbeth, and Coriolanus, adding Othello, King Lear, and Richelieu to his American repertory when he returned in 1843. From the start, elements of the press had attacked him personally, and his open contempt for American actors exacerbated matters. These problems came to a head on his third trip in 1848 when his rivalry with Edwin Forrest, as much a national and class rivalry as a personal one, exploded in May 1849 with the Astor Place Riots. Immediately thereafter he sailed for England, never to return. Mrs. John Drew, who acted with him, recalled, “Macready was a dreadful man to act with. . .[he was] a terribly nervous actor; any little thing which happened unexpectedly irritated him beyond endurance.” Biography: The Eminent Tragedian: William Charles Macready, Alan S. Downer, 1966.
| British History: William Macready |
Macready, William (1793-1873). Actor. Macready had a long and successful career in the age of Mrs Siddons and Kean. The son of an Irish actor settled in London, he took up the stage when his father's ventures collapsed, appearing at Birmingham in 1810 as Romeo. He first appeared on the London stage at Covent Garden in 1816, but not until his Richard III in 1819 was his popularity firmly established.
| Irish Literature Companion: William MacReady |
MacReady, William (?1755-1829), actor and theatre manager. Born in Dublin, he appeared at Smock Alley, and at Covent Garden. He wrote the comedies, The Irishman in London, or The Happy African (1792) and The Bank Note, or Lessons for Ladies (1795). His son, the celebrated tragic actor William Charles Macready (1793-1873), produced Gerald Griffin's play Gisippus and others by John Banim and George Darley.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: William Charles Macready |
Bibliography
See his Reminiscences, ed. by Sir Frederick Pollock (2 vol., 1875); his journal, from 1832 to 1851, ed. by J. C. Trewin (1967); biography by A. S. Downer (1966).
| Wikipedia: William Charles Macready |
William Charles Macready (3 March 1793 - 27 April 1873) was an English actor.
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He was born in London, and educated at Rugby. It was his intention to go up to Oxford, but in 1809 the embarrassed affairs of his father, the lessee of several provincial theatres, called him to share the responsibilities of theatrical management. On 7 June 1810 he made a successful first appearance as Romeo at Birmingham. Other Shakespearian parts followed, but a serious rupture between father and son resulted in the young man's departure for Bath in 1814. Here he remained for two years, with occasional professional visits to other provincial towns.
On 16 September 1816, Macready made his first London appearance at Covent Garden as Orestes in The Distressed Mother, a translation of Racine's Andromaque by Ambrose Philips. Macready's choice of characters was at first confined chiefly to the romantic drama. In 1818 he won a permanent success in Isaac Pocock's (1782-1835) adaptation of Scott's Rob Roy. He showed his capacity for the highest tragedy when he played Richard III at Covent Garden on 25 October 1819.
Transferring his services to Drury Lane, he gradually rose in public favor, his most conspicuous success being in the title-role of Sheridan Knowles's William Tell (11 May 1825). In 1826 he completed a successful engagement in the United States, and in 1828 his performances met with a very flattering reception in Paris. In 1829 he appeared as Othello in Warwick.[1] On 15 December 1830 he appeared at Drury Lane as Werner, one of his most powerful impersonations. In 1833 he played in Antony and Cleopatra, in Byron's Sardanapalus, and in King Lear. He was responsible, in 1834, and more fully in 1838, for returning the text of King Lear to the Shakespeare's text (although in a shortened version), after it had been replaced for more than a hundred and fifty years by Tate's happy-ending adaptation, The History of King Lear.[2]
Already Macready had done something to encourage the creation of a modern English drama, and after entering on the management of Covent Garden in 1837 he introduced Robert Brownings Strafford, and in the following year Bulwer's Lady of Lyons and Richelieu, the principal characters in which were among his most effective parts. On June 10, 1838 he gave a memorable performance of Henry V, for which Stanfield prepared sketches, and the mounting was superintended by Bulwer, Dickens, Forster, Maclise, WJ Fox and other friends.
The first production of Bulwer's Money took place under the artistic direction of Count d'Orsay on 8 December 1840, Macready winning unmistakable success in the character of Alfred Evelyn. Both in his management of Covent Garden, which he resigned in 1839, and of Drury Lane, which he held from 1841 to 1843, he found his designs for the elevation of the stage frustrated by the absence of adequate public support. In 1843 he staged Cymbeline. In 1843-1844 he made a prosperous tour in the United States, but his last visit to that country, in 1849, was marred by a riot at the Astor Place Theatre, New York, arising from the jealousy of the actor Edwin Forrest, and resulting in the death of twenty-three persons and the further injuring of one hundred, who were shot by the militia called out to quell the disturbance; Judge Charles Patrick Daly later presided at the trial. Macready was playing Macbeth at the time of the riot, a fact which added to the ominous reputation of that play.
Macready took leave of the stage in a farewell performance of Macbeth at Drury Lane on 26 February 1851. The remainder of his life was spent in happy retirement, and he died at Cheltenham on 27 April 1873. He had married, in 1823, Catherine Frances Atkins (d. 1852). Of a numerous family of children only one son and one daughter survived. In 1860 he married Cecile Louise Frederica Spencer (1827-1908), by whom he had a son.
Macready's performances always displayed fine artistic perceptions developed to a high degree of perfection by very comprehensive culture, and even his least successful personal turns had the interest resulting from thorough intellectual study. He belonged to the school of Kean rather than of Kemble; but, if his tastes were better disciplined and in some respects more refined than those of Kean, his natural temperament did not permit him to give proper effect to the great tragic parts of Shakespeare, King Lear perhaps excepted, which afforded scope for his pathos and tenderness, the qualities in which he specially excelled. With the exception of a voice of good compass and capable of very varied expression, Macready had no especial physical gifts for acting, but the defects of his face and figure cannot be said to have materially affected his success.
Macready's son was General Sir Nevil Macready, a distinguished British Army officer. The actor George Macready claimed to be a descendant.
| Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Macready, William Charles. |
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