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Susannah Centlivre : ウィキペディア英語版 | Susanna Centlivre
Susanna Centlivre (c. 1667 to 1670 – 1 December 1723), born Susanna Freeman and also known professionally as Susanna Carroll, was an English poet, actress, and "the most successful female playwright of the eighteenth century".〔Carraro, Laura Favero. ("Susanna Centilivre" ), ''The Literary Encyclopedia'', 20 October 2001, accessed 16 February 2012〕 Centlivre’s “pieces continued to be acted after the theatre managers had forgotten most of her contemporaries.” 〔Bowyer 3〕 During a long career at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, she became known as the second woman of the English stage, after Aphra Behn. ==Life== The main source of information on Centlivre's early life is Giles Jacob, who claimed he had received an account of her life directly from her. This was published in ''The Poetical Register'' of 1719, but it includes little information about her early life.〔Lock 1979, p. 14.〕 Centlivre was probably baptised Susanna Freeman at Whaplode, Lincolnshire on 20 November 1669, as the daughter of William Freeman of Holbeach and his wife, Anne, the daughter of Mr Marham, a gentleman of Lynn Regis, Norfolk.〔J. Milling, "Centlivre , Susanna (bap. 1669?, d. 1723)", ODNB, Oxford University Press, 2004. (Retrieved 7 October 2014, subscription required. )〕 Her father was a dissenter and a parliamentarian; as a result, the family surely faced persecution at the Restoration.〔 Several biographical sources state that Holbeach was the possible place of her birth or at least the place where she spent her childhood. There is some mystery surrounding her early life; however, it is generally believed that her father died when she was three, her mother died shortly after remarrying, and her step-father married soon after that.〔Bowyer 5〕 Abuse by this new stepmother may have motivated Centlivre to leave her childhood home before the age of 15.〔ODNB...〕 There are two stories that tell of her transition to acting and eventual arrival in London. The romanticized version has Centlivre found weeping by the roadside by Anthony Hammond, a student at Cambridge. Enraptured by her manners and good looks, he smuggled her into his college, where she was disguised as a male cousin, Jack. There she remained hidden for some months studying grammar and acquiring “some of the terms of logic, rhetoric, and ethics” before “attracting too much attention” and deciding to head to London. The more believable scenario has her joining a company of strolling actors in Stamford (about 25 miles from Holbeach), where she gained popularity acting in breeches roles, for which she was suited due to the a "small Wen on her left Eye lid, which gave her a Masculine Air."〔Bowyer 8〕 Centlivre's skill in such roles charmed many men, especially Mr. Fox, who would soon become Centlivre’s first husband when she was sixteen. However, he died less than a year later.〔Bowyer 9〕 Following Fox's death, Centlivre is claimed to have married an army officer named Carroll, who died in a duel a year and a half after their union. She kept the name Carroll until her next marriage.〔Bowyer 12〕 Although much of her early years is speculation, biographers agree that Susanna’s was predominantly self –acquired through reading and conversation. Looking at her use of French drama, it is not hard to see that Centlivre also had a sound knowledge of the French language.〔Bowyer 7〕 After her husband’s death, Centlivre spent much of her time in London, where she turned to writing partly for financial support.〔Bowyer 15〕 By 1706, Centlivre had made a small name for herself; however, she still relied on financial support from strolling (acting). It was during a performance when she played the role of Alexander the Great in Nathaniel Lee's tragedy ''The Rival Queens, or the Death of Alexander'' the Great for the court at Windsor Castle that she caught the eye of Joseph Centlivre. Though he was of a lower social class, a mere "yeoman of the mouth () to Queen Anne," they were married on 23 April 1707.〔Bowyer 92–93〕 There is no evidence to suggest where they resided for the first seven years of their marriage. Eventually, in late 1712 or early 1713, the Centlivres moved into residence at Buckingham Court, paying the highest rent second only to the Admiralty Office.〔Bowyer 149〕 After a long, illustrious career in high literary esteem with writings in the form of poems, letters, books, and, most famously, plays, Susanna Centlivre passed away on 1 December 1723, from lingering effects of a serious illness contracted in 1719. ''The Evening Post'', ''London Journal'', ''British Journal'', and ''Weekly Journal'' carry brief notices of her death.〔Bowyer 244〕 Centlivre’s body was buried three days after her death in St. Paul’s, Covent Garden. A little over year later, her husband followed.〔
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