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Letters
David Garrick
Harvard University Press

logo for Harvard University Press
Letters
David Garrick
Harvard University Press

logo for Harvard University Press
Letters
David Garrick
Harvard University Press

logo for Harvard University Press
Letters
David Garrick
Harvard University Press

logo for Harvard University Press
Pineapples of Finest Flavour
Or, A Selection of Sundry Unpublished Letters of the English Roscius, David Garrick
David Garrick
Harvard University Press
From the hundreds of unpublished Garrick letters of varying length and importance, Mr. Little has selected for this volume forty-four which would seem to be the most interesting or the most significant in depicting Garrick as the actor-manager and as a human being wielding a deft pen. Many of them were written to Captain Peter Garrick; others to George Colman, Samuel Foote, Dr. Burney, the Duchess of Portland, Mrs. Montagu, George Steevens, and Sir Joshua Reynolds. They range in date from 1733 to 1776. All of them reveal a distinct individuality, the special personality of Garrick combined with the unmistakable flavor of the eighteenth century. Their frank honesty, intellectual sincerity, and boyish zest for the full life reveal both a charming figure of the time and also the essential qualities which make the period so irresistibly interesting.
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front cover of Shakespeare and the Legacy of Loss
Shakespeare and the Legacy of Loss
Emily Hodgson Anderson
University of Michigan Press, 2018

How do we recapture, or hold on to, the live performances we most love, and the talented artists and performers we most revere? Shakespeare and the Legacy of Loss tells the story of how 18th-century actors, novelists, and artists, key among them David Garrick, struggled with these questions through their reenactments of Shakespearean plays. For these artists, the resurgence of Shakespeare, a playwright whose works just decades earlier had nearly been erased, represented their own chance for eternal life. Despite the ephemeral nature of performance, Garrick and company would find a way to make Shakespeare, and through him the actor, rise again.

In chapters featuring Othello, Richard III, Hamlet, The Winter’s Tale, and The Merchant of Venice, Emily Hodgson Anderson illuminates how Garrick’s performances of Shakespeare came to offer his contemporaries an alternative and even an antidote to the commemoration associated with the monument, the portrait, and the printed text. The first account to read 18th-century visual and textual references to Shakespeare alongside the performance history of his plays, this innovative study sheds new light on how we experience performance, and why we gravitate toward an art, and artists, we know will disappear.

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