Everything about Samuel Foote totally explained
Samuel Foote (January, 1720 –
October 21,
1777) was an English
dramatist,
actor and
theatre manager from
Cornwall.
Early life
Born into a well to do family, Foote was baptized in
Truro, Cornwall on
January 27,
1720. His father, John Foote, was from good family and he held several public positions, including
mayor of Truro,
Member of Parliament respresenting
Tiverton and a commissioner in the
Prize Office. His mother, née Eleanor Goodere, was the daughter of
baronet Sir Edward Goodere of
Hereford. Foote may have inherited his wit and sharp humour from her and her family which was described as "eccentric. ..whose peculiarities ranged from the harmless to the malevolent." About the time Foote came of age, he inherited his first fortune when one of his uncles, baronet Sir John Dinely Goodere, was murdered by another uncle, Captain Samuel Goodere. It was this murder that was the subject of the first
pamphlet that Foote published around 1741.
Foote was educated at the collegiate school at
Worcester, and at
Worcester College, Oxford, distinguishing himself in both places by mimicry and audacious pleasantries of all kinds. An undisciplined student, he frequently was absent from his
Latin and
Greek classes and subsequently, Oxford disenrolled him 28 January 1740. Although he left Oxford without taking his degree, he acquired a classical training which afterwards enabled him to easily turn a classical quotation or allusion, and helped to give to his
prose style a certain fluency and elegance.
Foote was destined for the
law, but certainly not by nature. In his chambers at the
Inner Temple, and in the
Grecian Coffee-house nearby, he came to know something of
lawyers if not of law, and was afterwards able to jest at the jargon and to mimic the mannerisms of the bar, and to satirize the
Latitats of the other branch of the profession with particular success. Though he never applied himself to his studies at the Inner Temple, he well applied himself to spending money and living as a
bon vivant which led to him quickly running out of money.
After finding himself in
debt, Foote married a certain Mary Hickes (or Hicks) on 10 January 1741. With his wife also came a sizable dowry. Contemporaries note that Foote mistreated his wife, deserting her when his financial situation improved and Hickes may have died an early death. But a stronger attraction drew him to the
Bedford Coffee-house in
Covent Garden, and to the theatrical world of which it was the social centre. His extravagant living soon forced him into
debtor's prison in 1742, and friends encouraged Foote's going onto the stage to make a living.
Initial theatrical ventures
Foote's first training for the stage came under the tutelage of
Charles Macklin. By 1744, when they appeared onstage together, Macklin had made a name for himself as one of the most notable actors on the British stage, after
David Garrick. His appearance as
Shylock in Shakespeare's
The Merchant of Venice at the
Drury Lane Theatre in 1741, mesmerized London audiences. Dismissing the conventional comedic approach to the character, Macklin played the character as consummately evil. Following his debut,
George II reportedly couldn't sleep while
Georg Lichtenberg described Macklin's interpretation of Shylock's first line--"Three thousand ducats"--as being uttered "as lickerously as if he were savouring the ducats and all they'd buy." Following less than a year of training, Foote appeared opposite Macklin's
Iago as the titular role in Shakespeare's
Othello at the
Haymarket Theatre, 6 February 1744. While his first appearance was unsuccessful, it's noted that this production was produced illegally under the
Licensing Act of 1737 which forbid the production of plays by theatres not holding
letters patent or the production of plays not approved by the
Lord Chamberlain. In order to skirt this law, the Haymarket Theatre held musical concerts with plays included gratis.
Following his unsuccessful London appearance, Foote spent the summer season in
Dublin at the
Theatre Royal, Smock Alley where he found his first success. Returning to England, he joined the company at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane which at that time included such noted actors as
Peg Woffington, David Garrick and
Spranger Barry. There he played comic roles including Harry Wildair in
Farquhar's The Constant Couple, Lord Foppington in
Vanbrugh's The Relapse and most notably, the playwright, Bayes in
Villiers' The Rehearsal. It was in this role that Foote publicly showed his gift of mimicry. Borrowing from David Garrick's interpretation of the role, Foote used this role to mock many leading contemporaries.
The Haymarket Theatre
Even with his success onstage, Foote remained impoverished. Attempting life as a theatre manager, he secured a lease on the Haymarket Theatre in 1746. Foote began writing in earnest, producing two pamphlets,
A Treatise on the Passions and
The Roman and English Comedy Considered. After illegally producing
Othello, Foote opened one of his own plays,
The Diversions of the Morning or, A Dish of Chocolate, a satire on contemporary actors and public figures performed by himself, on 22 April 1747. The
Dish of Chocolate of the title referred to a dish or tea offered by Foote to accompany the musical entertainment while the performance was offered gratis, all done to avoid the Licensing Act. On the morning following the performance, the theatre was locked and audiences gathering for the noon performance (another gimmick to evade the law was to stage the show as a
matinée) were turned away by authorities. Foote's jabs at other actors brought the ire of many at Drury Lane and the managers took steps to protect their patent.
Fortunately for Foote, some highly placed friends at court helped the theatre reopen and the play continued. In June, Foote offered
A Cup of Tea, a revision of his revue,
Diversions, again in the guise of a culinary offering. After a brief trip to
Paris, Foote opened
The Auction of Pictures which satirized satirist
Henry Fielding. A war of wit was launched with each lambasting the other in ink and onstage. Among the verbal missiles hurled, Fielding denounced Foote in
The Jacobite's Journal saying "you
Samuel Fut [sic] be pissed upon, with Scorn and Contempt, as a low Buffoon; and I do, with the utmost Scorn and Contempt, piss on you accordingly."
The Author himself
The Fielding quarrel was followed by a more serious quarrel with actor
Henry Woodward. This resulted in a small
riot that was damaging not only to the Haymarket Theatre but to Foote's reputation. He only began to deflect criticism with the opening of his play,
The Knights. This play, unlike his earlier satirical revues, was a romantic comedy set in the country, though he did use this play a vehicle to satirize such things as
Italian opera and the
gentry of Cornwall.
At the close of the Haymarket season in 1749, Foote left London for Paris in order to spend money he'd recently inherited. Upon his return to London in 1752, Foote's new comedy,
Taste, was produced at Drury Lane. Foote took aim at the burgeoning art and
antiquities market and particularly aristocratic collectors. In his preface to the play, Foote specifies his targets as the "barbarians who have prostituted the study of antiquity to trifling superficiality, who have blasted the progress of the elegant arts by unpardonable frauds and absurd prejudices, and who have vitiated the minds and morals of youth by persuading them that what serves only to illustrate literature is true knowledge and that active idelness is real business."
Taste opens with Lady Pentweazel who believes that the works of art, the
Venus de' Medici and the Mary de Medici, are sisters in the
Medici family. Two other collectors, Novice and Lord Dupe, claim to be able to determine the age and value of coins and medals by tasting them while Puff, an
auctioneer, convinces them and Sir Positive Bubble that broken china and statuary are worth far more than perfect pieces. Lord Dupe follows this advice by purchasing a canvas with the paint scraped off. The foibles of ignorant art collectors and predatory dealers were presented by Foote in this high
burlesque comedy. In order for an audience to appreciate high burlesque, they must understand the standards of true taste before they can recognize the conflict between those standards and the characters. The audience that saw the premier of
Taste evidently didn't understand this conflict as the play wasn't successful and only played five performances.
Following the unsuccessful reception of
Taste, Foote staged a new production,
An Englishman in Paris, inspired by both his trip there and possibly, as Davison suggests, a French play,
Frenchman in London which he may have seen. Here, Foote satirized the boorish behaviour of English gentlemen abroad. The play garnered wide acclaim and became a part of the repertoires of the Drury Lane and
Covent Garden theatres where it remained for a few decades. While his success was becoming more solidified as a writer, Foote was also in demand as an actor, working at Drury Lane and Covent Garden during the 1753-4 season.
When he found himself out of work in November 1754, Foote rented the Haymarket theatre and began to stage mock lectures. Satirizing
Charles Macklin's newly opened school of oratory, these lectures created a sort of theatrical war, especially when Macklin began to appear at the lectures himself. At one particular lecture, Foote extemporized a piece of nonsense prose to test Macklin's assertion that he could memorise any text at a single reading.
So she went into the garden to cut a cabbage-leaf to make an apple-pie; and at the same time a great she-bear, coming up the street, pops its head into the shop. "What! No soap?" So he died, and she very imprudently married the barber; and there were present the Picninnies, and the Joblillies, and the Garyalies, and the grand Panjandrum himself, with the little round button at top, and they all fell to playing the game of catch-as-catch-can till the gunpowder ran out at the heels of their boots.
This introduced the nonsense term "Grand Panjandrum" into the English language and the name was adopted for the
Panjandrum, an experimental
World War II-era
explosive device.
With Foote's success in writing
An Englishman in Paris, Irish playwright
Arthur Murphy was moved to create a sequel,
The Englishman returned from Paris. While Foote readily encouraged Murphy's plan, Foote secretly wrote his own version which opened at Covent Garden on 3 February 1756. While early biographers scorned Foote's plagiarism of Murphy's play, the 1969 discovery of that manuscript laid it to rest when it was proven that Foote's play was far superior. The play was successful at Covent Garden and played regularly until 1760.
Two rival actresses captured the attention of London audiences and Foote's satire. Peg Woffington and
George Anne Bellamy apparently took their roles rather seriously in a production of
Nathaniel Lee's
The Rival Queens. When Bellamy's Parisian fashions began to upstage Woffington, Bellamy was driven offstage by a dagger-wielding Woffington thus providing a source for Foote's
The Green-Room Squabble or a Battle Royal between the Queen of Babylon and the Daughter of Darius. The text of this farce is now lost.
Having turned his satire on Englishmen abroad and actresses at home, Foote pointed his daggered pen towards himself, other writers and the condition of the "starving writer" in his play
The Author which premiered at Drury Lane 5 February 1757. The plot concerned a poor author's father who disguises himself in order to spy on his son. Again, Foote created the role of Cadwallader for himself and used it to satirize John Apreece, a patron of authors. While critics derided Foote's attack on Apreece, audiences flocked to the theatre. Apreece even appeared and sat "open-mouthed and silly, in the boxes, to the delight of the audience, and mystified by the reflection of himself, which he beheld on the stage." Foote noted later that Apreece finding "the resemblance [...] too strong, and the ridicule too pungent [...] occasioned an application for the suppression of the piece, which was therefore forbidden to be anymore performed." The play was forbidden further productions by the Lord Chamberlain. While success may have been limited,
Richard Brinsley Sheridan adapted the plot in his
School for Scandal. Modern critics would point out that
The Author shows great development in Foote's ability in creating characters and sustaining plot.
Of mimicry and Methodists
Late in 1757, Foote faced himself in the guise of young actor and mimic,
Tate Wilkinson. Wilkinson, like Foote, had failed somewhat as an actor, but was renowned for his satiric mimicry of others. Foote traveled with him to Dublin for part of the 1757-58 season and he also revived
Diversions of the Morning as a vehicle to display Wilkinson's talents. The popularity of these talents crowded out all other performances at Drury Lane in the first half of the season, much to the chagrin of Garrick and the other actors. Soon, however, the luck ran out and by March, Foote was seeking employment elsewhere. With little luck in London, Foote traveled to perform a season in
Edinburgh and found success with many of his works, including
The Author which couldn't be staged in London. The following season found Foote in Dublin where Wilkinson was drawing crowds with his imitations and on 28 January 1760, Foote opened a new play,
The Minor. The production was a failure.
Returning to London, Foote's financial situation was still quite poor. After renting the Haymarket theatre and revising
The Minor into a three act version (up from the two act version presented in Dublin), the play opened in London. Doran remarks that while "
The Minor failed in Dublin, very much to the credit of an Irish audience, [...] they condemned it on the ground of its grossness and immorality[,]" English society, nevertheless, while hearing condemnations of the play, filled the theatres. The play played for full houses for 38 nights.
The Minor utilizes a fairly pedestrian plot to satirize the
Methodist movement. Before its premiere, Foote showed the text of
The Minor to the
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Thomas Secker. His Grace objected to several passages, but particularly to Mrs Cole referring to herself as a "lost sheep". An expression, he said, that was sacred to the pulpit. Foote beseeched His Grace to take the manuscript and strike the exceptionable passages. The Archbishop agreed on the condition that it should be published "Revised and Corrected by the Archbishop of Canterbury. "
The Devil on Two Sticks
While riding with
Prince Edward Augustus, Duke of York and Albany in 1766, he was thrown from his horse and the injury cost him his leg. Even in this state, he continued to act and as possible compensation for his injury was granted a license to legally operate the Haymarket Theatre. He produced a summer season of "legitimate plays" in 1767, engaging Spranger Barry and his wife to perform. He bought the theatre outright and remodelled the interior the same year and continued to operate the theatre until he was forced to give up his patent to
George Colman the Elder the following year. He died in 1777 en route to France.
Foote's satires are based on caricatures of characters and situations from his era. His facility and wit in writing these earned him the title "the English
Aristophanes." While, often, his subjects found his literary jabs just as humorous as his audiences, they often both feared and admired him.
Dramatic works
| Title |
Year of Premier |
Location of Premier |
Year Published |
| The Diversions of the Morning or, A Dish of Chocolate (revised as A Cup of Tea) |
1747 |
Haymarket |
|
| An Auction of Pictures |
1748 |
Haymarket |
|
| The Knights |
1748 |
Drury Lane |
1754 |
| Taste |
1752 |
Drury Lane |
1752 |
| An Englishman in Paris |
1753 |
Covent Garden |
1753 |
| A Writ of Inquiry on the Inquisitor General |
1754 |
Haymarket |
|
| The Englishman Returned from Paris |
1756 |
Covent Garden |
1756 |
| The Green-Room Squabble or a Battle Royal between the Queen of Babylon and the Daughter of Darius |
1756 |
Haymarket |
Lost |
| The Author |
1757 |
Drury Lane |
1757 |
| The Minor |
1760 |
Haymarket |
1760 |
| Tragedy a la Mode (alternative act 2 for Diversions) |
1760 |
Drury Lane |
1795 |
| The Lyar |
1762 |
Covent Garden |
1764 |
| The Orators |
1762 |
Haymarket |
1762 |
| The Mayor of Garrett |
1763 |
Haymarket |
1764 |
| The Trial of Samuel Foote, Esq. for a Libel on Peter Paragraph |
1763 |
Haymarket |
1795 |
| The Patron |
1764 |
Haymarket |
1764 |
| The Commissary |
1765 |
Haymarket |
1765 |
| The Devil on Two Sticks |
1768 |
Haymarket |
1778 |
| The Lame Lover |
1770 |
Haymarket |
1771 |
| The Maid of Bath |
1771 |
Haymarket |
1771 |
| The Nabob |
1772 |
Haymarket |
1778 |
| Piety in Pattens |
1773 |
Haymarket |
1973 |
| The Bankrupt |
1773 |
Haymarket |
1776 |
| The Cozeners |
1774 |
Haymarket |
1776 |
| A Trip to Calais (revised as The Capuchin) |
1776 |
Haymarket |
1778 |
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