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Sarah Baker and her Kentish theatres, 1737-1816 : challenging the status quo / Jean Baker

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Annual publication (Society for Theatre Research) ; 2018-19Publisher: London : Society for Theatre Research, 2019Copyright date: ©2019Description: xix, 262 pàgines, 8 pàgines de làmines no numerades : il·lustracions (algunes en color) ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
  • imatge fixa
Media type:
  • sense mediació
Carrier type:
  • volum
ISBN:
  • 9780854300846
  • 0854300848
Subject(s): Summary: "Sarah Baker was an illiterate fairground performer who became one of the most successful self-made women of her time. Born in 1737, she grew up travelling the country with her mother and younger sister in order to entertain crowds at country fairs and race meetings. In the early 1770s Sarah, recently widowed and with three young children, took over the small family troupe and, in the face of fierce opposition from male rivals, began to concentrate upon Kent. Temporary makeshift facilities were their only performance venues until 1789, when she opened the first of the four 'great grand' theatres she built in the county: Canterbury, Rochester, Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells. Across the 1790s she played a unique and hugely influential role in the rapidly evolving towns where she concentrated her activities. After her death in 1816 her estate was valued at more than 16,000 (in excess of 1.5 million today).--Sarah Baker's long life spanned a turbulent period of change which marked her experiences. Robert Walpole's political insecurities, William Wilberforce's evangelical concern with the nation's moral fibre, William Pitt's policy of war with France, even the French Revolution, all had life-changing consequences for Sarah and her family. By presenting her unlikely transformation from strolling player to wealthy entrepreneur in relation to the pressures under which she operated, this book casts new light not only on the role of Georgian provincial theatre but also on the volatile times in which Sarah Baker lived" -- Contracoberta
Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Llibre Biblioteca Barcelona Biblioteca Barcelona BCN Lliure Accés 792.027.07 BAKER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 1900080660

Nom de la col·lecció agafat de la pàgina web de l'editor

ISBN imprés en la contracoberta té un zero de més (imprés com 97800854300846) ; l' ISBN correcte (9780854300846) es troba imprés en el verso de portada

Inclou referències bibliogràfiques (pàgines 239-255) i índex

"Sarah Baker was an illiterate fairground performer who became one of the most successful self-made women of her time. Born in 1737, she grew up travelling the country with her mother and younger sister in order to entertain crowds at country fairs and race meetings. In the early 1770s Sarah, recently widowed and with three young children, took over the small family troupe and, in the face of fierce opposition from male rivals, began to concentrate upon Kent. Temporary makeshift facilities were their only performance venues until 1789, when she opened the first of the four 'great grand' theatres she built in the county: Canterbury, Rochester, Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells. Across the 1790s she played a unique and hugely influential role in the rapidly evolving towns where she concentrated her activities. After her death in 1816 her estate was valued at more than 16,000 (in excess of 1.5 million today).--Sarah Baker's long life spanned a turbulent period of change which marked her experiences. Robert Walpole's political insecurities, William Wilberforce's evangelical concern with the nation's moral fibre, William Pitt's policy of war with France, even the French Revolution, all had life-changing consequences for Sarah and her family. By presenting her unlikely transformation from strolling player to wealthy entrepreneur in relation to the pressures under which she operated, this book casts new light not only on the role of Georgian provincial theatre but also on the volatile times in which Sarah Baker lived" -- Contracoberta

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