|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GUI-HAN |
|
|
GWYN, NELL [ELEANOR] (1650-1687) , English actress, and mistress of Charles II., was born on the 2nd of February 165o/r, probably in an alley off Drury Lane, London, although Hereford
interest
Secret Love, or the Maiden Queen, he wrote " so great a performance of a comical part was never, I believe, in the world before " and, " so done by Nell her merry part as cannot be better done in nature " (Diary, March 25, 1667). Her success brought her other leading rolesBellario, in Beaumont and Fletcher's Philaster; Flora, in Rhodes's Flora's Vagaries; Samira, in Sir Robert Howard's Surprisal; and she remained a member of the Drury Lane company until 1669, playing continuously save for a brief absence in the summer of 1667 when she lived at Epsom as the mistress of Lord Buckhurst, afterwards ' 6th earl
birth
As an actress Nell Gwyn was largely indebted to Dryden, whoseems to' have made a special
chief
hair . She was illiterate, and with difficulty scrawled an awkward E. G. at the bottom of her letters, written for her by others. But her frank recklessness, her generosity, her invariable good temper, her ready wit, her infectious high spirits and amazing indiscretions appealed irresistibly to a generation which welcomed in her the living antithesis of Puritanism. " A true child of the London streets," she never pretended to be superior to what she was, nor to interfere in matters outside the special
Of her two sons by the king, the elder was created Baron Hedington and earl
Secret Service fund, provided her with other moneys, and settled on her an estate with reversion to the duke of St Albans. But she did not long survive her lover's death. She died in November 1687, and was buried on the 17th, according to her own request, in the church of St Martin-in-the-Fields, her funeral sermon being preached by the vicar, Thomas Tenison, afterwards archbishop of Canterbury, who said " much to her praise." Tradition credits the foundation of Chelsea Hospital
See Peter Cunningham, The Story of Nell Gwyn, edited by Gordon Goodwin (1903); Waldron's edition of John Downes 's Roscius Anglicanus (1789); Osmund Airy, Charles II. (1904); Pepys, Diary; Evelyn, Diary and Correspondence; Origin and Early History of the Royal Hospital
End of Article: GWYN, NELL [ELEANOR] (1650-1687) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/GUI_HAN/GWYN_NELL_ELEANOR_1650_1687_.html"> GWYN, NELL [ELEANOR] (1650-1687) </a> |
|
|
(Previous) GWILT, JOSEPH (1784-1863) |
(Next) GWYNIAD |
|
Sponsored Advertisements