Wanko, Three Stories of Celebrity
Wanko, Three Stories of Celebrity
Wanko, Three Stories of Celebrity
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in English Literature, 1500-1900
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SEL38 (1998)
ISSN 0039-3657
CHERYL WANKO
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482 BE GGA R 'S OPERA " B I O G RA P H I E S "
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C H E RYL WANKO 483
These new heroes owe their fame more to luck or audacity than
to diligence and virtue, and they are not born into noble fami-
lies where regard accompanies station. Public attention may be
provoked by some singular act, but these figures continue in the
public eye through the expanding popular press eager for new
material. Such attention initiates a kind of feedback mechanism
in which knowledge or gossip feeds the curiosity and desire for
more knowledge or gossip. The resulting cumulative "media
image" often becomes divorced from the incident that originally
propelled the person into public notice-even from the person
him/herself-detaching the signifier/signified from the referent.
Braudy contends that by the twentieth century "the ancient belief
that fame was the crown of achievement had been replaced by the
conviction that it was the only thing worthwhile at all."12
My general answer, then, to the question of how The Beggar's
Opera encouraged these biographies is that they responded to
the play's elevation of performers to new social heroes. They
reacted to the nascent social category of the celebrity, whose
fame derives more from media than from worthy deeds. Both
Isaac Kramnick and, more recently, J. Douglas Canfield have
argued that The Beggar's Opera criticizes emergent capitalism, and
these biographies reinforce such criticism in that they deplore
the type of heroes created by a market-driven capitalist econ-
omy.13 My paradoxical conclusion about the biographies' cumu-
lative effect, however, is that the very act of protesting
celebrities-disparaging their trivial personal problems, harm-
ful influence, and unearned cultural power-only solidifies
their public presence. Thus, unwillingly, the biographical
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484 BEGGAR'S OPERA "BIOGRAPHIES"
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C H E RYL WA N KO 485
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486 4 BE G GA R 'S OPERA "B I O G RA P H I E S "
Tho' the Cocks are all running, there's not enough Water,
For the Girl is brimful of combustible Matter:
Then play with your Buckets, and work for your Soul,
Or the best Toast in Town will be burnt to a Coal.25
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C H E RYL WA N KO 487
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488 BEGGAR'S OPERA "BIOGRAPHIES"
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C H E RYL WANKO 489
II. The Lure of Celebrity: Memoirs concerning the Life and Manners of
Captain Mackheath (1728)
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490 BE G GA R 'S OPERA " B I O GRA P H I E S "
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C H E RYL WANKO 491
III. The Rogue Chastised: The Life of Mr. James Spiller, the Late Famous
Comedian (1729)
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492 BEGGAR'S OPERA "BIOGRAPHIES"
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C H ERYL WANKO 493
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494 BE G GAR'S OPERA " B I O G RA P H I E S "
IV. Conclusion
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C H E RYL WANKO 495
NOTES
'The epigraph is from Authentic Memoirs of the Celebrated Miss Nancy D*ws
(London: Tom Dawson, ca. 1760).
2Examples are noted in Charles E. Pearce, "Polly Peachum": Being the Story
of Lavinia Fenton . . . and "The Beggar's Opera" (New York: Brentano's, 1913),
chaps. 9-13.
3The Life of Lavinia Beswick, alias Fenton, alias Polly Peachum (London: A.
Moore, 1728); Memoirs concerning the Life and Manners of Captain Mackheath
(London: A. Moore, 1728); George Akerby, The Life of Mr. James Spiller, the Late
Famous Comedian (London: J. Purser, 1729). For convenience in this article, I
will refer to these texts loosely as "biographies." Further references to Life of
Spiller will be from this edition and occur parenthetically in the text.
4Two of these previous biographies present the actor as a roguish comedian:
the anonymous criminal biography An Account of the Life . . . of. . . Mat.
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496 BEGGA R 'S OPERA " B I O GRA P H I E S "
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C H E RYL WANKO 497
Fire (1728), and Epistle from Matt of the Mint (1729). Henry Robert Plomer
merely states that he or she was a "pamphlet-seller and publisher in London:
Near St. Paul's 1722-47" (Dictionary of Printers . . . 1726 to 1775 [Oxford:
Oxford Univ. Press, 1932], p. 174). M. R. A. Harris states that "'A. Moore' on
an imprint seems to have been a generally accepted fiction in this period," but
he does not explain the sources of his inference ("Figures Relating to the Print-
ing and Distribution of the Craftsman 1726 to 1730," Bulletin of the Institute of
Historical Research 43, 108 [November 1970]: 233-42, 234 n. 5).
24Toni-Lynn O'Shaughnessy, "A Single Capacity in The Beggar's Opera," ECS
21, 2 (Winter 1987-88): 212-27.
25Polly Peachum on Fire, title page.
26The Craftsman 104 (29 June 1728).
27Ibid.
28Life of Fenton, p. 14. For closer examination of this text and its problem-
atic naming of its subject, see my previous article, "The Eighteenth-Century
Actress and the Construction of Gender: Lavinia Fenton and Charlotte
Charke," ECLife, n.s., 18, 2 (May 1994): 75-90.
29Philip H. HighfillJr., Kalman A. Burnim, and Edward A. Langh
Life of Fenton "a scurrilous and probably untrustworthy work which,
nately, is the only source" for the majority of information about Fenton (A
Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Actresses . . . and Other Stage Personnel in London
[Carbondale: Southern Illinois Univ. Press, 1973-93], s.v. "Fenton, Lavinia, nee
Beswick, later the Duchess of Bolton").
30JohnJ. Richett, PopularFiction before Richardson: Narrative Patterns, 1700
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969), p. 35.
31Life of Fenton, pp. 33, 47.
32Richard Dyer, Stars (1979; rprt. London: BFI Publishing, 1992).
33Braudy, p. 5.
34Davis, p. 68.
35Dyer, p. 30.
36Thomas Herring, preface to Seven Sermons on Public Occasions, [ed. William
Duncombe] (London: Printed for the Editor, 1763), pp. v-x, v-vi; rprt. inJ.
V. Guerinot and Rodney D. Jilg, "The Beggar's Opera, "Contexts 1, ed. Maynard
Mack (Hamden CT: Archon Books, 1976), pp. 119-20.
37For Daniel Defoe's responses, see Paula R. Backscheider, Daniel Defoe,
Life (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1988).
38The Craftsman 98 (18 May 1728).
39This is echoed in another pamphlet from the press of A. Moore, An Epis-
tle from Matt of the Mint, lately deceased, to Captain Macheath (1729), in which Matt
writes,
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498 BE G GA R 'S OPERA "BIOGRAPHIES"
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