Maria Ann Lovell

(Redirected from Mrs G. W. Lovell)

Maria Ann Lovell or Maria Lovell; Maria Lacy; Maria Ann Lacy (1803–1877) was an English actress and playwright, often referred to as Mrs G. W. Lovell. She acted under the name Miss Lacy.

Maria Ann Lovell
Born1803
Died1877
NationalityBritish

Life

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Lovell was born in London on 15 July 1803 to Willoughby Lacy of Drury Lane.[1] She was a working actor by 1818 when she successfully appeared in Belfast. By 1820 she was appearing in Scotland with Edward Kean and Charles Young. In 1822 she appeared at Covent Garden with such success that in time she was given a three-year contract.[2] By 1826 she had appeared in Love's Victory by Lady Mary Wroth and a lithograph recorded her role.[3]

She retired from acting and married in 1830 George William Lovell, a well-known dramatist, author of The Provost of Bruges, The Wife's Secret, Love's Sacrifice, Look Before You Leap, and The Trial of Love.[4]

Her father died in 1831.[2]

Lovell published a five act play titled Ingomar the Barbarian[5] from Der Sohn der Wildnis ("The Son of the Wilderness"), a German-language play by Eligius Franz Joseph, Freiherr von Munch-Bellinghausen, an Austrian who wrote as Friedrich Halm, and has been referred to as "Bellinghausen".[6] The leading role of Parthenia was taken by Charlotte Vandenhoff when it was first performed at Drury Lane in 1851. Four years later she published another play, titled The Beginning and the End in four acts. It was performed at the Haymarket in 1855.[2]

Lovell died in Hampstead on 2 April 1877.

References

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  1. ^ Maria Lowell, ODNB
  2. ^ a b c s:Lovell, George William (DNB00):Lovell, George William, ODNB, Wikisource
  3. ^ Maria Ann Lovell (née Lacy) as Princess Diana in 'Love's Victory', 1826, NPG. Retrieved 25 July 2016
  4. ^ "Stageland". Evening News. No. 10, 751. New South Wales, Australia. 23 November 1901. p. 3. Retrieved 16 June 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ Maria Anne Lovell (c. 1870). Ingomar the Barbarian: A Play in Five Acts. Samuel French & Son.
  6. ^ "Questionnaire Answers". The Australasian. Vol. CXLVIII, no. 4, 761. Victoria, Australia. 30 March 1940. p. 35. Retrieved 16 June 2021 – via National Library of Australia.