Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Turning points
- Part II Professional opportunities
- Part III Genre, form and tradition
- 12 Mirroring men: the actress in drag
- 13 ‘Studies in hysteria’: actress and courtesan, Sarah Bernhardt and Mrs Patrick Campbell
- 14 Beyond the muse: the Spanish actress as collaborator
- 15 Going solo: an historical perspective on the actress and the monologue
- 16 Changing Shakespeare: new possibilities for the modern actress
- General reading
- Index
13 - ‘Studies in hysteria’: actress and courtesan, Sarah Bernhardt and Mrs Patrick Campbell
from Part III - Genre, form and tradition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Turning points
- Part II Professional opportunities
- Part III Genre, form and tradition
- 12 Mirroring men: the actress in drag
- 13 ‘Studies in hysteria’: actress and courtesan, Sarah Bernhardt and Mrs Patrick Campbell
- 14 Beyond the muse: the Spanish actress as collaborator
- 15 Going solo: an historical perspective on the actress and the monologue
- 16 Changing Shakespeare: new possibilities for the modern actress
- General reading
- Index
Summary
In the second half of the nineteenth century, new spectacles of feminine suffering began to appear on the fashionable French and English stages as audiences were mesmerised by the figure of the fallen woman and the actresses who played her. The French actress who took the role of courtesan, or the English actress who played a disgraced wife or prostitute, risked the stigma of their own profession and that of the fallen woman. 'For a large section of society,' writes Tracy C. Davis on the employment of actresses in the nineteenth century, 'the similarities between the actress's life and the prostitute's or demi-mondaine's were unforgettable and overruled all other evidence about respectability. She was “no better than she should be”.' Juxtaposed with the risk to the actress of being seen as 'no better than she should be' was the 'redemption' of star actress through her celebrity status. It is a condition of celebrity-making that a star's aura, her charisma, can overcome these kinds of tensions and conflicts. This goes some way to explaining why, for example, Ellen Terry was fête 'an icon of Victorian femininity' despite being a mother of two illegitimate children. The two actresses focused on in this chapter, Sarah Bernhardt and Mrs Patrick Campbell, both had illegitimate children, numerous affairs and failed marriages, but both achieved international stardom, and in Bernhardt's case especially, cult status.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to the Actress , pp. 253 - 271Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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