What struck me most forcibly listening to the podcast was that she achieved all of this in her supposedly adolescent years! She was only just into her teens when she started as an orange-seller and she had only just turned twenty when she became a mother and gave up her acting career. That's extraordinary, isn't it, by today's standards? Not so unusual perhaps when one considers that in the previous century, both Catherine of Aragon and Catherine Howard were only sixteen when they made their Tudor marriages.
Maybe adolescence (from the Latin adolescere , to mature) was much more aligned to physical rather than emotional maturity prior to the 20th century. It must be fairly obvious that nowadays, certainly in the more affluent and enlightened West (since the education and welfare reforms of the last hundred years) youngsters can enjoy the luxury of an extended childhood.
Anyway, historical comparisons aside, I decided to head off into the bountiful worldwide web to find out more concerning the remarkable adolescent years of mistress Nell Gwyn.
Eleanor 'Nell' Gwyn, 1650-1687 |
It's also almost certain that she was illiterate, for there was no schooling available to poor girls of her day. She would have grown up in her mother's brothel in Coal Yard Alley, just off Drury Lane, and along with her "notorious" sister Rose she would have served "strong waters" to the clientele. There is a suggestion she may have taken a lover of her own when she was twelve years old.
Her first break (if you can call it that) was to be recruited by one Mary Meggs (aka Orange Moll) who had a licence to "vend oranges, lemons, sweetmeats" within the King's Theatre off Drury Lane - for by 1663 the dour days of the Republic were gone, the monarchy had been restored with fun-loving King Charles II on the throne and the theatres had re-opened. Mary Meggs' scantily-clad "orange girls" sold fruit to the patrons of the shows and were often tipped to take messages from high-society men in the audience to the actresses backstage.
Nell soaked it all up, the atmosphere, how the theatre worked, and being both pretty, precocious and with a comic talent had soon managed to persuade the management to enrol her in the theatre's acting school in 1664, aged fourteen, where she was given small parts to begin with in plays and revues. Note that she was among the first wave of female actors, for prior to the Restoration of 1660 women's parts had always been played by boys and men. Not that Nell herself was averse to cross-dressing either. From time to time she dressed as a man with a false beard and called herself William Nell. Because she couldn't read, she learned her lines by rote from listening to others reading them and on top of that she improvised. She was a natural performer and by her mid-teens had become something of a sensation for playing in John Dryden's heroic drama 'The Indian Emperor ' as the love interest of the main actor Charles Hart, who was at the same time her real-life lover.
By 1667 she had secured her acting reputation and offstage she numbered actors and earls among her paramours. In fact during that year the Duke of Buckingham took on the role of unofficial manager of Nell's love affairs and through that connection she came to the notice and soon to the bed of the King of England. Charles II made no secret of his mistresses. His Queen, Catherine of Braganza, could not bear him any children but he already had six from four separate mistresses by the time he took up with Nell. She rather archly called him Charles the Third because she'd already had two previous lovers with that name. He is said to have adored her for her quick wit and forthrightness as well as for her other charms.
Nell portrayed as Venus with her son as Cupid |
She'd never expected that her royal affair would last, but she made it work for her and she was always in the King's affections. Charles II kept that portrait of Nell as Venus hidden behind a landscape painting, but he would reveal it occasionally to guests who he though might find it of interest. And when he died in 1685, he left instructions for his brother (James II) that Nell Gwyn was to be well cared for, and so she was, living on in the Pall Mall house until her own death (from a stroke) two years later, aged just thirty-seven. She lives on in social and theatrical folklore, and various streets and buildings named in her memory.
As for my own adolescent years, I suspect they were fairly typical for a middle-class boy in the 1960s into early 1970s. There was embarrassment about one's conservative (i.e. 'square') parents, concern that the world might go up in an atomic fireball, worry about passing exams, about acne, the size of one's cock, making out with girls, being caught masturbating or using drugs, finding part-time jobs to fund buying clothes/records/books/beer, taking girls out (it was expected the boy would pay) and going to the football (those last two being mutually exclusive back then). It was a struggle but it was fun, And I left home as soon as I could.
I've been sorting through some old photographs recently and was struck by a similarity between the paintings of Nell Gwyn above (both painted by Sir Peter Lely when she was twenty) and that of a girl I knew fleetingly back in my own adolescence in Cambridge. I think it's the bosoms! Linda was the sister of a schoolfriend of mine, she was a student and part-time photographer's model, lived life to the full and barely made it into her twenties. I kept her picture (admittedly rather creased by the years) for sentimental reasons that you may care to guess at.
Linda Martin, 1952-1972 |
I also wrote poetry, mostly for its own sake, sometimes for the school magazine, occasionally for girlfriends. I didn't keep much of it, as I didn't think it would stand the test of time, but I do have a couple of poems dating from those teenage years. I've shared this one before in an early Dead Good Blog back in 2014, but I'll reproduce it here in lieu of anything new this week:
Saturday
I open the window
into a cold and rainy morning.
The grey streets
are full of grey people
with frowns on their faces
and water in their shoes
cursing the day they were born.
So I turn back to Friday night
for you are smiling and warm.
29 comments:
That's an amazing story, so much more to Nell Gwyn than I'd realised. I like your Saturday poem. ๐
You were a bad boy! (LOL)
An excellent read. Just fyi, it's likely that Nell's death from a stroke at a relatively young age (37) was a consequence of having contracted syphilis, something of an occupational hazard in the circle in which she moved. It is almost certain that Charles II suffered similarly, for he had been experimenting with taking mercury (thought at the time to be a cure) shortly before his own death.
A fascinating read. For some reason I'd never connected the arrival of female actors with the Restoration before. I love your Saturday poem.
Well, yes, nice bosoms! And I like your Saturday poem. About Linda by any chance?
Good for Nell Gwyn for making the most of her talents.
Love it. ❤️
A great read. It's funny how we all think we know about Nell Gwyn but don't really have the facts, including just how young she was. It's a lovely poem as well. You are quite the romantic, aren't you.
I listened to that 'You're Dead To Me' history podcast as well. Yes it was informative but I found the style of presentation annoying. Your blog is the better option! Keep up the good work.
Very good Steve.
I learn such a lot from your blogs. This was fascinating. It's a lovely poem as well. Thank you. ๐งก
I remember Linda. Such a lively girl and such a tragic end.
Your latest made good homeward-bound reading. We both threw away chances for away wins today. It's frustrating. I remember you showing me that poem (among other 'early' efforts) years ago and I've always liked it.
I'm hazarding a guess that you were a charming young man (and not a bad boy at all). This was very interesting and I love the poem.
For my sins, I wuz born an' brung up in Newmarket, which also has a tangential connection with the lovely Ms. Gwyn/Gwynne. She was gifted a cottage in Newmarket's Palace Street by her paramour Charles II, a great fan of the horses. Charles had a palace in said Palace Street, with allegedly a convenient tunnel to Nell's house across the street, and another to the Bushel Inn, where he would also go to watch cock-fights. The house is still standing and is a Grade II listed property. In 1669 and 1670, when the relationship was blooming, Charles spent around 50 days all told attending the races in Newmarket, with - one assumes - the adolescent Nell for company. Her name lives on locally in a race (for 3-y-o fillies) called the Nell Gwyn Stakes, run over seven furlongs on the Rowley Mile course in April each year. Winning this early-season race is widely regarded as a marker of better things to come: in 1985, for instance, Oh So Sharp won here before going on to take the fillies' Triple Crown of the 1,000 Guineas (also at Newmarket), the Epsom Oaks, and the St. Leger. On a completely separate issue, I don't recall Linda - you must have kept quiet about her, Steve.
A most interesting piece. I think what I knew about Nell Gwyn came from a Carry On film or some such comic representation. It was a shock that she was so young.
Fascinating article as usual Steve. Love that Charles the Third quote.
I rather like that poem.
Thanks Will for the info about Nell's Newmarket connection. As for Linda, it was necessarily clandestine.
All I can think of now is ripe fruit! Must have my adolescent head on today. ๐
Very interesting. Any hint that novels like Defoe's Moll Flanders of that Forever Amber you referenced recently in another blog were inspired by the story of Nell Gwyn?
I enjoyed this Steve. Nell Gwyn is deserving of her place in history. It's a lovely little poem too. How old were you when you wrote it?
Thanks for sharing. Yes that was a revelation, a fascinating read. I love your Saturday poem as well. ๐งก
I loved the picture of oranges at the end!
Nell was quite the gal and her buoyancy of spirit and sense of comedy comes through to the present day.
I loved the poem that really communicates a warmth and engagement with life at the end, compared with the start of the poem.
What happened to Linda?
Nell was quite a gal. I never realised. Good for her, too.
What happened to Linda was that unfortunately she became involved with a set of people who were into hard drugs and she came a cropper. Such a tragic waste of a young life.
I enjoyed your Nell blog Steve. Did you ever see the old movie with Anna Neagle as Nell? I kept in touch with Rob Martin after we left school. I was at uni in Edinburgh when Linda died but I know he took it hard because he idolised his sister. Saturday is a great little poem.
A fascinating account. Saturday is a delightful poem. Was it written for Linda?
Random thought from reading this: Is it harder for pretty girls to make their way in the world nowadays than it was in the 17th century?
I read a couple of years ago that a remake of Nell Gwyn was being lined up with Emma Mackey in the role of Nell. I've not seen anything about it recently, so maybe she was too tied up with Sex Education, Emily and Barbie. One to watch out for though.
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