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207:. The building was so small that actors who left from one set of wings had to walk around the building if their entrance was from the opposing side of the stage. At one point he had to borrow a large sum to keep it going. He took a company to the theatre during the summer from 1741 to 1747; his daughter Elizabeth appeared there. it was his plan in 1747 to open a larger theatre in Bath but he died before this could be done.
326:(i. 356), described Hippisley as a "comedian of lively humour and droll pleasantry". His appearance was comic, and always elicited laughter and applause from the audience. This was in part due to a burn on his face, received in youth. He says of himself, in his epilogue to
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were under the same management, and in
December 1732, on the opening night of the new Covent Garden Theatre, Hippisley played Sir Wilful Witwoud in Congreve's
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His son John
Hippisley appeared at Covent Garden as Tom Thumb, in April 1740; he later was known as a writer about Africa. His daughters
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He remained at
Lincoln's Inn Fields until the season of 1732–3, playing among many other characters Sir Francis Gripe in
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He died at
Bristol on 12 February 1748. He was buried in Clifton, Gloucestershire, with the following epitaph:
277:. Hippisley remained at Covent Garden for the rest of his life. His numerous new parts included Shallow in
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32:(14 January 1696 – 12 February 1748) was an English comic actor and playwright. He appeared at
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Hippisley also took part, probably in 1730, in an unrecorded representation of his own
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Curious
Epitaphs, Collected from the Graveyards of Great Britain and Ireland
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197:; later that year he leased land in Bristol and built a small theatre,
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At
Lincoln's Inn Field in 1731 he performed for his benefit his play
507: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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in
Somerset. Hippisley's first recorded appearance took place at
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342:(1719–1791) and Elizabeth (fl. 1742–1769) became actresses.
530:. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 8–9.
471:. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 8–9.
301:. In January 1747 he was the original Sir Simon Loveit in
237:. Hippisley played Sir Thomas Testy in March 1732 in his
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And Mirth herself, (’tis strange) laid down and cry’d.
311:. After this time his name disappears from the bills.
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When the Stage heard that death had struck her John,
222:, Dublin, and printed in London in the same year.)
375:Wit droop’d his head, e’en Humour seem’d to mourn,
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193:In August 1728 he performed in Bristol his play
565:18th-century English dramatists and playwrights
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201:, which opened on 23 June 1729 with Congreve's
212:The Journey to Bristol, or the Honest Welshman
410:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
267:. In January 1733 he was Lord Plausible in
40:in London, and was the original Peachum in
365:Laughter lamented that her Fav’rite died,
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407:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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380:And solemnly sat pensive o’er his urn.
195:The English Thief, or The Welsh Lawyer
46:. He opened a theatre in Bristol, the
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70:in November 1722, as Fondlewife in
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360:Gay Comedy her Sables first put on;
330:, that his "ugly face is a farce".
257:In 1732–3 Lincoln's Inn Fields and
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22:Hippisley as Sir Francis Gripe in
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239:Sequel to Flora, or Hob's Wedding
555:18th-century English male actors
527:Dictionary of National Biography
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468:Dictionary of National Biography
458:"Hippisley, John (d.1748)"
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241:(1732), another adaptation from
189:As playwright and theatre owner
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424:UK public library membership
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50:, where he and his daughter
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229:(1730), an adaptation from
218:, was given in 1767 at the
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283:, Ananias in Ben Jonson's
127:, Sir William Wisewood in
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560:English male stage actors
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518:Hippisley, John (d.1748)
482:William Andrews (1883).
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62:Hippisley was born near
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328:The Journey to Bristol
322:Thomas Davies, in his
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264:The Way of the World
169:and John Fletcher's
111:Troilus and Cressida
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34:Lincoln's Inn Fields
514:Knight, John Joseph
453:Knight, John Joseph
404:"Hippisley, John".
220:Smock Alley Theatre
199:Jacobs Well Theatre
52:Elizabeth Hippisley
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216:The Connaught Wife
182:The Beggar's Opera
172:The Maid's Tragedy
165:, and Calianax in
43:The Beggar's Opera
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422:(Subscription or
308:Miss in Her Teens
292:The Winter's Tale
269:William Wycherley
185:in January 1728.
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289:, Clown in
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64:Wookey Hole
539:Categories
426:required.)
386:References
298:Henry VIII
247:John Leigh
139:Ben Jonson
54:appeared.
516:(1891). "
318:His style
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177:John Gay
106:Pandarus
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524:(ed.).
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465:(ed.).
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461:. In
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227:Flora
340:Jane
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