Thomas Walker (1698–1744) was an English actor and dramatist.
Early life
He was the son of Francis Walker of Soho, London. At around the year 1714, he joined the Shepherd's company (perhaps the Shepherd who was at William Pinkethman's theatre in Greenwich in 1710). Barton Booth saw Walker in a droll, The Siege of Troy, and recommended him to the management of the Drury Lane Theatre.[1]
Actor
In November 1715 Walker seems to have played Tyrrel in Colley Cibber's Richard III; on 12 December 1715 he was Young Fashion in a revival of The Relapse (John Vanburgh).[2] On 23 September 1721 he appeared at Lincoln's Inn Fields as Edmund in King Lear, and he remained there until 1733.[3] On 29 January 1728 Walker took on his major original part, Captain Macheath in the Beggar's Opera, and his reputation was established.[1][4]
On 10 February 1733, at the new Covent Garden Theatre, Walker was the first Periphas in John Gay's Achilles.[5] The last part in which he is mentioned at Covent Garden is Ambrosio in Don Quixote, which he played on 17 May 1739. In 1739–40 he seems to have been resting, but he played, 17 May 1740, Macheath for his benefit at Drury Lane. In 1740–41 he was seen in many of his major parts at Goodman's Fields Theatre. But after David Garrick's arrival at Goodman's Fields in 1741, Walker's name was taken from the bills and did not reappear until 27 May 1742, when the Beggar's Opera and the Virgin Unmasked (Henry Fielding) were given for his benefit. He seems to have played in Dublin in 1742 as Kite in The Recruiting Officer, with Garrick as Plume.[1]
Walker's best serious parts were thought to be Bajazet, Hotspur, Edmund, and Falconbridge; in comedy he was best received as Worthy in the Recruiting Officer, Bellmour in the Old Bachelor, and Harcourt in The Country Girl (Garrick, after Wycherley).[1]
Dramatist
Walker's first dramatic effort was to compressing into one play the two parts of Thomas D'Urfey's Massaniello. This work was produced at Lincoln's Inn Fields, 31 July 1724, with Walker as Massaniello. The Quaker's Opera, 1728, an imitation by Walker of the Beggar's Opera, was acted at Lee and Harper's booth in Bartholomew Fair. The Fate of Villainy, 1730, was given at Goodman's Fields Theatre on 24 February 1730 by Henry Giffard and Mrs. Giffard.[1]
Death
In 1744 Walker went to Dublin, taking with him the Fate of Villainy, which was acted there under the title of Love and Loyalty. The second night was to have been for his benefit. Not being able to furnish security for the expenses of the house, he could not induce the managers to reproduce it. He died three days later, 5 June 1744.[1]
Selected roles
- Cardono in The Cruel Gift by Susanna Centlivre (1716)
- Captain Jolly in The Cobbler of Preston by Charles Johnson (1716)
- Charles in The Non-Juror by Colley Cibber (1717)
- Captain Carbine in The Play is the Plot by John Durant Breval (1718)
- Rameses in Busiris, King of Egypt by Edward Young (1719)
- Brutus in The Invader of His Country by John Dennis (1719)
- Daran in The Siege of Damascus by John Hughes (1720)
- Charles Despotick in The Compromise by John Sturmy (1722)
- Pheroras in Mariamne by Elijah Fenton (1723)
- Phocias in The Fatal Legacy by Jane Robe (1723)
- Galerius Caesar in The Roman Maid by Robert Hurst (1724)
- Proclus in Belisarius by William Phillips (1724)
- Albert in Edwin by George Jeffreys (1724)
- Frippou in The Bath Unmasked by Gabriel Odingsells (1725)
- Beaumine in The Capricious Lovers by Gabriel Odingsells (1725)
- Beaufort in The Dissembled Wanton by Leonard Welsted (1726)
- Sir Charles Mirmont in The Female Fortune Teller (1726)
- Marsan in Money the Mistress by Thomas Southerne (1726)
- Murrus in The Fall of Saguntum by Philip Frowde (1727)
- Perses in Philip of Macedon by David Lewis (1727)
- Captain Macheath in The Beggar's Opera by John Gay (1728)
- Arsamnes in The Virgin Queen by Richard Barford (1728)
- Frederick in Frederick, Duke of Brunswick-Lunenburgh by Eliza Haywood (1729)
- Xerses in Themistocles by Samuel Madden (1729)
- Hypsenor in Periander by John Tracy (1731)
- Pylades in Orestes by Lewis Theobald (1731)
- Cassander in Philotas by Philip Frowde (1731)
- Adrastus in Merope by George Jeffreys (1731)
- Horatio in The Married Philosopher by John Kelly (1732)
- Porsenna in The Tuscan Treaty by William Bond (1733)
- Cardinal of Aragon in The Fatal Secret by Lewis Theobald (1733)
- Heartly in The Lady's Revenge by William Popple (1734)
- Young Courtlove in The Double Deceit by William Popple (1735)
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- ↑ On 3 February 1716 he was the first Squire Jolly in the Cobbler of Preston, an alteration by Charles Johnson of the induction to the Taming of the Shrew. On 21 May Cato, A Tragedy was given for his benefit. On 17 December he was the first Cardono in Susannah Centlivre's Cruel Gift. He also played during the season Axalla in Tamerlane and Portius in Cato. Beaupré, in the Little French Lawyer (Francis Beaumont), was given next season, and on 6 December 1717 he was the first Charles in Cibber's Nonjuror. Pisander in The Bondman (Philip Massinger), Rameses—an original part—in Edward Young's Busiris (7 March 1719), and Laertes followed, and he was (11 November) the first Brutus in John Dennis's The Invader of His Country, an adaptation of Coriolanus, and (17 February 1720) the first Daran in John Hughes's The Siege of Damascus. Cassio and Vernon in the First Part of King Henry IV, Alcibiades in Timon of Athens, Pharnaces in Mithridates, Octavius in Julius Cæsar, Aaron in Titus Andronicus, were also among the parts he played at Drury Lane.
- ↑ Playing during his first season Carlos in Love Makes a Man (Colley Cibber), Polydore in The Orphan (Thomas Otway), Bassanio, Hotspur, Don Sebastian, Oroonoko, Aimwell in The Beaux' Stratagem, Young Worthy in Love's Last Shift, Bellmour in The Old Bachelor (William Congreve), Paris in Philip Massinger's Roman Actor, Lorenzo in The Spanish Friar (John Dryden), and other parts in tragedy and comedy. Over time he played Antony in Julius Cæsar, Adrastus in Œdipus, Constant in The Provoked Wife, Leandro in The Spanish Curate (Beaumont and Fletcher), Hephestion in The Rival Queens (Nat Lee), Alexander the Great, Captain Plume, King in Hamlet, Phocias—an original part—in The Fatal Legacy (translated from Racine's Thebais) (23 April 1723), Roebuck in George Farquhar's Love and a Bottle, Massaniello, Lovemore in The Amorous Widow (Thomas Betterton), Wellbred in Every Man in his Humour, Harcourt in The Country Wife, Younger Belford in The Squire of Alsatia (Thomas Shadwell), Dick in The Confederacy (John Vanbrugh), Cromwell in Henry VIII, Massinissa in Sophonisba (John Marston), Marsan—an original part—in Thomas Southerne's Money the Mistress (19 February 1726), Don Lorenzo in The Mistake (Vanburgh), Pierre in Venice Preserved, and Young Valère in The Gamester (Susannah Centlivre).
- ↑ On 10 February 1729 he was the first Xerxes in Samuel Madden's Themistocles, and on 4 March the first Frederick in Eliza Haywood's Frederick, Duke of Brunswick. Lysippus in a revival of the Maid's Tragedy and Juba in Cato followed. On 4 December 1730 he was the original Ramble in Henry Fielding's Coffee-house Politician. He also played Myrtle in The Conscious Lovers, Cosroe in The Prophetess, Corvino in Volpone, and Lord Wronglove in the Lady's Last Stake (Colley Cibber); and was, in the season 1730–1, the first Cassander in Philip Frowde's Philotas, Adrastus in George Jeffreys's Merope, Pylades in Lewis Theobald's Orestes, and Hypsenor in John Tracy's Periander.
- ↑ At this house he played Lothario, Banquo, Hector in Dryden's Troilus and Cressida, Angelo in Measure for Measure, Sempronius in Cato, Lord Morelove in The Careless Husband (Colley Cibber), Timon, Carlos in The Fatal Marriage (Thomas Southerne), the King in The Mourning Bride, Ghost in Hamlet, Fainall in The Way of the World, Colonel Briton, Bajazet, Henry VI in Richard III, Young Rakish in The School Boy (Colley Cibber), Falconbridge, Dolabella in All for Love, Horatio in The Fair Penitent, Norfolk in Richard II, Marcian in Theodosius (Nat Lee), Kite in The Recruiting Officer, and Scandal in Love for Love.
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Walker, Thomas (1698-1744)". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co.