Jane Wiseman
{{Short description|British actress, poet, and playwright}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
{{other people||Jane Wiseman (disambiguation)}}
Jane Holt (née Wiseman; March 1673 – after 1717)[http://orlando.cambridge.org/public/svPeople?person_id=wiseja Jane Wiseman] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181109153403/http://orlando.cambridge.org/public/svPeople?person_id=wiseja |date=9 November 2018 }} at the Orlando Project, Cambridge University Press was a British poet and playwright, notable for being the first self-educated labouring-class woman to have a play professionally produced in London.Kendall. "Jane Wiseman". Love and thunder: plays by women in the age of Queen Anne London: Methuen, 1988, pp. 114—117. ([https://archive.org/embed/lovethunderplays0000unse Internet Archive])
Wiseman was possibly born in Holborn. She seems to have been from a modest labouring-class background and self-taught and she worked as a servant, but very little else is known about her. Her one play, Antiochus the Great, or, The Fatal Relapse, was successfully produced at the New Theatre, Lincoln's Inn Fields, in 1701, and revived as late as 1721.Pearson, Jacqueline. The prostituted muse. Palgrave Macmillan, 1988, p. 235. ([https://archive.org/embed/prostitutedmuse00jacq Internet Archive]) It was one of forty or so plays by women produced in London between 1695 and 1723, and is notable for its emphasis on female friendship.Kendall. Intro. Love and thunder: plays by women in the age of Queen Anne London: Methuen, 1988, pp. 9—12. ([https://archive.org/embed/lovethunderplays0000unse Internet Archive]) She was part of a literary group with Susannah Centlivre, with whom she was friends, as well as George Farquhar, Abel Boyer, Ned Ward, and Tom Brown.Anon. Letters of Wit, Politicks and Morality. (London, 1701, p. 21.), cited by Kendall. "Jane Wiseman". Love and thunder: plays by women in the age of Queen Anne London: Methuen, 1988, p. 114. ([https://archive.org/embed/lovethunderplays0000unse Internet Archive])
File:Elizabeth Barry.png played Leodice in Wiseman's Antiochus the Great]]
She is thought to have been the "Mrs Holt" whose collection of occasional and friendship poems, A Fairy Tale Inscrib'd, to the Honourable Mrs. W—, with other Poems, was published in 1717.Christmas, William J. “[http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/60783 Holt, Jane (fl. c.1682–1717)].” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison. Oxford: OUP, 2004. Accessed 23 July 2022.
Wiseman took the proceeds from her success with Antiochus the Great and bought a tavern in Westminster for herself and her husband.
Etexts
- Wiseman, Jane. Antiochus the Great, or, The Fatal Relapse (1701). Rpt. in Love and thunder: plays by women in the age of Queen Anne Ed. and Intro. Kendall. London: Methuen, 1988, pp. 113–153. (Free with registration at the [https://archive.org/embed/lovethunderplays0000unse Internet Archive])
See also
References
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Category:Year of death unknown
Category:18th-century British women writers
Category:18th-century British dramatists and playwrights
Category:18th-century English poets
Category:British women dramatists and playwrights
Category:English dramatists and playwrights
Category:18th-century English women writers
Category:18th-century English people
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