Lucie Skeaping visits the Scilly Isles to learn about the actress and singer Ann Cargill, who drowned in a dramatic shipwreck there in 1784 […] Ann made her London stage debut in 1771 at the tender age of eleven in Thomas Arne's opera "The Fairy Prince" at Covent Garden. Later she eloped with a married man eighteen years her senior, and her father washed his hands of her. She continued to be a popular draw at Drury Lane, in productions of John Gay's "The Beggar's Opera" and Thomas Linley's "The Duenna" […]
The Story of Ann Cargill: EMS 4 January
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostLucie Skeaping visits the Scilly Isles to learn about the actress and singer Ann Cargill ...
Programme sounds interesting, though.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostScilly Isles hardly "far flung places", I would have thought!
Perhaps anywhere outside the M25 constitutes a far flung place to Metropolitans
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A pity that the singer who 'represented' Cargill in the programme was hard to listen to, and led to this being switched off. One for the podcast (with reduced musical extracts), methinks..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by JFLL View PostI can't speak for 'Metropolitans' (I'm a Midlander myself), but I presume the Scillies are are even more far-flung (? further-flung) to those in Northumberland.
This didn't hold my attention, I'm afraid.
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