Jacobs Well Theatre
The journey to the theatre from fashionable areas such as Queen Square and College Green was somewhat perilous, especially on dark nights, and consequently the theatre often provided linkboys to light the way with torches. Notable actors who appeared at the theatre included Charles Macklin, William Powell, and Thomas King, who were all stars of the Georgian stage. After Hippisley's death in 1748, the business was continued by his widow. When the Theatre Royal opened in King Street in 1776 most actors left the Jacobs Well Theatre as the new venue proved to be more fashionable. The last recorded performance at Jacobs Well was a pantomime in 1779.
See also
Works cited
Howell, Mark A. "The Regulated Theatre at Jacob's Well, Bristol" chapter one in Scenes from Provincial Stages: Essays in Honour of Kathleen Barker Society for Theatre Research London, 1994.
- Latimer, John (1893). The Annals of Bristol in the Eighteenth Century. Bristol.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Powell, G. Rennie (1919). The Bristol Stage: Its Story. Bristol: Bristol Printing & Publishing Co.
- Watts, Guy Tracey (1915). Theatrical Bristol. Bristol: Holloway and Son.