He is mentioned favourably in Charles Lamb's Essays of Elia: Smith's masterpiece was his impersonation of Charles Surface in Richard Brinsley Sheridan's The School for Scandal, which won the highest praise for originality, boldness of conception, truth, freedom, ease, and gracefulness of action and manner. It was said that he prided himself on the reflection that he was never called upon to perform in an after-piece, or to pass through a trapdoor in any entrance or exit on the stage. However, he won popularity as Richard III, Hotspur, and Hastings, and was also admired in the roles of Kitely ( Every Man in his Humour, in which he was preferred to Garrick ), Archer, and Oakly. Though for a long time he played lead roles in tragedy, for which he had a suitably tall and well-proportioned figure, his facial features lacked the flexibility and expressiveness, and his vocal delivery was somewhat too harsh and monotonous, to be considered ideal. Garrick having engaged him for Drury Lane, he remained there until retirement in 1788. They both returned to London for the autumn season, Hartley to continue at Covent Garden and Smith to Drury Lane. They travelled on to Cork, Ireland where they acted together. The poet Charles Churchill, in his "Rosciad" satire of 1761, said of him: "Smith the genteel, the airy, and the smart Smith was just gone to school to say his part." Smith was at Covent Garden for 22 years.Īt the end of season in 1774 he and the actress Elizabeth Hartley, who played his on-stage lover in Henry II or The Fall of Rosamond, caused a scandal when they absconded to France. If he had defects, they were generally overlooked by his audiences, who admired his upright and independent private life. Cibber and Spranger Barry (whose pupil he had effectively become ), on Barry's retirement he took on many of that actor's principal parts. Having taken various subordinate roles in casts led by Mrs. He next appeared as Polydore in Thomas Otway's The Orphan, Southampton in The Earl of Essex, and Dolabella in John Dryden's All for Love. Smith was inclined towards the stage: upon arrival in London, he applied to John Rich at the original Covent Garden Theatre, where he first appeared in January 1753 in the role of Theodosius (in Nathaniel Lee's tragedy of The Force of Love ), a performance attended by many of his college friends in a spirit of solidarity. He refused the punishment that was imposed, and quit the university to avoid expulsion. One evening he drank too freely with some friends and, being pursued by a proctor, he unwisely snapped an unloaded pistol at him. The vivacious spirit for which he was well known at Eton led him into problems at Cambridge. His father, intending that he should enter the church, sent him to Eton College in 1737 and then to St John's College, Cambridge in 1748. William Smith was born in London in 1730. William Smith (1730 – 13 September 1819), known as "Gentleman Smith", was a celebrated English actor of the 18th century who worked with David Garrick, and was the original creator of the role of Charles Surface in Richard Brinsley Sheridan's The School for Scandal.
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