Richard Wroughton (1748âÂÂ1822), was an actor, who worked mainly in Covent Garden (now the Royal Opera house) and Drury Lane (now the Theatre Royal), and occasionally in the city of his birth, Bath.
He was born in 1748, and came to London, followed by a young milliner who had fallen in love with him, who nursed him through a severe illness, and whom he married. His first appearance was made at Covent Garden on 24 September 1768 as Zaphna in âÂÂMahomet,â and not apparently in Altamont in âÂÂThe Fair Penitentâ (acted on the 12th), as all his biographers say. He was seen during the season as Tressel in âÂÂRichard III,â Nerestan in âÂÂZara,â Creon in âÂÂMedea,â Altamont, for his benefit, on 4 May 1769, and George Barnwell.
He was slow in ripening, and his early performances gave little promise. By dint of sheer hard work he developed, however, into a good actor. During the seventeen years in which he remained at Covent Garden he played the principal parts in comedy and many important characters in tragedy and romantic drama. These included Dick in the âÂÂMiller of Mansfield,â Frederick in âÂÂThe Miser,â Polydore in the âÂÂOrphan,â Cyrus, Moneses in âÂÂTamerlane,â Claudio in âÂÂMeasure for Measure,â Guiderius, Colonel Briton in the âÂÂWonder,â Marcus in âÂÂCato,â Theodosius, Colonel Tamper in âÂÂDeuce is in him,â Florizel in âÂÂThe Winter's Tale,â Bonario in âÂÂVolpone,â Sebastian in âÂÂTwelfth Night,â Buckingham in âÂÂHenry VIII,â Bellamy in âÂÂSuspicious Husband,â Richmond in âÂÂRichard III,â Younger Worthy in âÂÂLove's Last Shift,â Lord Hardy in âÂÂFuneral,â Poins, Dolabella in âÂÂAll for Love,â Myrtle in âÂÂThe Conscious Lovers.âÂÂ
In the summers of 1772, 1773, and subsequent years he was in Liverpool, where he played, with other parts, Lear, King John, Henry V, Antony in âÂÂLove for Love,â Romeo, Othello, Leontes, and Lord Townly.
Back at Covent Garden, he was seen as Flaminius in âÂÂHerod and Mariamne,â Shore in âÂÂJane Shore,â Alonzo in the âÂÂRevenge,â Phocion in âÂÂThe Grecian Daughter,â Laertes, Pedro in âÂÂMuch Ado About Nothing,â Oakly in âÂÂThe Jealous Wife,â Juba in âÂÂCato,â Aimwell in âÂÂThe Beaux' Stratagem,â Lord Randolph in âÂÂDouglas,â Lovemore in âÂÂWay to keep him,â Bassanio, Amphitryon, Castalio in the âÂÂOrphan,â Fainall in âÂÂThe Way of the World,â Romeo, Sir George Airy, Henry V, Hotspur, Kitely, Banquo, Ford, Tancred, Archer, Lear, Young Mirabel, Othello, Charles I, Wellborn in âÂÂA New Way to Pay Old Debts,â Jaffier, Proteus in âÂÂThe Two Gentlemen of Verona,â Darnley, Iachimo, Truewit in âÂÂSilent Woman,â Colonel Standard, Evander, Plain Dealer, and Apemantus.
Among very many original parts which Wroughton enacted at Covent Garden, only the following call for mention: Prince Henry in âÂÂHenry II, King of England,â by John Bancroft (dramatist) or Mountfort, on 1 May 1773; Lord Lovemore in William Kenrick's âÂÂDuellistâ on 20 Nov.; Elidurus in William Mason's âÂÂCaractacusâ on 6 December 1776; Earl of Somerset in âÂÂSir Thomas Overbury,â altered from Savage by Woodfall, 1 February 1777; Douglas in Hannah More's âÂÂPercy,â 10 December. This was one of Wroughton's best parts. About this time he seems to have joined Arnold in the proprietorship of Sadler's Wells Theatre, but he sold his share some twelve years later in 1790. He continued at Covent Garden as Orlando in Hannah More's The Fatal Falsehood, 6 May 1778; Sir George Touchwood in Mrs. Cowley's âÂÂBelle's Stratagem,â 22 February 1780; Raymond in Robert Jephson's âÂÂCount of Narbonne,â 17 November 1781, and Don Carlos in Mrs. Cowley's âÂÂBold Stroke for a Husband,â 25 February 1783.
In 1786âÂÂ7 Wroughton disappeared from the bills, his parts at Covent Garden being assigned to Farren, and on 29 September 1787, as Douglas in âÂÂPercy,â he made his first appearance at Drury Lane. For the time being he replaced John Palmer (1742?âÂÂ1798), but he practically remained at Drury Lane for the rest of his career. He played with the Drury Lane company at the Haymarket in 1792âÂÂ3 Charles Surface, Clerimont, and other parts, and at Drury Lane enlarged his repertory by many new characters, including the Ghost in âÂÂHamletâ and Hamlet himself, King in âÂÂHenry IVâ and in âÂÂRichard III,â Antonio in âÂÂThe Merchant of Venice,â the Stranger in âÂÂDouglas,â Leontes, Jaques, Careless in âÂÂThe Double Dealer,â Jaques, Tullus Aufidius, Macduff, Moody in âÂÂCountry Girl,â Sciolto, Belarius, Kent and Edgar in âÂÂLear,â Sir Peter Teazle, and Leonato. Most conspicuous among his original characters were Gomez in Bertie Greathead's âÂÂRegent,â 1 April 1788; Polycarp in Richard Cumberland's âÂÂImpostors,â 26 January 1789; Periander to the Ariadne of Mrs. Siddons in Arthur Murphy's The Rival Sisters 18 March 1793; Charles Ratcliffe in Cumberland's âÂÂJew,â 8 April 1794; Odoarto Galotti in âÂÂEmilia Galottiâ translated by Thompson from Lessing, 28 October; Lord Sensitive in Cumberland's âÂÂFirst Love,â 12 May 1795; Fitzharding in George Colman's âÂÂIron Chest,â 12 March 1796; Orasmyn in Miss Lee's âÂÂAlmeyda,â 20 April, Mandeville in Frederick Reynolds's The Will 19 April 1797; and Earl Reginald in âÂÂMonkâ Lewis's âÂÂCastle Spectre,â 14 December.
In 1798 he retired from the stage and settled in Bath, but in 1800, on the death of John Palmer and the illness of Aikin, in answer to an invitation of the Drury Lane management he came back, and was seen in a new series of parts including: Don Pedro in William Godwin's Antonio, 13 December 1800; Provost in William Sotheby's âÂÂJulian and Agnes,â 25 April 1801; Casimir Rubenski in Dimond's âÂÂHero of the North,â 19 February 1803; Maurice in Cobb's âÂÂWife of Two Husbands,â 1 November; Sir Rowland English in Francis Ludlow Holt's The Land We Live In, 29 December 1804; Balthazar in John Tobin's âÂÂHoneymoon,â 31 January 1805; Conrad in Theodore Hook's âÂÂTekeli,â 24 November 1806; and Cà Âlestino in âÂÂMonkâ Lewis's âÂÂVenoni,â 1 December 1808. His return did little good to his reputation, and before he finally quit the stage he was completely worn out.
On 9 March 1815 Wroughton gave to the stage an alteration of âÂÂRichard IIâ with additions from other plays of Shakespeare, in which he did not act. On 10 July 1815 he acted his old part of Withers in Kenney's âÂÂWorld.â This was his last performance.
Wroughton was what Michael Kelly calls him, âÂÂa sterling, sound, and sensible performer.â His person was bad, he was knock-kneed, his face was round and inexpressive, and his voice was not good. He had, however, an easy and unembarrassed carriage and deportment, was never offensive, and, though he rarely reached greatness, seldom sank into insipidity or dulness. He was always perfect in his parts, indefatigable in industry, and wholly free from affectation. Wroughton was a close friend of Bannister; they were spoken of as Pylades and Orestes.
A portrait of Wroughton by Samuel De Wilde, as Sir John Restless in All in the Wrong, was in the Mathews collection in the Garrick Club. A mezzotint portrait by Robert Laurie after Robert Dighton was published in 1779, and there are several portraits in character in John Bell's British Theatre.
On 7 February 1822, at the reputed age of seventy-four, he died in Howland Street, London, leaving behind him a widow, and was buried in St. George's, Bloomsbury.