Mrs. Cibber as Cordelia in Nahum Tate's Version of 'King Lear'
by Pieter van Bleeck
1755
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection B1981.25.46
From Yale's description:
This remarkable painting by the younger artist depicts a scene from Nahum Tate’s late seventeenth century adaptation of William Shakespeare’s King Lear, when Edgar—son of the Earl of Gloucester—darts in from the right disguised as a madman in order to protect Cordelia, whom he will later marry, and her confidante Arante from two ruffians. The actress Susannah Maria Cibber made her first appearance as Cordelia in 1746 and was, at the time of her death in 1766, the highest paid actress at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, earning only slightly less than the celebrated actor David Garrick.
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This image is provided courtesy of the Yale Center for British Art, which specifies the image is in the public domain. This work can be freely copied, modified, and distributed for any purpose.