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DOROTHEA JORDAN (1762—1816)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 509 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DOROTHEA

JORDAN (1762—1816)  , Irish actress, was born near
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Waterford, Ireland, in 1762 . Her
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mother, Grace Phillips, at one time known as Mrs Frances, was a
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Dublin actress . Her
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father, whose name was Bland, was according to one account an army captain, but more probably a stage hand . Dorothy Jordan made her first appearance on the stage in 1777 in Dublin as
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Phoebe in As You Like It . After acting elsewhere in Ireland she appeared in 1782 at Leeds, and subsequently at other
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Yorkshire towns, in a variety of parts, including Lady Teazle . It was at this time that she began calling herself Mrs Jordan . In 1785 she made her first
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London appearance at Drury Lane as Peggy in A Country Girl . Before the end of her first season she had become an established public favourite, her acting in
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comedy being declared second only to that of Kitty Clive . Her engagement at Drury Lane lasted till 1809, and she played a large variety of parts . But gradually it came to be recognized that her
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special talent
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lay in comedy, her Lady Teazle, Rosalind and Imogen being specially liked, and such " breeches " parts as William in Rosina . During the rebuilding of Drury Lane she played at the Haymarket; she transferred her services in 1811 to Covent Garden . Here, in 1814, she made her last appearance on the London stage, and the following
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year, at
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Margate, retired altogether .

Mrs Jordan's private

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life was one of the scandals of the period . She had a daughter by her first manager, in Ire-
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land, and four children by
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Sir Richard Ford, whose name she
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bore for some years . In 1790 she became the
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mistress of the duke of Clarence (afterwards William IV.), and bore him ten children, who were ennobled under the name of Fitz Clarence, the eldest being created
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earl of Munster . In 1811 they separated by mutual consent, Mrs Jordan being granted a liberal allowance . In 1815 she went abroad . According to one story she was in danger of imprisonment for debt . If so, the debt must have been incurred on behalf of others—probably her relations, who appear to have been continually borrowing from her—for her own
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personal debts were very much more than covered by her savings . She is generally understood to have died at St Cloud, near Paris, on the 3rd of
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July 1816, but the story that under an assumed name she lived for seven years after that date in England finds some credence . See James Boaden, Life of Mrs Jordan (1831); The
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Great I'Legitimates (183o); John Genest, Account of the Stage; Tate Wilkinson, The Wandering Patentee;
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Memoirs and Amorous Adventures by Sea and Land of King William IV . (183o) ; The Georgian Era (1838) .

End of Article: DOROTHEA JORDAN (1762—1816)
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