Background
She was probably the daughter of a naval lieutenant named Beswick, but she bore the name of her mother"s husband, who was a coffee-house owner.
She was probably the daughter of a naval lieutenant named Beswick, but she bore the name of her mother"s husband, who was a coffee-house owner.
She was thought to have been born in Charing Cross, London and had been a child prostitute, a waitress, and a barmaid before becoming an actress. One of her biographers describes her as having "a vivacious, lively spirit, and a promising beauty," displaying "some singular turns of wit, which shew"d her of an aspiring genius."
Her first appearance was as Monimia in Thomas Otway"s The Orphan: or The Unhappy Marriage, in March 1726 at the Haymarket Theatre. Shortly thereafter she received profits from a benefit performance, and took the role of Cherry Boniface in The Beaux Stratagem.
She then joined the company of players at the theatre in Lincoln"s Inn Fields, where she earned "the not very magnificent salary of fifteen shillings," but her success and beauty made her the toast of the beaux.
The critic Mistress Charles Mathews noted: "The abilities of Mission Fenton cannot be disputed. The universal panegyrics of the time, and the anxiety of the managers to monopolise her services, assure us that no actress or singer could at any period of the drama be more popular."
lieutenant was in John Gay"s Beggar"s Opera, as Polly Peachum, that Mission Fenton made her greatest success.
She debuted the role on the 29th of January, 1728. Fenton"s portrayal of Polly was so popular that Londoners were identifying her as Polly both on and offstage.
Her pictures were in great demand, songs and verses were written to her and books published about her, and she was the most talked-of person in London.
After the play"s first run, Fenton"s salary was doubled, and she appeared as Alida in John Vanbrugh"s adaptation of The Pilgrim. Some of her notable roles include Leanthe (Love in a Bottle) and Ophelia (Hamlet). She appeared in several comedies, and then in numerous repetitions of the Beggar"s Opera.
Peachum Road, close to the site of Westcombe House, was named after her role as Polly Peachum.