Mary Ann Orger

Mary Ann Orger or Mary Ann Ivers (25 February 1788 – 1 October 1849) she was a leading actress, playwright and the mother of the composer Caroline Reinagle.

Mary Ann Orger
in Lock and Key in 1824
Born25 February 1788
Died1 October 1849
NationalityBritish

Life

Ives was born in London in 1788. Her father was a musician and her mother was an actress who also allowed her daughter to appear. At a young age she was being carried on to the stage and she was on the playbill at the age of five.

By the age of fifteen she was admired by Thomas Orger who married her in 1804. She returned to the stage and in Edinburgh in 1806 she made £78 as a result of a benefit performance.

She was a leading actress and the mother of the composer Caroline Reinagle who was born in 1817.[1]

In 1807 she appeared in Glasgow as Caroline Sedley in James Kenney's False Alarm in a benefit for the singer and actress Rosoman Mountain.[2]

gollark: Maybe just that, as I said, civilisations with more resources can afford to be nicer regardless of whether it is an actual advantage.
gollark: I got *that* bit, I'm just saying that I don't think that implies what Runa implies it implies.
gollark: To what I said.
gollark: I don't see the relevance.
gollark: It could equally be that better-off societies can afford to be nicer without becoming uncompetitive.

References

  1. Patrick Waddington, ‘Reinagle , Caroline (1817–1892)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2007 accessed 14 March 2015
  2. Joseph Knight, ‘Orger , Mary Ann (1788–1849)’, rev. J. Gilliland, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 14 March 2015
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