Abstract

Anthony Leigh (d. 1692) built his career as a Restoration comedic actor by playing a combination of queer, lascivious, old, and/or disabled men to audiences’ great delight. In this essay, I key in on two plays that frame Leigh’s career: Thomas Durfey’s The Fond Husband (1677) and Thomas Southerne’s Sir Anthony Love (1690). In The Fond Husband, a younger Leigh plays a “superannuated,” almost blind and almost deaf Old Fumble who, in the first act, kisses a man because he cannot navigate the heterosexual erotic economy of the play (as over-determined by able-bodiedness). Over a decade later, in Sir Anthony Love, Leigh plays an aging, queer Abbé who is so earnestly erotically invested in Love’s masculinity (unaware that Love is a woman in drag) that he attempts to seduce Love with dancing. I bring the beginning and end of Leigh’s stage life together to argue that Leigh’s body, performing queerly, asks audiences to confront the limits of pleasure in sustaining fantasies of the abled, autonomous heterosexual self. Using these two Restoration comedies that bookend Leigh’s career, I trace pleasures and queer structures of feeling experienced in the Restoration playhouse. While Durfey and Southerne’s plays-as-texts seek to discipline unruly, disabled queer bodies by making Fumble and the Abbé the punchline, Leigh’s performances open up alternative opportunities for queer pleasure. Pleasure becomes queer in its ability to undo orderings and fantasies based on autonomy (that nasty little myth). In his Apology, Colley Cibber reveals the ways that Leigh’s queerly performing body engages the bodies of audience members. In reflecting on the reading versus spectating experience, Cibber remarks, “The easy Reader might, perhaps, have been pleas’d with the Author without discomposing a Feature; but the Spectator must have heartily held his sides, or the Actor would have heartily made them ache for it” (89). Spectatorship is not a passive role, but rather a carnal interplay with the actor, and this interplay has immediate, bodily implications. Audiences laugh. They ache. They touch. Whereas the reader of a play in private can maintain composure, audiences in the theatre are contrarily discomposed, non-autonomous, and holding onto their sides. Leigh’s ability as a comedian energizes the text and produces pleasure on an immediate, corporeal level for audiences. And that pleasure is generated through stage business built on touching, feeling, and seducing male-presenting characters. Spectatorship may, in fact, be a queer experience as Leigh’s queerly performing body exposes the limits of autonomy.

Highlights

  • Anthony Leigh (d. 1692) built his career as a Restoration comedic actor by playing a combination of queer, lascivious, old, and/or disabled men to audiences’ great delight

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • The male subject of desire would locate his freedom in the pleasurable and subjective experience in his own sensations” (117). With this emergent eighteenth-century fantasy of autonomy and having and owning one’s own private sensations, embodied performances like Leigh’s, which shock the audience out of the senses, is a provocative hiccup in the solidification of “man.” If the era develops the “emergence of a new concept of manliness as that inner space of self-possession and autonomy preceding, and extending across, propertied men’s interactions with each other as they unfold in time,” the public playhouse might be a queer site that ruptures self-possession and autonomy

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Summary

Queer Pleasure and the Limits of Autonomy

Cibber describes the very carnal implications of Leigh’s comedy, which engages with audience members’ bodies in different ways than with those of readers. With this emergent eighteenth-century fantasy of autonomy and having and owning one’s own private sensations, embodied performances like Leigh’s, which shock the (male) audience out of the senses, is a provocative hiccup in the solidification of “man.” If the era develops the “emergence of a new concept of manliness as that inner space of self-possession and autonomy preceding, and extending across, propertied men’s interactions with each other as they unfold in time,” the public playhouse might be a queer site that ruptures self-possession and autonomy Such conversations about autonomy, gendered fictions, and resistance to congealing heteronormativity are happening in the history of the novel, poetry, and public discourse.. By doing a deep reading of Durfey and a smaller coda of Southerne, I theorize moments of performance that open up the queerness of Restoration theatre-going through Leigh

Fumbling Pleasures
Queer Potentiality: A Coda with Sir Anthony Love
See Ann Cvetkocih’s An Archive of Feelings
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