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Lydia Foote


Lydia Foote, born Lydia Alice Legg (1843 – 30 May 1892), was an English actress. She played leading roles from the 1850s to the 1880s, including at the Lyceum Theatre, the Olympic Theatre, the Prince of Wales's Theatre and the Adelphi Theatre. She was known for her performances in such plays as The Frozen Deep (1866) and Caste (1867).

Foote was born in London to Arthur Wellington Legg, a coachbuilder, and Sarah Judith Legg (née Goward). Her maternal aunt was Mary Anne Keeley, a noted actress. Coming from an acting family Foote enjoyed a degree of respect that was generally not afforded to female actors as their profession was seen as indicative of sexual promiscuity.

Foote played leading roles from the 1850s to the 1880s. She debuted in London at the Lyceum Theatre in 1852 in the juvenile role of Edward in A Chain of Events by Charles Mathews and Slingsby Lawrence. About 1859, she played Amanthis in The Child of Nature by Elizabeth Inchbald. In 1863–1866, after other performances in London, Manchester and elsewhere, she was engaged at the Olympic Theatre, where she first appeared in The Ticket-of-Leave Man as May Edwards. In that piece, Foote delivered a song that was published as the song that Lydia Foote sang. In 1864 there, she created the role of Enid in Tom Taylor's adaptation of The Hidden Hand, and in the following year created another role, Miss Hargrave, in Taylor's Settling Day. She also played Maria in Twelfth Night. In 1866, she received warm reviews as Clara in Wilkie Collins's The Frozen Deep.


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