George Alexander Stevens
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George Alexander Stevens (1710 -September 6, 1780), was an English actor, playwright, poet, and songwriter. He was born in the parish of St. Andrews, in Holborn, a neighborhood of London. After spending many years as a traveling actor, he performed for the theater in Covent Garden (now the Royal Opera House).
Stevens was most famous in his lifetime for his Lecture on Heads, a satirical "lecture" on heads and fashion, which parodied the popularity of physiognomy. The lecture was first performed in 1764, and became an immediate success; he went on to perform it on tour throughout Great Britain, in Ireland, and in the American colonies at Boston and Philadelphia.
He was also known as popular song-writer, especially known for his bawdy drinking-songs and patriotic songs (such as Liberty-Hall and The Briton). Many of both kinds were collected in his Songs, comic and satyrical (1788).
Stevens also authored several dramatic pieces for the stage, a novel entitled Tom Fool, and a satire, The Birthday of Folly.
He died in Baldock in Hertfordshire.
[edit] References
- Thomas Campbell (1819), Specimens of the British Poets, pp. 436-440. Available through Google Books Library Project.