Katherine Corey
Katherine Corey was an English actress of the Restoration era, one of the first generation of female performers to appear on the public stage in Britain. Corey played with the King's Company and the United Company, and had one of the longest careers of any actress in her generation. In "The humble petition of Katherine Corey", she stated that she "was the first and is the last of all the actresses that were constituted by King Charles the Second at His Restauration."
Correy started her career under her maiden name, Mitchell, but was Mrs. Corey by 1663. "Mrs Corey was a big woman with a gift for comedy. She was popular in a variety of roles, but especially in old women parts: scolding wives, mothers, governesses, waiting women, and bawds." In his Diary, Samuel Pepys, who admired Corey's talents, calls her "Doll Common" after her part in Ben Jonson's The Alchemist.
In her three decades on the stage, Corey played a wide range of roles; in revivals of plays from the period of English Renaissance theatre:
- Lady Would-be in Jonson's Volpone
- Mrs. Otter in Epicene
- Sempronia in Catiline
- Arane in Beaumont and Fletcher's A King and No King
- Abigail in The Scornful Lady
- Duchess Sophia in Rollo Duke of Normandy
- Quisania in The Island Princess
- Mrs. Trainwell in Brome's The Northern Lass
- Octavia in All for Love
- Melissa in The Maiden Queen
- an Englishwoman in Amboyna
- Bromia in Amphitryon
- Lucy in The Country Wife
- Widow Blackacre in The Plain Dealer
- Mrs. Joyner in Love in a Wood
- Agrippina in The Tragedy of Nero
- Cumana in Sophonisba, or the Death of Hannibal
- Sysigambis in The Rival Queens
- Cleorin in Boyle's The Black Prince
- Rosellia, leader of the Amazons, in D'Urfey's The Commonwealth of Women
- Mrs. Touchstone in Tate's Cuckold's Haven
- Crowstich in D'Urfey's Love for Money
- Mopsophil in Behn's The Emperor of the Moon
- Quickthrift in Edward Howard's The Man of Newmarket
- Redstreak in Psyche Debauch'd
- Teresa in The Spanish Rogue.
In the Spring of 1689, Mrs. Corey became involved in an attempt by some actors in the United Company to form an independent troupe under the management of Henry Killigrew. When that effort failed, manager Charles Killigrew would not allow Corey back into the United Company; she appealed to the Lord Chamberlain, with the "humble petition" cited above, to be re-admitted, and won re-instatement.
She continued to act a variety of parts —
- Mrs. Bumfiddle in D'Urfey's The Marriage-Hater Matched
- Mrs. Flint in Behn's The Widow Ranter
- The Abbess of Charlton in The Merry Devil of Edmonton
As one of the earliest actresses with the King's Company, Corey has been nominated as a possibility for the honour of the "first English actress," who played Desdemona in an 8 December 1660 performance of Othello. Most commentators, however, think Corey's lack of physical beauty makes her an unlikely Desdemona, and prefer Margaret Hughes or Anne Marshall for the distinction.