Overview
Context
Lady Audley is alone in a moment of sharp
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It must be my aim to stand well with this young man; he is my husband’s favourite, I know. I manage Sir Michael as I like, and if his nephew gains too firm a hold upon him, he may prove a dangerous rival in my path. I live now for ambitions and interest, to mould the world and its votaries for my own end. Once I was fool enough to wed for love. Now I have married for wealth. What a change from the wife of George Talboys to the wife is Sir Michael Audley! My fool of a first husband thinks me dead. Oh excellent scheme, oh cunning device, how well you have served me. [George enters at back, and comes down silently to her side] Where can he be now? Still in India no doubt. He is mourning my death perhaps - ha ha! Why, I have only just begun to live--to taste the sweets of wealth and power. If I am dead to George Talboys, he is dead to me. Yes, I am well rid of him, and on this earth we meet no more.
C.H. Hazlewood, “Lady Audley’s Secret” in Nineteenth Century Plays, ed. George Rowell, Oxford University Press, 1987, p. 245.
Performance Tips
- Establish a sharp vocal contrast between the
Emotional Beat Breakdown
1. Identifying the Threat
- What shifts:
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