Charles Macklin, the celebrated eighteenth-century actor and playwright, is now
remembered as a comedian and a comedic writer; however, his first produced work
as an author was the historical drama Henry VII, or the Popish
Imposter. This was immediately condemned as a flop and, although it was
published, it was never again produced. In this article Michael M. Wagoner
examines the nature of the play’s failure by questioning the accepted
narratives of theatrical success. Specifically, he engages issues of audience
reception as well as the playwright’s persona to understand the
combined relationship between the two dynamics that can result in a
play’s failure. Ultimately, both Macklin’s persona and his
later work secured the flop narrative in order to temper the subsequent
expectations of his audiences. Michael M. Wagoner is a doctoral candidate at
Florida State University, and he holds an MFA in Shakespeare and Performance from
Mary Baldwin College. His research examines the performance and dramaturgy of
early modern drama, and his essay ‘Imaginative Bodies and Bodies
Imagined: Extreme Casting in Shakespeare’s The
Tempest and Fletcher and Massinger’s The Sea
Voyage’ will appear in The Bear Stage: Shaping
Shakespeare for Performance (Farleigh Dickinson University Press,
2015).