Event Comment: [
Macklin dis
missed after this night. See the account in
The Genuine Arguments of the Council, with the Opinion of the Court of the King's Bench, &c., By a Citizen of the World, (
London, 1774). Extracts in E. R.
Page, George Colman, the Elder (
New York, 1935). See notes for 23
and 30 Oct.
and the subsequent action in note for 20 Nov. He did not return until 18 May 1775. This night was aparently, except for #4 5s. which was not recorded on the books of the theatre until 18 June well after the season closed. Macklin's suit in court against the rioters was judged 24 Feb. 1775. A column
and a half account of the trial appeared in the
Public Advertiser, Saturday 13 May 1775, giving the testimony of the witnesses accused of starting the riot, the lawyers,
and the judge. The accused were
Leigh,
Miles,
James,
Aldus,
and Clarke. The first four were convicted of a conspiracy
and a riot, the last of a riot only. During the Course of the Business
Lord Mansfield took Occasion to observe, that the Right of Hissing,
and Applauding in a theatre was an unalterable Right, but there was a wide Distinction between expressing the natural Sensations of the Mind as they arose on what was seen
and heard,
and executing a pre-concerted Desagn, not only to hiss an Actor when he was playing a Part in which he was universally allowed to be excellent, but also to drive him from the theatre,
and effect his utter ruin." See also
William W. Appleton,
Charles Macklin, An Actors Life (
Cambridge, Mass., 1960), Chapter X.