Event Comment: Benefit for 
Reddish [and his last appearance on 
the stage].  Tickets sold at 
the Doors will not be admitted.  
Public Advertiser, 1 May: Tickets to be had of Reddish, No. 14, near 
the Turnpike, 
Tottenham Court Road.  "Poor Reddish, on 
the 5th of May, had a benefit, and it was resolved to try whe
ther he could not go through 
the character of 
Posthumus.  He was now infirm; in common occurrences imbecile, but to be exited by his former profession, or nothing.  
The late 
John Ireland gave an affecting detail of this attempt.  He met his friend an hour before 
the performance began.  Reddish entered 
the room with 
the step of an idiot, his eye wandering, and his whole countenance vacant.  Mr Ireland congratulated him, that he was sufficiently recovered to perform his favourite Posthumus.  'Yes', said he, 'and in 
the garden scene I shall astonish you.'  '
The garden scene!  I thought you were to play Posthumus?'  'No, Sir, I play 
Romeo.'  His friend assured him that Posthumus was 
the part he was to act--and he walked to 
the theatre, reciting Romeo all 
the way.  When dressed for Posthumus, and in 
the green-room, it was still hard to undeceive him--at length he was pushed upon 
the stage....
The instant he came in sight of 
the audience his recollection seemed to return; his countenance resumed meaning, his eye became lighted up, he made 
the modest bow of respect, and played 
the scene as well as he had ever done.  But Romeo again met him in 
the green-room, and it was only 
the stage cue that had 
the power to unsettle this delusion; and that never failed to do it through 
the whole play.  Mr Ireland thought him, on this occasion, less assuming and more natural than he had seemed in 
the full enjoyment of his reason" (
Boaden, Kemble, I, XVI-XVII; Ireland, 58-60)