Hattie Shepparde
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hattie Shepparde (3 August 1846 – 22 September 1874) was an Australian actress who during her short career gained a growing reputation in her native land where she was highly regarded for ‘her intelligence, her ease, the grace of her manner and her thorough devotion to her art’.[1] She died aged 28 after childbirth.
Various legends sprang up about the origins of Hattie Shepparde during her short lifetime including that she was born into a theatrical family,[2] whereas the truth was somewhat more prosaic. She was born as Mary Harriet Langmaid (sometimes Langmede or Langmead) in Launceston, Tasmania[3] in 1846,[4] the daughter of Amos Langmaid (1809–1894), a former convict but at this time a boot and shoemaker.[5][6] Amos Langmaid married twice: firstly to Harriet Hill (1812–1874) in Launceston in 1836, and following his divorce from her to Hannah Hall (1831–1905) in 1852 in Melbourne and that between the two wives he fathered fourteen children, not all of whom survived. It is claimed that during her early life she went with her family to California where she was educated at the Convent of San Jose in San Francisco,[3] but it is uncertain for what reason the family may have gone there.[5]
Stage career
Hattie Shepparde made her Australian stage début aged 5 when she played an angel in the burlesque Atalanta at the Royal Victoria Theatre in Adelaide[1] before going on to play Agnes in an adaptation of David Copperfield at the Princess Theatre in Melbourne in 1861 aged 15. Such was the financial insecurity in her home that it was necessary for her to support herself from her teens. She played supporting and minor roles such as Georgina in Our American Cousin; Rowena in Rip Van Winkle; Julia in J. M. Morton's farce The Irish Tiger; Mrs. Clairbone in Dion Boucicault's Octoroon; Clementine in Robert Macaire; and Kate Nickleby in Boucicault's three-act comic drama Newman Noggs, based on Dickens's novel Nicholas Nickleby, all opposite the American actor Joseph Jefferson at the Haymarket Theatre in Melbourne (1862). Later in 1862, still with Jefferson, Shepparde played Hippolyta in A Midsummer Night's Dream; Ursula in Much Ado About Nothing; Julia in Henry Mayhew's farce The Wandering Minstrel; Eliza in Paul Pry and Mary in The Turnpike.[5]

