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Samuel Foote
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==The Haymarket Theatre== Even with his success onstage, Foote remained impoverished.<ref name="Howard, p. 132"/> Attempting life as a theatre manager, he secured a lease on the Haymarket Theatre in 1746.<ref>Thomson, p. 477.</ref> Foote began writing in earnest, producing two pamphlets, ''A Treatise on the Passions'' and ''The Roman and English Comedy Considered''.<ref name="Holland, p. 382"/> After illegally producing ''Othello'', Foote opened one of his own plays, ''The Diversions of the Morning or, A Dish of Chocolate'', a satire on contemporary actors and public figures performed by himself, on 22 April 1747.<ref name="Hartnoll, p. 290"/><ref name="Howard, p. 132"/> The ''Dish of Chocolate'' of the title referred to a dish or tea offered by Foote to accompany the musical entertainment while the performance was offered gratis, all done to avoid the Licensing Act. On the morning following the performance, the theatre was locked and audiences gathering for the noon performance (another gimmick to evade the law was to stage the show as a [[wikt:matinée|matinée]]) were turned away by authorities. Foote's jabs at other actors brought the ire of many at Drury Lane and the managers took steps to protect their patent. Fortunately for Foote, some highly placed friends at court helped the theatre reopen and the play continued. In June, Foote offered ''A Cup of Tea'', a revision of his revue, ''Diversions'', again in the guise of a culinary offering. After a brief trip to [[Paris]], Foote opened ''The Auction of Pictures'' which satirized satirist [[Henry Fielding]]. A war of wit was launched with each lambasting the other in ink and onstage. Among the verbal missiles hurled, Fielding denounced Foote in ''The Jacobite's Journal'' saying "you ''Samuel Fut'' [sic] be pissed upon, with Scorn and Contempt, as a low Buffoon; and I do, with the utmost Scorn and Contempt, piss on you accordingly."<ref>Howard, pp. 132–3.</ref>
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