Thomas Betterton (ca. 1635 - April 28, 1710), English actor, son of an under-cook to King Charles I, was born in London. He was apprenticed to John Holden, Sir William Davenant's publisher, and possibly later to a bookseller named John Rhodes, who had been wardrobe-keeper at the Blackfriars Theatre. In 1659, Rhodes obtained a licence to set up a company of players at the Cockpit Theatre in Drury Lane; and on the reopening of this theatre in 1660, Betterton made his first appearance on the stage. Betterton's talents at once brought him into prominence, and he was given leading parts. On the opening of the new theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1661, Davenant, the patentee of the Duke's Company, engaged Betterton and all Rhodes's company to play in his Siege of Rhodes . Betterton, besides being a public favorite, was held in high esteem by Charles II, who sent him to Paris to examine stage improvements there. In 1662 he had married the actress Mary Saunderson (d. 1712).
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