Born in
Hemingford Grey,
Huntingdonshire, Elizabeth Gunning was one of the daughters of John Gunning of
Castle Coote,
County Roscommon, and his wife, Bridget Bourke, a daughter of
Theobald Bourke, 6th Viscount Mayo (1681–1741). Elizabeth's elder sister was
Maria Gunning, later Countess of Coventry. In late 1740 or early 1741, the Gunning family returned from England to John Gunning's ancestral home in
Ireland, where they divided their time between their country house in Roscommon and a rented town house in
Dublin. According to some sources, when Maria and her sister Elizabeth came of age, their mother urged them to take up acting, in order to earn a living, owing to the family's relative poverty, even though acting was not considered a respectable profession, as many actresses of that time doubled as
courtesans; and that the Gunning sisters worked for some time in the Dublin theatres, befriending actors who included
Margaret Woffington. However, Woffington did not arrive in Dublin until May 1751, by which time Maria and her sister Elizabeth were in England. In October 1748, a ball was held at
Dublin Castle by
Viscountess Petersham. The two sisters did not have any dresses for the gathering until
Thomas Sheridan, manager of one of the local theatres, supplied them with two costumes from the green room, those of
Lady Macbeth and
Juliet. Wearing the costumes, they were presented to the
Earl of Harrington, the then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Harrington must have been pleased by the meeting as, by 1750, Bridget Gunning had persuaded him to grant her a pension, which she then used to transport herself, Maria, and Elizabeth, back to their original home in Huntingdon, England. With their attendance at local balls and parties, the beauty of the two girls was much remarked upon. They became well-known celebrities, their fame reaching all the way to London, with themselves following soon afterwards. On 2 December 1750, they were presented at the
Court of St James's. By this time, they were sufficiently famous that the presentation was noted in the London newspapers. Elizabeth was immortalized in portraits by, among others, artists
Joshua Reynolds and
Gavin Hamilton. ==Marriages==