, In 1815, at age 18, her
contralto voice and attractive appearance gained Madame Vestris her first leading role in Italian
opera in the title-role of
Peter Winter's
II ratto di Proserpina at the
King's Theatre. She also sang in 1816 in
Martín y Soler's
Una cosa rara and performed the roles of Dorabella and Susanna in
Mozart's operas
Così fan tutte, and
The Marriage of Figaro. She had immediate success in both London and
Paris. In the French capital city she occasionally appeared at the
Théâtre-Italien and various other theatres. A legend that she performed as a tragic actress at the
Théâtre-Français playing Camille opposite
François-Joseph Talma in
Corneille's
Horace has however turned out to be untrue. The mistake was the result of a misreading of Talma's
Mémoires wherein the actor narrates an episode in 1790 in which a 'Madame Vestris', not Eliza Lucia Vestris who was born several years later, but
Françoise-Marie-Rosette Gourgaud, the wife of
Angiolo Vestris, and thus a great-aunt-in-law of Eliza Lucia's husband, was once scandalized by Talma's showing up bare-legged on stage in an unusually realistic ancient-Roman costume. The legend was first stated in 1847, when Madame Vestris was still alive, by Thomas Marshall in his book on British actors and actresses, and, after being almost held up to ridicule by
John Westland Marston in 1888, it was on the contrary taken as true by
Joseph Knight in his article on Madame Vestris in the
Dictionary of National Biography, and has since been regularly revived by the main following encyclopaedical sources. Finally, the legend has been refuted by modern biographers of Madame Vestris. Her first hits in English were in 1820 at age 23 at the
Drury Lane in
Stephen Storace's
Siege of Belgrade, and in
Moncrieff's
burlesque Giovanni in London, From then on she remained an extraordinary favourite in opera, musical farces, and comedies until her retirement in 1854. At the King's Theatre she sang in the English premieres of many Rossini operas, sometimes conducted by the composer himself:
La gazza ladra (as Pippo, 1821),
La donna del lago (as Malcolm Groeme, 1823),
Ricciardo e Zoraide (as Zomira, 1823),
Matilde di Shabran (as Edoardo, 1823),
Zelmira (as Emma, 1824), and
Semiramide (as Arsace, 1824). She excelled in "breeches parts," and she also performed in Mozart operas, such as
Die Entführung aus dem Serail (Blonde) in 1827, and later, in 1842,
The Marriage of Figaro (Cherubino), in a complete specially crafted English version by
James Planché. She was credited with popularizing such new songs as "
Cherry Ripe", "Meet Me by Moonlight Alone" (written by Joseph Augustine Wade), "I've been roaming," etc. She also took part in world premieres, creating the role of Felix in
Isaac Nathan's comic opera
The Alcaid or The Secrets of Office, (London,
Little Theatre in the Haymarket, 1824), and, above all, that of Fatima in ''
Oberon or The Elf King's Oath'', "the Grand Romantic and Fairy Opera" by
Carl Maria von Weber, which was staged at the
Theatre Royal, Covent Garden on 12 April 1826. Despite her celebrity status and popularity, Madame Vestries was not met with total social acceptance for her breeches roles. Her revolutionary action as an actress spurred vicious attacks on her character by her more conservative contemporaries. Vestries' risqué activities onstage were taken to be representative of her own lack of morality and social purity. Disregarding public backlash, Madame Vestries found great financial achievement with her breeches roles and gained the ability to take a position of power within the theatre industry. Women did not have as much influence over
theatrical production as men, including the roles of management, ownership and administration. Though women had the experience and qualifications from past family ventures they were often not able to secure funding enough to finance their ventures in the capital-intensive industry. When Covent Garden management sought to reduce the acting payroll in 1830, however Vestris had accumulated a fortune from performing and was able to lease the
Olympic Theatre from John Scott. There she began presenting a series of
burlesques and
extravaganzas—for which she made this house famous. She produced numerous works by the contemporary playwright James Planché, with whom she had a successful partnership, which included him contributing ideas for staging and costumes. ==Second marriage and subsequent career==