George Anne Bellamy (born c. 1727, Fingal, Ire.—died Feb. 16, 1788, London, Eng.) was an English actress whose stage career and personal life were, in their irregularity, not entirely atypical of her era. Her best performances were in such tragic roles as Desdemona in Othello and Juliet in Romeo and Juliet.
Bellamy was the “accidental” daughter of a Quaker lady who eloped from boarding school with the diplomat Lord Tyrawley. She was named George Anne through a mishearing of the name Georgiana at her christening. Though her mother married a Captain Bellamy in Lisbon, Bellamy was acknowledged by Tyrawley as his daughter and he provided for her needs, including her education at a convent in Boulogne. While living with her mother in London, Bellamy met the theatrical manager John Rich and other leading stars of the stage, and she soon determined to pursue an acting career.
Her early roles at Covent Garden, beginning about 1744, were as Miss Prue in Love for Love and with James Quin in The Orphan. Bellamy’s reputation as an actress rested largely on her good looks and her “soft” feminine manner. Her career reached its pinnacle when, in 1750, her performance of Juliet to David Garrick’s Romeo was said to surpass the work of the revered Susanna Cibber in a rival production of the play.
Riotous living, including a legal and a bigamous marriage, took its toll on Bellamy’s beauty and her appeal to managers. Her later life was marred by ill health and credit troubles. In 1785 a benefit was held on her behalf at Covent Garden, and the same year her six-volume Apology recounted with questionable reliability the events of her life.