Mrs. Lovett | |
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![]() Actress Phyllis Davis portraying Mrs. Lovett in a 2018 production ofSweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, alongside Justin Gaudoin asSweeney Todd | |
In-universe information | |
Occupation | Baker |
Spouse | Albert Lovett (deceased) |
Mrs. Lovett is a fictional character appearing in many adaptations of the storySweeney Todd. Her first name is most commonly referred to as Nellie, although she has also been referred to as Amelia, Margery, Maggie, Sarah, Shirley, Wilhelmina, Mary and Claudetta.[1] A baker from London, Mrs. Lovett is an accomplice and business partner ofSweeney Todd, a barber andserial killer fromFleet Street. She makesmeat pies from Todd’s victims.
First appearing in theVictorianpenny dreadful serialThe String of Pearls, it is debated if she was based on an actual person or not.[2] The character also appears in modern media related toSweeney Todd including multiple stage and film adaptations.
In every version of the story in which she appears, Mrs. Lovett is the business partner and accomplice of barber andserial killerSweeney Todd; in some versions, she is also his lover. She makes and sellsmeat pies made from Todd's victims.
Although Mrs. Lovett's character and role in the story are similar in each version, certain details vary according to the story's interpretation. In some versions, for example, Mrs. Lovett commitssuicide when their crimes are discovered, while in others, Todd kills her himself or she is arrested and escapes execution byturning King's Evidence against Todd.
Her physical appearance varies from a slim and alluring beauty to a plump, homelylunatic. Her age is also differing in many adaptations; though it is never specifically stated in any versions, there are some (most noticeably in Sondheim's musical) where she is older than Todd, often by a difference of over fifteen years and others where she is around his age. Whether their relationship is platonic, romantic, or merely sexual also varies according to interpretation.[3][4]
In April 2024,Washington Post journalist Thomas Floyd met with eight notable actresses who have portrayed Mrs. Lovett. In their article, Floyd met withJulia McKenzie (1993 revival, National Theatre in London),Christine Baranski (1999, Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, CA, and 2002, Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.),Patti LuPone (2000, London Philharmonic, 2001, San Francisco Symphony, and 2005 Broadway revival in New York City, NY),Helena Bonham Carter (2007, film adaptation),Lea Solonga (2019, Theatre at Solaire in Manila, Sands Theatre in Singapore), Bryonha Marie (2023, Signature Theatre in Arlington, VA),Annaleigh Ashford (2023 Broadway revival in New York City, NY), andSutton Foster (2024, replaced Ashford in Broadway revival).[5]
The performers agreed that playing the iconic role was a great honor, and also a great responsibility. Both Baranski and LuPone recalled feeling intimidated when finding out they had been cast. Baranski recalledStephen Sondheim stating that she was going to have fun playing the role, to which Baranski responded: "Fun? This is like scaling a mountain. This is terrifying."[5]
The actresses took different approaches to preparing for the role. Baranski read the novelLondon Labour and the London Poor by Henry Mayhew to take a deeper look into the priorities of a lower-class woman in Victorian England. Ashford, Solonga, Bonham Carter, and LuPone all revisited previous performances, includingAngela Lansbury’s originating performance in 1979. Others took a more personal approach, such as Marie, who drew from her culture and background as a black woman to develop the character. The performers also voiced differences in their interpretations of the role. McKenzie saw Mrs. Lovett less as a villain and more as a product of her circumstances, whereas LuPone saw her as a manipulator and the true villain of the story.[5]
Foster, Bonham Carter, and Solonga agree that Mrs. Lovett’s desperate need for love leads to her eventual demise, and LuPone theorized that the first lie she tells at the top of the show leads the character down the path of manipulation that leads to her fate. Ashford describes Mrs. Lovett’s arc asShakespearean in how wild, broad, and grounded it is, and compared the character toPuck.[5]