The London Figaro was a London periodical devoted to politics, literature, art, criticism and satire during the Victorian era. It was founded as a daily paper in 1870 with the backing ofNapoleon III but after a year re-established itself as a general interest weekly magazine and is chiefly remembered nowadays for its highly independent drama criticism.
The first issue was published byJames Mortimer on 17 May 1870, from a small shop at 199Strand. It was initially a daily periodical and continued to be published daily until 18 March 1871. At this point it changed format from a newspaper to a weekly magazine owing to the withdrawal of its financial support as a result of French defeat in theFranco-Prussian War.
Among those who contributed to it wereWilliam Archer (writing asAlmaviva, drama critic), Ernest Bendall,Faustin Betbeder (Faustin, caricaturist), Percy Betts (Cherubino, musical critic),Ambrose Bierce (Passing Showman,Town Crier),Edward Bradley (Cuthbert Bede), Aglen Dowty (Young and Happy Husband,OPQ Philander Smiff), John Baker Hopkins,Frank Marshall, Edwin Milliken,Clement Scott (Almaviva, drama critic), and Edward Blanchard (drama critic). Mortimer was a chess master and so theFigaro had a chess column, which from 1872 until 1876 was contributed byJohann Löwenthal and from 1876 to 1882 byWilhelm Steinitz.
The magazine became very popular during the mid-1870s and for several years was published twice a week. Mortimer was very supportive of his writers and in particular strove to shield the identities of his drama critics, Clement Scott, and later William Archer, both of whom wrote under the pseudonym,Almaviva. Mortimer suffered much personal abuse from actors and promoters as a result.
In 1879 Mortimer was the defendant in a libel case brought against him byWilliam Henry Weldon as a result of the serial which theFigaro had run on the topic ofGeorgina Weldon, his wife, who claimed that she had been unjustly confined under thelunacy laws of the time. Owing to a combination of misfortune and bad decisions Mortimer lost the case and was sentenced to three months in prison and a heavy fine.
In 1882 Mortimer sold theFigaro. Writing inJournalistic London later in the year,Joseph Hatton said:
The magazine continued publication for another 15 years. By the late 1890s, however, it had lost much of its readership; and at a shareholders' Extraordinary General Meeting in December 1897, it was agreed to wind it up.