The Sarah Siddons Audio Files: Romanticism and the Lost Voice

During her lifetime (1755–1831), English actress Sarah Siddons was an international celebrity acclaimed for her performances of tragic heroines. We know what she looked like—an endless number of artists asked her to sit for portraits and sculptures—but what of her famous voice, reported to cause audiences to hyperventilate or faint? The Sarah Siddons Audio Files takes readers on a journey to discover how this actor’s voice actually sounded. Bringing together archival discoveries, sound recording history, and media theory, Judith Pascoe shows how Romantic poets’ preoccupation with voices is linked to a larger cultural anxiety about the ephemerality of the voice.

Winner of the Barnard Hewitt Award and a Joe A. Callaway Award Honorable Mention

“The theatre scholar’s daunting but irresistible quest to recover some echoes of performance of the past has never been more engagingly presented than in Pascoe’s account of tracing the long-silenced voice of Sarah Siddons. Her report is a warm, witty and highly informative exploration of the methodology and the pleasures of historical research.”

—Marvin Carlson, author of The Haunted Stage: The Theatre as Memory Machine


“Along the way, the author aptly developed her own voice—her gift for felicitous, first-person writing, still a skeptically viewed undertaking in academic monographs. . . . Pascoe succeeds in creating an account, personal and learned, of her quest . . . She spices The Sarah Siddons Audio Files with lively writing . . . a literary counterpart to Siddons’s riveting voice.”

The Chronicle of Higher Education


“Judith Pascoe, in her new book, The Sarah Siddons Audio Files: Romanticism and the Lost Voice, writes engagingly and humorously about the process of historical recovery.”

—Daniel Cavicchi, The Ardent Audience


“Richly informed by archival research and theories of new media supplemented by first-hand experimentation, and written in a lively, first-person voice, The Sarah Siddons Audio Files is a vibrant and sure-to-be-influential work of scholarship.”

—Amy Muse, Comparative Drama


“...a truly interdisciplinary study that is about much more than recovering Siddons’s lost voice. In her multifaceted investigations, Pascoe asks us to consider what it means to think about historical evidence in the absence of tangible documentation, an issue that theater historians have been tackling for many years, but which have just recently become a central interest of literary scholars.”

—Laura Engel, Women's Writing


“The zeal with which Pascoe pursues the mystery of Sarah Siddons’s voice proves the power with which the human voice can enrapture and enthrall, and Pascoe’s enthusiasm is undeniable. In short, the most interesting character in the book is not Siddons but Pascoe herself. Her attempt to capture the ephemeral mirrors the Romantics whom she studies, and one cannot help but get swept up in the captivating earnestness of her impossible dream.”

—Abigail Taylor-Sansom, Voice and Speech Review