4.7 • 908 Ratings
🗓️ 25 November 2024
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this new series Lucy Worsley switches her attention from Lady Killers to Lady Swindlers - con women, thieves and hustlers.
This time Lucy is investigating the case of Ann Mary Provis, an obscure young artist in Georgian London who has the leading painters of her day - including the President of the Royal Academy - eating out of her hand.
She claims to know the ‘secret’ of how great Renaissance painters, like Titian, achieved intense colour and luminosity. But Ann Mary isn’t going to part with Titian’s ‘lost recipe’ unless the artists who want it pay up. And ultimately, in falling for her hoax, they lose a great deal more than their money.
With Lucy to explore Ann Mary’s story is Rebecca Salter, the current President of the Royal Academy, and the first woman to hold that position. Lucy and Rebecca discover how Ann Mary, the poorly educated daughter of a servant, uses her femininity to dupe the great men of the Royal Academy.
Lucy is also joined by historian Dr Jacqueline Riding at the Royal Academy in London to explore the humiliating denouement of Ann Mary’s hoax. When pictures using her ‘secret recipe’ are put on display they are ridiculed, and the whole episode is immortalised by the great 18th century satirist James Gillray.
Lucy wants to know: how did an obscure young female artist pull off this extraordinary hoax? Why have so many female artists of the 18th century, like Ann Mary Provis, disappeared from view? And have women artists today finally achieved the same recognition as men?
Producer: Jane Greenwood Historical consultant: Professor Rosalind Crone Readers: Clare Corbett and Jonathan Keeble Sound Design: Chris Maclean Executive producer: Kirsty Hunter
A StoryHunter production for BBC Radio 4.
If you're in the UK, listen to the newest episodes of Lady Killers first on BBC Sounds: https://bbc.in/3M2pT0K
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | You are about to listen to a BBC podcast and I'd like to tell you a bit about what goes into making one. |
0:06.5 | I'm Sadata Sese, an assistant commissioner of podcasts for BBC Sounds. |
0:11.2 | I pull a lot of levers to support a diverse range of podcasts on all sorts of subjects, |
0:16.0 | relationships, identity, comedy, even one that mixes poetry, music and inner city life. |
0:22.4 | So one day I'll be helping host develop their ideas, the next fact-checking, a feature, |
0:28.3 | and the next looking at how a podcast connects with its audience, and maybe that's you. |
0:33.6 | So if you like this podcast, check out some others on BBC Sounds. |
0:39.3 | BBC Sounds, music, radio podcasts. |
0:46.4 | Welcome to Lady Swindlers with me, Lucy Wersley, where true crime meets history with a twist. |
0:59.4 | Music where true crime meets history with a twist. Join me and my all-female team of detectives as we travel back in time to revisit some |
1:05.4 | audacious crimes committed by women trying to make it in a world made for men. |
1:11.7 | These are women who stepped outside their ordinary lives to do extraordinary things. |
1:17.7 | What might their crimes and the times they lived in teach us about women's lives today? |
1:25.3 | Now, we've all seen those scams on the internet which say, give me your money and I'll tell you |
1:31.9 | the secret formula to my success. Well, today I'm investigating, a very similar hoax. It was pulled |
1:39.7 | off by an obscure young painter called Anne Mary Provost. She was the daughter of a minor royal servant in Georgian London |
1:47.7 | who mesmerised some of the most respected painters of her day |
1:51.3 | and had them eating out of her hand. |
1:54.3 | And I'm asking, do we sometimes believe things |
1:57.3 | just because we want them to be true? |
2:06.2 | No, believe things just because we want them to be true. It's May 1797. |
2:09.3 | The newspapers and fashionable London society are in a state of high excitement, |
... |
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