{{Short description|British actress}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2019}} {{Infobox person | name = Maria Gibbs | image = Mary Gibbs as Selina by Samuel De Wilde.jpg | alt = | caption = Mary (Maria) Gibbs as Selina | birth_name = Maria Logan | birth_date = c. 1770<!-- {{Birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} or {{Birth-date and age|Month DD, YYYY}} --> | birth_place = | death_date = 1850 | death_place = | other_names = | occupation = Actress | known_for = }} '''Maria Gibbs''' (born about 1770) (''fl''. 1783–1844) was a British actress.

==Life== She was one of three sisters who became actors. Her Irish father was associated with the theatre. John Palmer, her godfather, brought her on the stage at the Haymarket, where, on 18 June 1783, she made her first appearance as Sally in ''Man and Wife'' by George Colman the Elder. After one season at the Haymarket, Miss Logan accompanied Palmer in his unfortunate expedition to the Royalty Theatre in Wellclose Square. At the opening of the house on 20 June 1787, as Mrs. Gibbs, she played Biddy in David Garrick's ''Miss in her Teens.''<ref>{{Cite ODNB|title=Gibbs [née Logan; other married name Colman], Maria [Mary] (1770–1850), actress {{!}} Oxford Dictionary of National Biography|language=en|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/10602|year=2004}}</ref> At the Royalty she played the principal characters in the serious pantomimes, given to evade the privileges of the patent houses. While at this theatre, Mrs. Gibbs came on the stage as the Comic Muse through a trap and gave an imitation of Delpini. Her support of Palmer offended the managers, who boycotted her, in effect. On 15 June 1793, at the Haymarket she played Bridget in ''The Chapter of Accidents'' by Sophia Lee. This was announced as her first appearance at the theatre. Oxberry says she had played at both Drury Lane and Covent Garden previously.{{sfn|Knight|1890}}

A close intimacy sprang up between George Colman the Younger and Mrs. Gibbs, and she was identified in her will as Mary Colman, widow.<ref>Will of Mary Colman, National Archives, PROB 11-2116-30</ref> Allegedly, Colman wrote the parts of Cicely in ''The Heir at Law'' (Haymarket, 15 July 1797); Annette in ''Blue Devils'' (Covent Garden, 24 April 1798); Grace Gaylove in the ''Review'' (Haymarket, 2 Sept. 1800); and Mary in ''John Bull'' (Covent Garden, 5 March 1803) for her.{{sfn|Knight|1890}}

In these characters and in others, such as Katherine in ''Katherine and Petruchio'' and Miss Hardcastle in ''She Stoops to Conquer’' ''she obtained reputation as a second Mrs. Jordan''. '' She made occasional appearances at Drury Lane and Covent Garden, but the Haymarket remained her home. Here, in late years, she played parts such as Mrs. Candour and Miss Sterling in ''The Clandestine Marriage''. Oxberry speaks of her as possessing genius, talent, and industry, adding that her Curiosa in the ‘Cabinet’ is one of the richest specimens of extant comic acting. In such parts as Nell in ''The Devil to Pay'' she rivalled Mrs. Davison or Fanny Kelly, though surpassed both in vivacity and the "fullness and jollity" of her voice. Although she was not much of a singer, she had a peculiarly pleasing voice. Physically, she had a plump figure, a light complexion, and blue eyes. The ''Monthly Mirror'' reported in August 1800 that, "in consequence of the secession of Mrs. Stephen Kemble, she has deservedly occupied all characters of tender simplicity and unaffected elegance." She won the high esteem of her contemporaries, and the stories told concerning her are mostly to her credit. She appears to have been generous in disposition, and to have befriended her fellow-actresses.{{sfn|Knight|1890}}

After Colman's death in 1836, she lived in retirement in Brighton, and died at her home, Burlington Cottage, on 6 June 1850.<ref>Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, September 2004</ref> In her will she left valuable personal items of jewellery to her son John George Nathaniel Gibbes, daughter-in-law Elizabeth and grandson George Harvey Gibbes, but the residue of her estate was bequeathed to her friend Mary Ann Griesbach "for her own sole and separate use and independent of her husband".<ref>National Archives, will of Mary Colman, PROB 11/2116/30</ref>

==Selected roles== * Lady Jane Danvers in ''The Box-Lobby Challenge'' by Richard Cumberland (1794) * Blanch in ''The Iron Chest'' by George Colman the Younger (1796) * Cicely Homespun in ''The Heir at Law'' by George Colman the Younger (1797) * Lady Griffith's Shade in ''Cambro-Britons'' by James Boaden (1798) * Dorothy in ''Laugh When You Can'' by Frederick Reynolds (1798) * Georgiana in ''Folly as it Flies'' by Frederick Reynolds (1801) * Emily Worthington in ''The Poor Gentleman'' by George Colman the Younger (1801) * Lilla in ''The Voice of Nature'' by James Boaden (1802) * Mary Thornberry in ''John Bull'' by George Colman the Younger (1803) * Lady Delamare in ''The Three Per Cents'' by Frederick Reynolds (1803) * Mrs Villars in ''The Blind Bargain'' by Frederick Reynolds (1804) * Nancy in ''Guilty or Not Guilty'' by Thomas Dibdin (1804) * Mrs St Clair in ''The School of Reform'' by Thomas Morton (1805) * Mrs Aubrey in ''The Delinquent'' by Frederick Reynolds (1805) * Fanny in ''Who Wants a Guinea?'' by George Colman the Younger (1805) *Jenny in ''Five Miles Off'' by Thomas Dibdin (1806) * Fanny Freeman in ''Errors Excepted'' by Thomas Dibdin (1807) * Geraldine in ''The Foundling of the Forest'' by William Dimond (1809)

==References== {{reflist}} ;Attribution {{DNB|wstitle=Gibbs, Mrs.|first=John Joseph |last=Knight |volume=21}}

==Sources== *{{cite ODNB|id=10602|author=Joseph Knight, rev. J. Gilliland|title=Gibbs, Maria (1770–1850)}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Gibbs, Maria}} Category:British stage actresses Category:18th-century British actresses Category:19th-century English actresses Category:19th-century British actresses Category:1770s births Category:Year of death missing