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Julie Teal

Narrator

Julie Teal

Julie Teal is a voice, stage and screen actress. She has appeared extensively on stage, winning the 1994 Stella Award for Best Actress for her performance in Death and the Maiden. Her television work includes The Bill, EastEnders, Touching Evil and Midsomer Murders. Julie has also narrated many audiobooks by Anthony Doerr, Elizabeth George, Mary Chamberlain and Juliet Nicolson, among others.

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Mistresses: Sex and Scandal at the Court of Charles II
Released the same day as the standard print edition
Title:
Mistresses: Sex and Scandal at the Court of Charles II
Written by:
Linda Porter 
Read by:
Julie Teal 
Format:
Unabridged CD Audio Book 
Number of CDs:
Duration:
8 hours 40 minutes 
Published:
April 16 2020 
Available Date:
April 16 2020 
Age Category:
Adult 
ISBN:
9781529047059 
Genres:
Non-fiction; Biography 
Publisher:
Bolinda/Macmillan audio 
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AUD$ 39.95
AUD$ 39.95
 

According to the great diarist, John Evelyn, Charles II was ‘addicted to women’, and throughout his long reign a great many succumbed to his charms.

According to the great diarist, John Evelyn, Charles II was ‘addicted to women’, and throughout his long reign a great many succumbed to his charms. Clever, urbane and handsome, Charles presided over a hedonistic court, in which licence and licentiousness prevailed. Mistresses is the story of the women who shared Charles’s bed, each of whom wielded influence on both the politics and cultural life of the country. From the young king-in-exile’s first mistress and mother of his first child, Lucy Walter, to the promiscuous and ill-tempered courtier, Barbara Villiers. From Frances Teresa Stuart, ‘the prettiest girl in the world’ to history’s most famous orange-seller, ‘pretty, witty’ Nell Gwynn and to her fellow-actress, Moll Davis, who bore the last of the king’s 15 illegitimate children. From Louise de Kéroualle, the French aristocrat – and spy for Louis XIV – to the sexually ambiguous Hortense Mancini. Here, too, is the forlorn and humiliated Queen Catherine, the Portuguese princess who was Charles’s childless queen. Drawing on a wide variety of original sources, including material in private archives, Linda Porter paints a vivid picture of these women and of Restoration England, an era that was both glamorous and sordid.