Eloise Smyth Topless

Eloise Smyth Topless




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Eloise Smyth Topless
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Eloise Smyth stars in Hulu’s new drama, Harlots, as Lucy Wells, Margaret’s youngest daughter who is about to enter the family trade. Smyth first appeared in Ben Drew’s, Ill Manors and then in the BAFTA nominated short film, SEA VIEW. In 2014, Smyth starred in ITV’s The Frankenstein Chronicles and also had roles in Life of Crime and Hunted. Next up, Smyth will star in the second season of Sky Atlantic’s Fortitude.






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Published: 22:11 BST, 5 August 2020 | Updated: 08:51 BST, 6 August 2020
Viewers have praised raunchy new BBC2 drama Harlots, which details the booming sex industry of 18th century London .  
The first episode of the bawdy show, which originally aired on ITV Empire in 2017, followed the lives of feuding madams Margaret Wells (Samantha Morton) and Lydia Quigley (Lesley Manville), and the prostitutes who live in their brothels.
It saw brothel owner Margaret on the threshold of moving into a more up-market house in Soho when her premises was raided by the night-watchmen, forcing her to sell her daughter's virginity in order to pay her fine. 
The show opened with a very raunchy scene, showing a compilation of the 'Harlots' having sex with customers. 
And viewers were quick to take to Twitter, with one writing: 'This started off with a bang in every sense of the word'.
Viewers have praised raunchy new BBC2 drama Harlots, which details the booming sex industry of 18th century London. The first episode of the bawdy show, which originally aired on ITV Empire in 2017, showed Fleabag's Hugh Skinner (pictured) in a very raunchy role as he pursued prostitute Charlotte (Jessica Brown-Findlay), pictured
The show opened with a very raunchy scene, showing a compilation of the 'Harlots' having sex with customers (pictured) 
Taking to Twitter, one person wrote: 'This started with a bang in every sense of the word' (pictured)
Meanwhile, a second added: 'Spanking, nipples and bare bottoms so far on #harlots.' 
The series, which was influenced by 1700s prostitution guidebook Harris's List Of Covent Garden Ladies, started with Margaret's daughter Lucy (Eloise Smyth), reading out reviews of the brothel's residents.
Viewers were introduced to Nancy Birch (Kate Fleetwood) - a longtime friend and neighbour of Margaret who specialises in domination - and sex workers Betsey Fletcher (Alexa Davies) and Fanny Lambert (Bronwyn James).
Those who tuned in also met impulsive sex worker Emily Lacey (Holli Dempsey), who deserted Margaret to work for Lydia, but soon found her stay in the elite brothel nowhere near as luxurious as she once imagined.
Margaret's oldest daughter Charlotte (Jessica Brown-Findlay) lives as the city's most coveted courtesan and is pursued by Sir George Howard (Hugh Skinner)
Viewers were stunned with what they witnessed in the BBC Two period drama
Margaret made clear her ambitions to move to the more elite Greek Street in Soho, but her plans were foiled when Quigley orchestrated a raid of the area with the help of Florence Scanwell (Dorothy Atkinson ) - a religious zealot who opposes sex work and becomes a pawn for Quigley. 
The raid left her unable to pay a £100 court fine, and, unable to pay the forthcoming payment on her Greek Street home, she was forced to sell her youngest daughter's virginity. 
She set up a plan to sell to the highest bidder, after previously refusing one of the brothel's client's offers of £50 to have sex with her daughter. 
Meanwhile, Margaret's oldest daughter Charlotte (Jessica Brown-Findlay), who lives as the city's most coveted courtesan, was expected by Sir George Howard (Hugh Skinner), an aspiring Member of Parliament, to sign a contract to formally become his 'keeper'.  
Viewers have praised raunchy new BBC2 drama Harlots, which details the booming sex industry of 18th century London. Pictured, Eloise Smyth as Lucy Wells
The bawdy show, which originally aired on ITV Empire in 2017, follows the lives of feuding madams. Pictured, Sir George Howard (Hugh Skinner)
By Hallie Rubenhold for The Mail On Sunday 
Harlot was inspired by the real people and events depicted in Hallie Rubenhold's book, The Covent Garden Ladies, which details the story behind one of history's most notorious publications, The Harris's List Of Covent Garden Ladies. 
At the beginning of Harlots, there is a flurry of excitement as the latest edition of The Harris's List, a guide to the capital's sex workers, arrives from the bookseller.
All of the 'ladies of pleasure' are eager to hear what has been written about them, anxious that whatever is said will make or break their careers in the sex trade. Scenes like this would have unfolded every Christmas between 1757 and 1795 when the guide rolled off the presses.
The Lists were more than just a dry catalogue of names and addresses, but a wittily written chronicle of London's sex trade. Each edition contained information about the women who worked in it, providing details of their ages, physical appearance and sexual specialities as well as stories about these women's lives.
The thousands of women from all walks of life who featured in its pages include the likes of Miss Noble who was known for her 'skill in the reviving the dead' with her tongue of 'double charm', or Miss West 'who can pick her gallant's pocket very coolly' while in the act. Miss Love of 14 George Street is celebrated for her 'dark complexion'.
The lists are filled with others who led lives as actresses, servants, shopkeepers, nursemaids and even a number who were married women. They ran the gamut in terms of age and appearance, from those described as 'true beauties' to others referred to as 'veterans in the field of Venus'. Not all were confined to brothels.
The Harris's List show that women often shared accommodation with other sex workers or lodged with ordinary families, such as green grocers and cabinet makers. Although Covent Garden was the centre of sin, filled with theatres, taverns, coffee houses and bath houses, there was no designated red-light district, and women lived in virtually every neighbourhood, from Fitzrovia to Mayfair, from Holborn to the City.
The Harris's List cost two shillings and sixpence, which pushed it far out of range of the ordinary working man. Those women who appeared on it catered almost exclusively to middle-class men and above, but the sex trade catered to every strata of society, from the Prince to the dock worker. 
By becoming her keeper, George would pay for her lavish lifestyle in return for Charlotte having sex with nobody else, and legally becoming his property. 
In one amusing scene, the character was seen gifting the courtesan a pineapple, which he believed to be the finest luxury he could acquire - and later donned Charlotte's clothes as he waited for her to return home. 
However, in a fit of jealousy, after discovering that Charlotte had not been 'living like a nun' as promised, he successfully bid for Lucy's virginity - and while the pair didn't have sex, he forced Lucy to say otherwise. 
Viewers were captivated by Hugh's character, and laughed at the funny gesture of gifting a pineapple.
'No one wants a man who thinks she's a pineapple,' wrote one, while a second joked: '"You are the pineapple of Great Britain." Imagine interrupting sex to say that.'
A third commented: 'Just what every woman wants, a pineapple.'
Others loved the raunchiness of the show from the get go, but others commented that it isn't historically accurate for the sex workers to have 'perfect hair and teeth.'
Margaret Wells had ambitions to move to the more elite Greek Street, in Soho, but her plans were foiled when Quigley orchestrated a raid of the area. Pictured, Samantha Morton as Margaret
Lydia Quigley (Lesley Manville) owns an up market brothel and was the original madam of a 10-year-old Margaret 
Also introduced was impulsive sex worker Emily Lacey (Holli Dempsey), who deserted Margaret to work for Lydia, but soon found her stay in the brothel was not as luxurious as she once imagined
Harlots airs on BBC2 and BBCiPlayer from August 5th at 9pm 
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

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RAUNCHY drama Harlots burst onto the BBC with a bang last week, with viewers stunned at the amount of sex in the opening scenes.
But viewers were also shocked at scenes where brothel madam Margaret Wells puts her 15-year-old daughter's virginity up for sale before admitting she had done the same to oldest daughter Charlotte - at 12.
Incredibly, the disturbing scenes reflect the grim reality behind the booming sex trade of Georgian England where children as young as 11 worked the streets and mothers auctioned their daughters’ virginity for up to £9,000.
One in five women sold their bodies to get by and women who had grown too old to earn a living often became "bawds" preying on young girls who came to London looking for work and conning them into prostitution.
Horrifyingly, one celebrated brothel owner even put on a show where wealthy punters could watch as teen virgins were publicly "deflowered."
As the drama continues on Wednesday nights, at 9pm on BBC2, we look at the darker side of Georgian prostitution, where children were sold into the sex trade and purity meant pound signs.
In a scene from Harlots, Margaret Wells, played by Samantha Morton, sells off her "favourite" daughter Lucy’s virginity to the highest bidder.
Confronted by older daughter Charlotte she admits that she "had her out at 12".
Outrageous as it seems, the character of Charlotte - played by Downton Abbey star Jessica Brown Findlay - is partly based on real life prostitute Charlotte Hayes, born in 1725.
Like her Harlots counterpart, she was raised as the daughter of a brothel owner who trained her from an early age in the art of becoming a courtesan.
At 14, her mother sold Charlotte’s virginity to the highest bidder for £50 - the equivalent of £9,000 today.
With sexually transmitted diseases rife among sex workers, virgins came at a premium and, in a common con, the teenager’s ‘virginity’ wasn’t just sold once, but several times over.
Historian and Harlots writer Hallie Rubenhold told I: “The experience of having sex with a virgin was highly prized in the 18th century.
“People were afraid of venereal diseases, people were obsessed with youth and so this was a highly erotic, pleasurable experience.
“If a girl was young enough, they could sell her virginity several times over. They had methods by which they could pretend it had been restored, they had recipes for how to tighten the walls of the vagina using various herbs.”
Hayes went on to become one of the most desired women in London, lavished with luxury by her wealthy “keepers”.
As well as making a mint as a courtesan, Charlotte Hayes ran one of the most lucrative brothels in London, off the elegant thoroughfare of Pall Mall, which she called her “nunnery.”
Hayes took in girls as young as 12, taught them refined manners and dressed them in French silks and lace, promising customers they would “satisfy all fantasies, caprices, and extravagances of the male visitor, carrying out their every wish".
A night with one of her "nuns" cost over £100, more than the average annual wage at the time.
The high price meant her customers were members of the highest society, including lords, earls and even royals, such as the future King George IV.
On one occasion, after reading about erotic rituals in Tahiti, she organised a event in which “12 beautiful nymphs, unsullied and untainted” were deflowered by 12 young men, as in “the celebrated rites of Venus”.
An audience of 23 men were charged handsomely to watch the sordid spectacle.
Hayes became a celebrated name amassing a fortune of £20,000 – around £3million today.
Hayes wasn't the only one to build her fortune on child exploitation.
Every year thousands of young girls flocked to London in the hope of finding work, and many fell into a common trap set by "bawds", who trawled the inns and taverns looking for a fresh young face.
Once sucked in, the girl's virginity could be sold to a nobleman for up to £150.
In The Secret History of Georgian London, historian Dan Cruickshank describes one "vile procuress" at work.
"Each morning she took her rounds to all the inns, to see what youth and beauty the country had sent to London.
"And when she found a rural pretty lass step out of a wagon, the antiquated She-captain of Satan's regiment would offer the poor innocent creature accommodation in her house gratis, till she saw if she should like the town."
The naive country girls were taken in by these motherly figures, who offered them a roof over their heads until they found their feet.
One contemporary author reports these "fallen angels" were then trapped by false debt, thinking they owed money for lodgings or food.
They would often be forced to work in "bawdy houses", with the older woman passing them round to drunken men for cash.
"Then, at a nod, must that tender delicate person be given up to the lust of every ruffian who can afford the price, to be touzed, and rumpled, like a bit of dirty paper," reads the report.
Like Charlotte Hayes, many prostitutes became celebrated courtesans and even mistresses of the King.
According to series creator Alison Newman, Harlots' Charlotte Wells was also inspired by Kitty Fisher, a sex worker immortalised in a famous painting by Joshua Reynolds.
Considered one of the most beautiful women of her time, Kitty came from a humble background but rose to high society by becoming the mistress of a series of wealthy men, including Lord Coventry and the Duke of York.
One contemporary writer noted: "She lives in the greatest possible splendour, spends twelve thousand pounds a year, and she is the first of her social class to employ liveried servants."
Kitty was immortalised in the nursery rhyme line: "Lucy Lockett lost her pocket, Kitty Fisher found it."
Another child prostitute who infiltrated the upper classes was Lavinia Fenton, the illegitimate daughter of a sailor whose mother married a London brothel keeper.
As her mother was in negotiations for her “deflowering” defiant Lavinia slept with with a Portuguese nobleman who was then imprisoned for debt, so she became a child prostitute.
However at the age of 20, in 1728, she ran away with her lover, The Duke of Bolton, who was 23 years her senior.
They married after the death of his wife, over 20 years later, when they already had three children, and she became the Duchess of Bolton.
Harlots madam Lydia Quigley - played by Lesley Manville - is seen supplying teenage virgins to a club of aristocratic men, who are later found to be raping and murdering them in Satanic rituals.
The scenes are inspired by the 18th Century rise of Hellfire Clubs, secret societies formed by wealthy society men and, on some occasions, women.
According to the London Gazette of 1721, these “scandalous clubs meet together and in the most impious and blasphemous Manner, insult the most sacred Principles of Holy Religion, affront Almighty God himself, and corrupt the Minds and Morals of one another.”
The paper reported that party-goers drank “Hellfire punch” and dined on dishes named Holy Ghost Pie, Devil’s Loins and Breast of Venus.
Reports of deflowering virgins, Satanic abuse of women and even murder began to circulate around the clubs.
One such club, formed in 1746 by Sir Francis Dashwood with the motto "Fais ce que tu voudrais" (D
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