She married Thomas Goodall and they were involved in a noted legal case.
She made the newspapers when she argued with Kemble over whether she would appear as "Lady Anne" in King Richard III.
[2] In 1789 she was employed to do breeches parts by George Colman the Younger and she was painted by de Wilde in her costume of Sir Harry Wildair in George Farquhar's The Constant Couple which was later engraved by William Satchwell Leney.
[1] In 1813 her frequently absent husband who was called an "Admiral of Hayti" took out a case for damages against his lawyer, Fletcher.
The case went to court and although some of the figures may have been exaggerated Goodall was awarded $5,000 for his lawyer's "criminal conversation" with his wife.