[1] She became known as an excellent ingénue playing the roles of naïve or lively and whimsical young women in comedies[2] and achieved considerable success and fame.
[1] Adamberger remained a favourite of audiences throughout her whole career, and contemporary Viennese poets such as Heinrich Joseph von Collin wrote many poems praising her.
[1] Ernst Brandes wrote about her that "it would not be possible" to play a mischievous peasant woman or a naughty city girl in a "truer and more endearing" way.
[4] He also asserted that whoever saw her play in Lustspiels "forgot that there could be anything outside of the comedy" and that she could "entertain the mind, move the heart and delight the soul".
[1] Adamberger was born on 23 October 1752 in Vienna, Archduchy of Austria, the daughter of court actor Karl J. Jaquet (1726–1813).