HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF
AMERICAN THEATER MODERNISM
JAMES FISHER and FELICIA HARDISON LONDRÉ
HISTORICAL DICTIONARIES...
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HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF
AMERICAN THEATER MODERNISM
JAMES FISHER and FELICIA HARDISON LONDRÉ
HISTORICAL DICTIONARIES OF LITERATURE AND THE ARTS Jon Woronoff, Series Editor 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23.
Science Fiction Literature, by Brian Stableford, 2004. Hong Kong Cinema, by Lisa Odham Stokes, 2007. American Radio Soap Operas, by Jim Cox, 2005. Japanese Traditional Theatre, by Samuel L. Leiter, 2006. Fantasy Literature, by Brian Stableford, 2005. Australian and New Zealand Cinema, by Albert Moran and Errol Vieth, 2006. African-American Television, by Kathleen Fearn-Banks, 2006. Lesbian Literature, by Meredith Miller, 2006. Scandinavian Literature and Theater, by Jan Sjåvik, 2006. British Radio, by Seán Street, 2006. German Theater, by William Grange, 2006. African American Cinema, by S. Torriano Berry and Venise Berry, 2006. Sacred Music, by Joseph P. Swain, 2006. Russian Theater, by Laurence Senelick, 2007. French Cinema, by Dayna Oscherwitz and MaryEllen Higgins, 2007. Postmodernist Literature and Theater, by Fran Mason, 2007. Irish Cinema, by Roderick Flynn and Pat Brereton, 2007. Australian Radio and Television, by Albert Moran and Chris Keating, 2007. Polish Cinema, by Marek Haltof, 2007. Old Time Radio, by Robert C. Reinehr and Jon D. Swartz, 2008. Renaissance Art, by Lilian H. Zirpolo, 2008. Broadway Musical, by William A. Everett and Paul R. Laird, 2008. American Theater: Modernism, by James Fisher and Felicia Hardison Londré, 2008.
(ISTORICAL $ICTIONARY OF !MERICAN 4HEATER Modernism
James Fisher Felicia Hardison Londré
Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts, No. 23
The Scarecrow Press, Inc. Lanham, Maryland • Toronto • Plymouth, UK 2008
SCARECROW PRESS, INC. Published in the United States of America by Scarecrow Press, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 www.scarecrowpress.com Estover Road Plymouth PL6 7PY United Kingdom Copyright © 2008 by James Fisher and Felicia Hardison Londré All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Fisher, James, 1950– Historical dictionary of American theater : modernism / James Fisher, Felicia Hardison Londré. p. cm. — (Historical dictionaries of literature and the arts ; no. 23) “1880 to 1930”—Introd. Includes bibliographical references. ISBN-13: 978-0-8108-5533-5 (hardcover : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8108-5533-X (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Theater—United States—History—20th century—Dictionaries. 2. Theater— United States—History—19th century—Dictionaries. 3. American drama—20th century—Dictionaries. 4. American drama—19th century—Dictionaries. I. Londré, Felicia Hardison, 1941– II. Title. PN2266.3.F57 2008 792’.097303—dc22
2007025843
∞ ™ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992. Manufactured in the United States of America.
#ONTENTS
Editor’s Foreword
Jon Woronoff
vii
Acknowledgments
ix
Reader’s Note
xi
List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
xiii
Chronology
xv
Introduction
xxxi
THE DICTIONARY
1
Bibliography
535
About the Authors
569
v
%DITORS &OREWORD
The age of modernism in American theatre, running from roughly 1880 to 1930, was a transitional period, or more concretely, a period of maturation in every sense. There were more and more theatres, not only in major cities, but also lesser ones, and even small towns had a location for such activities. There were still visiting companies from Europe, and European actors appealed to the public, but there were more and more American companies and actors, and this meant not only major ones but touring companies on the road and, increasingly, amateur groups. There were theatrical clubs and drama schools, and the public was kept informed by more and better critics. All that was lacking were American plays and playwrights, but even that gap was gradually filled. However, maturation does not necessarily mean maturity, the range of topics dealt with was limited, and some topics were off-limits such that they were blocked by informal or official censorship. The portrayal of minorities and women was more negative or condescending than not, and political or social commentary was usually meek if at all present. Yet, no matter how you look at it, this was a very exciting period in theatrical terms, and a lot happened. So much, indeed, that even this substantial volume cannot include everything, although it does offer an exceptionally broad and deep coverage. The chronology already indicates what was going on, and when, so that this process of maturation can be traced over the years. Next, it is put into context in a more analytical introduction. Then the dictionary section, with an amazing 1,400 entries, takes a closer look at the actors, producers and directors, playwrights, critics, and others who contributed to the maturation process. Other entries describe some of the major theatres or deal with aspects of production and scenography, emerging trends, and themes. This is rounded off with commentaries on the more memorable plays. Big as it is, this book can only go so far and it therefore concludes with a bibliography that can take interested readers even further. vii
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EDITOR’S FOREWORD
This Historical Dictionary of American Theater: Modernism was written by two academics with a keen interest in the period and an accumulated knowledge without which it could hardly have been written: James Fisher and Felicia Hardison Londré. James Fisher is head and professor of theatre at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, following nearly three decades at Wabash College, nearly half of this as department chair. During this time, he has authored several books on American theatre and is busily working on the historical dictionary that will deal with the contemporary period. On top of all this, he has written two plays of his own. Dr. Londré is also a professor of theatre, teaching theatre history at the University of Missouri, Kansas City, for three decades, at present focusing mainly on turn-of-the-century American theatre. Alongside her teaching, and among many other things, she served as dramaturg for Missouri Repertory Theatre and is presently dramaturge for the Nebraska Shakespeare Festival. She, too, has written several books on American and world theatre. This volume draws on their impressive experience and provides interested readers with a solid and often entertaining guide to a crucial period in American theatre. Jon Woronoff Series Editor
!CKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors are grateful to the staff of The Scarecrow Press for their patience and support, with particular thanks to our editor, Jon Woronoff, for his impressive grasp of the big picture as well as his remarkable memory for details. His promptness in responding to our many queries as well as his insightful suggestions on other matters helped us enormously. Felicia Hardison Londré is deeply grateful to her amazingly resourceful and industrious collaborator, Jim Fisher, with whom it has been a joy to work. Indeed, the inception of the project owes much to the friendship that began with our mutual love for the immortal voice of Al Jolson, whose career peaked during the modernist era. Felicia extends her appreciation also to all the valiant artists of the American theatre, past and present, including her colleagues in UMKC Theatre at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. She thanks Daniel J. Watermeier for his suggestions on various points. She especially thanks her wonderful, supportive family: Venne-Richard Londré, Tristan and Tilda Londré (and their children Tristan Graham, Henry, Eleanore, Gilbert, and Adeline), and Georgianna Londré and Martin Buchanan. James Fisher would like to express his gratitude to his collaborator, Felicia Hardison Londré, for the privilege of learning from her vast store of knowledge of American theatre history and especially for her warm, generous friendship and encouragement. He would also like to acknowledge the support of his former colleagues in the Wabash College Theatre Department and his new coworkers at UNCG, his 2005 summer research intern, Braden Pemberton, and, above all, his wife, Dana, and their children, Daniel and Anna, for their continual love and support.
ix
2EADERS .OTE
The plan of this volume follows the format established for Scarecrow’s series of Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts. Although we cover only five decades (1880–1930) and focus narrowly on legitimate theatre while leaving aside musical and variety entertainment forms (except as they directly impact the legitimate theatre), the amazing richness of the modernist era necessitated somewhat selective coverage. To list every performer, manager, designer, or critic who made a mark on the theatre during that half century, or every play that ran more than 200 performances on Broadway, might have doubled the length of this volume. The difficult choices between inclusion and exclusion were made with the probable needs of the reader or researcher in mind. We weighed relative influences and resorted informally to a quasi-Googlelike system of giving extra value to names and terms boasting the greatest number of cross-references. Yet we are mindful also that much of the value of a work of this nature lies in the rescue of reputations and concepts that were common currency in their day but are in danger of being lost to posterity. The vastness of our subject may be seen in the length of our bibliography, which is divided into subcategories. Other approaches to the material are offered in the chronology, in the introduction, and in overview entries on some broad topics like actors and actresses, playwrights, comedy, musical theatre, African American theatre, Shakespearean influence, and so on. Those overview entries contain the most important names in that category, and those names are boldfaced to indicate crossreferencing to individual entries. Individual entries cover the noteworthy dramatists, actors, directors, designers, and critics, as well as individual plays, terminology, theatrical publications, companies, producing organizations, unions, technical developments, genres, and other features. Some of the plays merit plot summary in their individual entries. Other plays are notable more for xi
xii •
READER’S NOTE
the artists involved or for the unusual nature of the material or the audience response. In any case, rather than adhere to a rigid formula, we have endeavored to offer what is likely to be most useful in understanding the importance of the work within the context of theatre history and of the era. In many cases, the influence or accomplishment of an individual extends beyond 1930, the year we see as a useful demarcation between modernist and contemporary theatre. Such entries in this volume stress an entrant’s activity before 1930 but also include a brief summation of the direction of later work. Those entrants will also be found in The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater: Contemporary, 1930 to the Present, where the emphasis will be on their work since 1930. Names, titles, terms, and so on, included in the contemporary volume will be noted with an asterisk (e.g., Katharine Cornell*), while cross-references of names, titles, terms, and so on within this volume will be indicated by bold type. Those cross-references that will be in both volumes will appear in small caps (e.g., +ATHARINE #ORNELL Individual entries that will appear in both volumes will be represented by a dagger (e.g., CORNELL, KATHARINE. †).
!CRONYMS AND !BBREVIATIONS
AAAA AADA AEA AFA AFL ALA ALT ART ASA ASSP CRT DG FTP IATSE IWW K&E MAT NAACP NATSE NTC PMA RADA SADC SRO TOBA USAA
Associated Actors and Artistes of America American Academy of Dramatic Arts Actors’ Equity Association Actors’ Fund of America Actors’ Fidelity League Authors’ League of America American Laboratory Theatre American Repertory Theatre Actors’ Society of America American Society of Scenic Painters Civic Repertory Theatre The Dramatists Guild Federal Theatre Project International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees International Workers of the World Klaw & Erlanger Moscow Art Theatre National Association for the Advancement of Colored People National Alliance of Theatrical and Stage Employees National Theatre Conference Producing Managers’ Association Royal Academy of Dramatic Art Society of American Dramatists and Composers Standing Room Only Theatre Owners Booking Association (a.k.a. Tough On Black Actors) United Scenic Artists of America
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#HRONOLOGY
1860–1880 During this period, theatrical activity spreads across the United States and territories, while New York City maintains its wellestablished dominance as the center of the American entertainment industry. The Civil War puts a damper on much activity, and yet theatre continues to be available in cities like St. Louis, where the colorful manager Benedict De Bar soldiers on for the arts. Rivers are the main highways into the interior of America until the 1870s. That decade marks the transition from trouping by horse-drawn wagon and riverboat to train travel. With the rapid expansion of railroads in the 1880s, touring companies come into their glory days, quickly replacing the old resident stock companies. 1861 6 June: Adah Isaacs Menken plays the title role, a male character, in an old melodrama, Mazeppa, for the first time in Albany, New York. In the famous climactic scene, wearing flesh-colored tights, she creates the illusion of nudity, while strapped to the back of a horse sent galloping up a ramp decked in canvas painted to represent a mountain. Menken tours the show for five years and inspires other equestrian actresses to take the role. 1864 26 November: Edwin Booth opens his record 100-performance run in the title role of Hamlet at the Winter Garden in New York. 1865 14 April: Actor John Wilkes Booth assassinates President Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C., during a performance of the comedy Our American Cousin by Laura Keene’s company. His brother Edwin Booth leaves the stage for one year. Tony Pastor opens his Opera House, where he initiates the trend toward making variety entertainment clean enough for women. Joseph Jefferson III first performs the title role in Dion Boucicault’s adaptation of Washington Irving’s Rip Van Winkle in London. xv
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CHRONOLOGY
1866 The Thalian Dramatic Association, one of the first academic theatre groups, is established at Brown University. 3 September: Joseph Jefferson first performs the role of Rip Van Winkle in the United States at New York’s Olympic Theatre; it will remain a staple of his long career. 12 September: The Black Crook, a fantasy-melodrama with spectacular effects and ballet sequences, opens to acclaim at Niblo’s Garden, and is later signaled as a milestone in the development of American musical theatre. 1869 Augustin Daly opens his Fifth Avenue Theatre, home to his excellent ensemble in polished productions for a decade. 1872 12 December: Edwin Forrest, the leading American romantic actor, dies in Philadelphia. 1875 14 December: Augustin Daly’s popular drama Pique opens with Fanny Davenport as Mabel Renfrew surrounded by a strong cast featuring John Drew, John Brougham, James Lewis, and Maurice Barrymore. 1877 McKee Rankin begins touring Joaquin Miller’s The Danites. 22 December: Polish actress Helena Modjeska makes her Englishspeaking debut at the Fifth Avenue Theatre in Eugène Scribe’s Adrienne Lecouvreur. 1879 Steele MacKaye opens his state-of-the-art Madison Square Theatre, with an elevator stage, on West 24th Street. David Belasco collaborates with James A. Herne to write Hearts of Oak, a popular success. Harrison Grey Fiske founds the New York Dramatic Mirror, an important trade newspaper. Augustin Daly opens Daly’s Theatre at 1221 Broadway. August–December: The Mulligan Guards’ Chowder by Edward Harrigan opens in August at the Theatre Comique, followed in December by The Mulligan Guards’ Christmas, launching the popular Mulligan Guard series of plays with music and ethnic characters, set in New York’s Lower East Side, an American alternative to Gilbert and Sullivan and other European operettas. 1880 Uncle Tom’s Cabin is performed with an integrated cast for the first time at the Gaiety Theatre (Boston). George H. Jessop’s Sam’l of Posen; or, The Commercial Drummer begins its long life as a stock and touring vehicle. Steele MacKaye presents his own play, Hazel Kirke, starring Effie Ellsler, at Madison Square Theatre. November 8: Sarah
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• xvii
Bernhardt makes her American debut at Booth’s Theatre on the first of her nine American tours. Tony Pastor introduces Lillian Russell as a star attraction. 1881 October: Tony Pastor opens his new Fourteenth Street Theatre to present family-oriented variety (already beginning to be called vaudeville). P. T. Barnum merges his circus with that of James A. Bailey to create “The Greatest Show on Earth.” William Gillette stars in his own slight comedy The Professor, an auspicious beginning to his career as a prominent actor and dramatist. Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex rehearses for six months and is performed in Greek at Harvard University. 1882 Boris Thomashefsky persuades a Lower East Side saloon owner to underwrite a Yiddish Theatre production of Avrom Goldfaden’s Koldunye. The Actors’ Fund of America is founded as a charitable organization to aid ill and indigent actors. 1883 12 February: James O’Neill acts the role of Edmond Dantès in The Count of Monte Cristo for the first time at Booth’s Theatre in New York; he plays the role more than 4,000 times (6,000 in some sources) during four decades. 6 August: The most popular of Harrigan and Hart’s Mulligan Guard plays, The Mulligan Guard’s Ball, opens. William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody’s Wild West Show, managed by Nate Salsbury, is established and operates successfully until 1902, touring the United States and Europe. October: British actor Henry Irving begins the first of his six American tours; Ellen Terry makes her American debut as a member of his company. 1884 The Lyceum Theatre School of Acting (later better known as the American Academy of Dramatic Arts), the first conservatory of actor training in the United States, is founded by Franklin Haven Sargent in New York City. 1885 27 April: Charles H. Hoyt’s farce with music, A Parlor Match, opens at New York’s Grand Opera House, with attention going not to the author but to the comedy team of Evans and Hoey. Sharpshooter Annie Oakley and her husband, Frank Butler, join William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody’s Wild West Show. 1886 The Theatre, a publication of stage news, makes its first appearance. 16 August: William Gillette stars in the opening of his own Civil War melodrama, Held by the Enemy, at Madison Square Theatre.
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1887 Edwin Booth and Lawrence Barrett begin their first season of “joint star” tours, with a repertoire of Shakespearean plays. Denman Thompson first performs Josh Whitcomb in the full-length version of his play (coauthored with George W. Ryer) The Old Homestead, a rural comedy that remains the staple of his career until 1910. David Belasco collaborates with Henry C. DeMille on The Wife, the first of several successful plays they write together. 26 September: Bronson Howard’s inside look at Wall Street speculation, The Henrietta, opens at the Union Square Theatre. 20 October: Julia Marlowe makes her New York debut as Parthenia in Ingomar in a matinee performance at the Bijou. 1888 The Players club in New York’s Gramercy Park, underwritten by Edwin Booth, is incorporated. Augustin Daly’s company tours Shakespeare plays to England. 16 October: Eugene O’Neill, son of actor James O’Neill and future playwright, is born in a hotel on what is now Times Square. 3 December: Frances Hodgson Burnett’s Little Lord Fauntleroy opens at the Broadway Theatre. 1889 David Belasco and Henry C. DeMille continue their successful coauthorship with The Charity Ball. 6 March: Charles H. Hoyt’s rural farce A Midnight Bell opens at the Bijou and tours for several seasons. 9 September: Bronson Howard’s Shenandoah, produced by Charles Frohman, opens at the Star Theatre. 21 October: Having triumphed in London as Richard III, Richard Mansfield opens Shakespeare’s Richard III at Palmer’s Theatre, initiating a new phase in his career. 1890 James A. Herne’s Margaret Fleming, the first American play patterned on the realistic social problem dramas of Henrik Ibsen, is completed, but its shocking subject matter prevents public performances. January: Richard Mansfield presents Beatrice Cameron in Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House in New York; the production elicits a mixed critical response: an anti-Ibsen movement led by critic William Winter versus enthusiasts for the new realism. November: Charles H. Hoyt’s comedy A Texas Steer debuts. Clyde Fitch begins his prolific 20-year playwriting career with Beau Brummel, a vehicle for Richard Mansfield. Joseph Jefferson III publishes his autobiography, a chronicle of his long career and of the 19th-century American stage. 1891 A young George M. Cohan plays the title role in the farce Peck’s Bad Boy as part of The Four Cohans (with his parents and sister). The first international copyrights convention is held, establishing some
CHRONOLOGY
• xix
protections for dramatists. The male-only American Dramatists Club is founded. 1 April: Augustus Thomas’s Alabama opens at Madison Square Theatre. 4 April: Edwin Booth performs Hamlet at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and announces his retirement from the stage; it is his final performance before his death in 1893. 9 November: Charles Hoyt’s A Trip to Chinatown opens at Madison Square Theatre. 9 December: James A. Herne’s Margaret Fleming opens at Palmer’s. Thomas A. Edison patents the kinetoscope, a cinematic peep show that paves the way to motion pictures. 1892 James A. Herne’s Shore Acres premieres in Chicago. 17 February: Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler opens at the Amberg Theatre in New York. 10 November: With the opening of Mavourneen, Chauncey Olcott establishes himself as the leading Irish tenor–comedian in show business. 1893 The Orpheum circuit is founded in San Francisco by Morris Meyerfield and Gustav Walter, and will control vaudeville west of the Mississippi for many years. Thomas A. Edison’s Black Maria motion picture studio is constructed for the manufacture of films for public consumption. African American writer-activist Henrietta Vinton Davis stages William Edgar Easton’s Dessalines in Chicago. 23 January: Eleonora Duse makes her American debut in The Lady of the Camelias at the Fifth Avenue Theatre; it is the first of her four American tours. 25 January: Charles Frohman opens his Empire Theatre at 40th and Broadway with The Girl I Left Behind Me by Franklin Fyles and David Belasco. 25 March: Martha Morton’s Brother John opens, starring William H. Crane. 7 June: Edwin Booth dies. 4 September: Nat C. Goodwin stars in Augustus Thomas’s In Mizzoura, which opens at the Fifth Avenue Theatre. 23 October: Charles T. Dazey’s In Old Kentucky opens at New York’s Academy of Music and will long remain popular on the road. 1894 Frederick F. Proctor, “dean of vaudeville,” establishes Proctor’s Pleasure Palace in New York City, and a circuit of 25 vaudeville theatres nationally. Oscar Hammerstein (I) opens his Victoria Theatre, which offers legitimate theatre until 1904, when he switches to vaudeville attractions. 15 February: Minnie Maddern Fiske plays Nora in Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House as a matinee benefit performance for a hospital maternity department; its success prompts her return to professional acting and the beginning of general acceptance of Ibsen’s realism.
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1895 May Irwin, formerly a vaudevillian, wins stardom in The Widow Jones shortly before she appears in a motion picture short, The Kiss, which shocks audiences with the first “close-up” shot of a kiss: Irwin kissing John C. Rice. May: The Actors’ Society of America is founded to protect those in the acting profession. 22 October: Mrs. Leslie Carter, a socialite famous for a scandalous divorce trial, stars for David Belasco in The Heart of Maryland, opening at Herald Square Theatre. 1896 Producers Marc Klaw, Abraham Erlanger, Al Hayman, Fred “Sam” Nirdlinger, J. Fred Zimmerman, and Charles Frohman establish The Theatrical Syndicate (a.k.a. The Theatrical Trust) with the goal of dominating theatre management in the United States. Koster & Bial’s Music Hall, the most prestigious vaudeville house of the day, is the first to show a motion picture on its bill. European sensation Anna Held is brought to New York by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. and performs in a revival of Charles H. Hoyt’s A Parlor Match. Julius Cahn’s Official Theatrical Guide, an invaluable source for stage professionals, begins publication. 5 October: William Gillette stars in his own Civil War melodrama, Secret Service, opening at the Garrick Theatre. 1897 2 March: Minnie Maddern Fiske plays the title role in Tess of the D’Urbervilles, at the Fifth Avenue Theatre. 27 September: Maude Adams attains stardom as Lady Babbie in J. M. Barrie’s The Little Minister, produced by Charles Frohman. 1898 7 February: Lottie Blair Parker’s rural melodrama Way Down East opens at the Manhattan Theatre and will find a long life on tour and in motion picture adaptations. 1899 The Hebrew Actors Union is formed. Henrietta Vinton Davis stages The Negro, a pageant on African American life, and it tours the country. 12 September: Langdon Mitchell’s adaptation of Thackeray’s Vanity Fair, titled Becky Sharp, opens at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, with Minnie Maddern Fiske in the title role. 24 October: James A. Herne acts in the opening of Sag Harbor, the last play from his pen. 6 November: William Gillette plays the title role in the opening of Sherlock Holmes at the Garrick Theatre, his own adaptation from Arthur Conan Doyle’s stories, and will play the role frequently into the 1930s. 29 November: Ben Teal directs William Young’s stage adaptation of General Lew Wallace’s novel Ben-Hur, a production featuring consider-
CHRONOLOGY
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able visual spectacle (including an onstage chariot race), opening at the Broadway Theatre. 1900 Vaudeville artists unionize under the name White Rats. Managers counter with their own organizations: Association of Vaudeville Managers, which soon becomes the Vaudeville Managers Protective Association. The Shubert brothers, Lee, Samuel, and J. J., lease and refurbish the Herald Square Theatre, initiating their 15-year process of breaking the managerial dominance of the Theatrical Syndicate. 5 February: Olga Nethersole stars in Clyde Fitch’s Sapho, opening at Wallack’s Theatre; on 23 February, she and several others are arrested for indecency. 5 March: David Belasco’s Madame Butterfly, coauthored with John Luther Long, opens, produced by Belasco and starring Blanche Bates. 12 November: The musical Florodora, with the famous Florodora sextette’s number “Tell Me, Pretty Maiden,” opens at the Casino. 1901 Forty-one legitimate theatre houses are operating in New York City, as well as seven vaudeville and six burlesque theatres. Theatre Magazine is founded. Minnie Maddern Fiske and her husband, Harrison Grey Fiske, take over management of the Manhattan Theatre in defiance of the Theatrical Syndicate. Jane Addams and Laura Dainty Pelham establish the Hull-House Players at Addams’s settlement house in Chicago. 4 February: Clyde Fitch’s comedy Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines opens with Ethel Barrymore in her acclaimed debut performance. 25 February: George M. Cohan makes his Broadway debut in his own play The Governor’s Son. 20 May: The Shuberts open their Herald Square Theatre with Brixton Burglary. 23 September: David Warfield plays the title role in the opening of David Belasco’s and Charles Klein’s The Auctioneer. 1902 Brander Matthews is appointed Professor of Dramatic Literature at Columbia University, the first such position in American colleges. 3 December: David Belasco and John Luther Long present an Asianthemed mythical drama The Darling of the Gods, starring Blanche Bates and George Arliss. 25 December: Clyde Fitch’s drama The Girl with Green Eyes opens starring Clara Bloodgood. 1903 Edwin S. Porter’s motion picture The Great Train Robbery shows the possibilities of the storytelling motion picture. 25 May: Jacob Adler plays Shylock in Yiddish with English-speaking supporting actors in
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CHRONOLOGY
the opening of The Merchant of Venice on Broadway. 12 October: The New Amsterdam Theatre opens on 42nd Street. 13 October: Victor Herbert’s operetta Babes in Toyland opens. 30 December: During a sold-out matinee performance of Mr. Bluebeard, starring Eddie Foy, a fire breaks out in Chicago’s Iroquois Theatre and 602 people are killed. The tragedy prompts renewed attention to safety standards in theatres everywhere, as well as ill will toward the Theatrical Syndicate. 1904 5 January: Owen Wister’s The Virginian, adapted to the stage by Kyle Bellew, opens. April: Longacre Square is renamed Times Square. 3 September: Anne Crawford Flexner’s Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch opens. 6 September: David Warfield opens in the longpopular tearjerker The Music Master by David Belasco and Charles Klein. 7 November: George M. Cohan writes, directs, and stars in the opening of his musical, Little Johnny Jones, featuring the songs “The Yankee Doodle Boy” and “Give My Regards to Broadway.” 1905 Producer Sam Shubert is killed in a train accident. 12 April: The mighty Hippodrome opens at 43rd Street and Sixth Avenue. 31 October: At the behest of Anthony Comstock, secretary for the Society for the Suppression of Vice, police close Arnold Daly’s production of George Bernard Shaw’s controversial drama, Mrs. Warren’s Profession, starring Mary Shaw. 6 November: Maude Adams plays the title role in J. M. Barrie’s Peter Pan. 14 November: Blanche Bates finds her greatest role as the title character in David Belasco’s The Girl of the Golden West, opening at the Belasco Theatre. December: Variety, a publication aimed at theatrical professionals, is founded by Sime Silverman and begins publication. 1906 George Pierce Baker establishes his English 47 course at Harvard University, emphasizing techniques of playwriting. French actress Sarah Bernhardt tours the United States for the seventh time. George M. Cohan has two hits in the same season: George Washington, Jr., starring Cohan, and Forty-Five Minutes from Broadway, starring Fay Templeton and Victor Moore. Rida Johnson Young finds success with Brown of Harvard and will go on to write 26 plays, musicals, and operettas. David Pinski’s Yiddish theatre play, The Eternal Jew, is produced. 4 October: Opening of William Vaughn Moody’s The Great Divide, featuring Margaret Anglin and Henry Miller. 17 October: Playwright Rachel Crothers’s The Three of Us opens at the Madison Square Theatre.
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13 November: Alla Nazimova opens in Hedda Gabler, supported by Henry Miller. 19 November: Langdon Mitchell’s The New York Idea opens. 27 November: David Belasco’s Rose of the Rancho, coauthored by Richard Walton Tully, opens with Frances Starr in the title role. 1907 The Society of Dramatic Authors is founded as an advocacy group for women playwrights by Martha Morton. Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. produces the first edition of his celebrated Follies, a lavish musical revue, with annual editions until 1925. 7 January: Clyde Fitch’s drama The Truth opens for a short run at the Criterion, followed by a tour during which its star, Clara Bloodgood, commits suicide in December. 16 October: A Grand Army Man, starring David Warfield, opens David Belasco’s new theatre at 111 West 44th Street. 21 October: Franz Lehar’s Viennese operetta The Merry Widow opens at the New Amsterdam Theatre. 18 November: The Witching Hour by Augustus Thomas opens. 3 December: William C. deMille’s The Warrens of Virginia opens. 1908 20 April: George M. Cohan stars in the opening of his own The Yankee Prince. 17 November: Edward Sheldon’s Salvation Nell, starring Minnie Maddern Fiske, opens and causes a sensation for its frank subject matter. 29 December: Marion Fairfax’s comedy, The Chaperone, starring Maxine Elliott, inaugurates Maxine Elliott’s Theatre. 1909 Percy MacKaye publishes The Playhouse and the Play, the first of several important discussions of the little theatre movement and a plea for subsidized community theatre in the United States. 19 January: William Vaughn Moody’s last play The Faith Healer opens. 8 April: Helena Modjeska dies. 4 September: Clyde Fitch dies in France; his last play, The City, opens on 21 December. 1910 8 February: A Man’s World by Rachel Crothers opens. 5 May: Marie Dressler keeps her audience laughing all evening at the opening of Tillie’s Nightmare at the Herald Square Theatre. 7 November: Victor Herbert’s operetta Naughty Marietta opens. 15 November: Avery Hopwood’s comedy Nobody’s Widow, produced by David Belasco for his star, Blanche Bates, opens. 1911 The Authors’ League of America is founded with Bronson Howard as president and Martha Morton as vice president, superseding the previous playwrights’ organizations that were segregated by gender.
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Thomas H. Dickinson establishes the Wisconsin Dramatic Society. 17 January: Percy MacKaye’s The Scarecrow, based on Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Feathertop, opens for a short run. 20 March and 20 November: Al Jolson begins a long reign as leading Broadway musical star with two Shubert-produced shows, La Belle Paree, inaugurating the Shubert’s lavish new Winter Garden Theatre on 20 March, and Vera Violetta, opening 20 November. 20 December: Kismet opens, starring Otis Skinner. 1912 George Pierce Baker adds the 47 Workshop to his English 47 course at Harvard University. Maurice Browne establishes the Chicago Little Theatre, an early exemplar of the little theatre movement. Producer Winthrop Ames opens the Little Theatre on West 44th Street, with a goal of producing experimental new works there. The Lafayette Theatre opens on Seventh Avenue in Harlem as a venue for new plays and musicals by African American writers. 8 January and 20 December: After years of acting in provincial tours, Laurette Taylor scores two New York successes this year: in The Bird of Paradise, opening on 8 January, and as the title character in the sentimental comedy Peg O’My Heart, written by her husband, J. Hartley Manners, opening on 20 December. 22 July: The opening of the Shubert-produced first edition of The Passing Show, a semiannual musical revue meant to rival the Ziegfeld Follies. 22 December: Actors’ Equity Association is founded. 1913 W. E. B. DuBois stages his pageant The Star of Ethiopia at New York’s 12th Regiment Armory. 24 March: The Palace Theatre opens at Times Square in New York and becomes the mecca of vaudeville, operating successfully until 1932. October: B. F. Keith’s United Booking Office wrests control of the Palace from producer Martin Beck, who built it. 22 September: George M. Cohan opens his nonmusical mystery Seven Keys to Baldpate. 1914 Eugene O’Neill publishes Thirst and four other one-act plays, initiating his career as America’s leading dramatist. Thomas Wood Stevens creates a drama program at the Carnegie Institute of Technology. February: Lawrence Langer, among others, establishes the Washington Square Players, a noncommercial theatre for new and foreign plays. 19 August: Elmer Rice’s first play, On Trial, featuring innovative flashback sequences, opens.
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1915 A group of artists summering in Provincetown, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod stage some of their own one-act plays in a fish shack on a wharf and attract small audiences; this venture marks the larval phase of what will become Provincetown Players. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) establishes a drama committee. D. W. Griffith’s motion picture of the Civil War, The Birth of a Nation, opens. 12 February: Alice and Irene Lewisohn found the Neighborhood Playhouse, presenting Jephthah’s Daughter. 19 February: Washington Square Players open their first full season. 7 May: When the Lusitania is torpedoed by German gunboats, the theatre people killed include producer Charles Frohman and playwright Charles Klein. 9 December: Grace George stars in the first New York production of George Bernard Shaw’s Major Barbara. 30 December: Anita Bush’s all-black stock company takes the name Lafayette Players and opens Across the Footlights at Harlem’s Lafayette Theatre. 1916 Eugene O’Neill joins the group in Provincetown, where his Bound East for Cardiff and Susan Glaspell’s Trifles are presented in the Wharf Theatre; upon returning to Greenwich Village in the fall, the ensemble adopts the name Provincetown Players. The National Vaudeville Artists Union is established and supersedes the White Rats. Angelina Weld Grimké’s African American drama, Rachel, is produced in Washington, D.C., for two performances. Sam Hume founds the Detroit Arts and Crafts Theatre, and Frederick McConnell establishes the Cleveland Playhouse, both part of the independent or little theatre movement. Theatre Arts Monthly begins publication. 31 October: Clare Kummer’s Good Gracious, Annabelle opens. 1917 J. Hartley Manners’s Out There is performed on tour by an all-star cast in support of the war effort. Mae Desmond establishes the Desmond Players, a little theatre, in Philadelphia. April: Theatre artists become involved in the patriotic cause when the United States enters the Great War in April. 5 April: Black actors perform three plays by Ridgely Torrence on a bill that opens at the Garden Theatre. 18 April: John and Lionel Barrymore perform together in the opening of Peter Ibbetson. 1918 Smaller circuses merge to form Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, managed by Ringling North. Maurice Schwartz establishes the Yiddish Art Theatre, which operates until 1950. The Carolina
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Playmakers, an important regional group, is founded by Frederick Koch. 18 February: Augustus Thomas’s The Copperhead opens, with Lionel Barrymore in the leading role. May: Washington Square Players disband, having lost some of its company to military service. 16 August: Maytime, Sigmund Romberg’s operetta with a book by Rida Johnson Young opens. 1919 The Theatre Guild is founded by Lawrence Langner, Teresa Helburn, Helen Westley, Philip Moeller, Lee Simonson, and Maurice Wertheim and presents its first production, Jacinto Benavente’s The Bonds of Interest, opening on 14 April at the Garrick Theatre, followed by a major success with the 12 May opening of St. John Ervine’s John Ferguson. Edna St. Vincent Millay’s one-act play, Aria da Capo, is staged by the Provincetown Players. May: The Producing Managers’ Association, headed by producer Sam H. Harris, is established in May. 26 May: George Gershwin writes songs for the musical La! La! Lucille, opening on 26 May. June: The Pulitzer Prize for Drama is awarded for the first time. The first winner is Jesse Lynch Williams for his 1918 comedy, Why Marry? 7 August: Actors’ Equity begins a strike to win better wages and working conditions from producers; stagehands and musicians join the strike on 5 September. The strike is settled the following day with concessions from the Producing Managers’ Association. 30 September: Avery Hopwood scores a hit with his farce The Gold Diggers. 6 October: Zöe Akins’s drama Déclassée opens, starring Ethel Barrymore. 30 December: Jane Cowl plays the leading role in her own sentimental comedy, Smilin’ Through. Jacob Ben-Ami founds the Jewish Art Theatre. 1920 The Dramatists Guild is formed. 2 February: Eugene O’Neill’s first full-length play, Beyond the Horizon, opens and goes on to win the second Pulitzer Prize for Drama. 7 March: John Barrymore stars in Shakespeare’s Richard III, directed and produced by Arthur Hopkins and designed by Robert Edmond Jones. 23 August: Mary Roberts Rinehart and Avery Hopwood’s The Bat opens and becomes a stock and touring perennial. 27 September: George M. Cohan’s comedymystery The Tavern opens. 1 November: O’Neill’s expressionist drama The Emperor Jones opens with African American actor Charles Gilpin in the title role. 21 December: Jerome Kern’s Sally, starring Marilyn Miller, opens, produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. and introducing Kern’s song “Look for the Silver Lining.” 26 December: Zona Gale’s Miss
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Lulu Bett, adapted from her own novel, opens at Sing Sing Prison and on 27 December continues at the Belmont Theatre on Broadway; this play will make her, in 1921, the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. 1921 2 March: Nice People, Rachel Crothers’s drama of contemporary mores, opens for a long run, introducing Katharine Cornell and Tallulah Bankhead in their first important roles. 26 March and 14 November: Susan Glaspell’s Inheritors (opening 26 March) and The Verge (opening 14 November) are produced by the Provincetown Players. 20 April: Ferenc Molnár’s Liliom opens, featuring Eva Le Gallienne and Joseph Schildkraut. 23 May: The all-black musical Shuffle Along by Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle opens and during its long run advances the practice of racially integrated seating in all parts of the auditorium. 14 August: George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly’s satiric comedy Dulcy opens and makes a star of Lynn Fontanne. 22 September: Irving Berlin opens his Music Box Revue, the first of four annual editions. 2 November: Eugene O’Neill’s Anna Christie opens and wins him a second Pulitzer Prize. 1922 The Ethiopian Art Theatre is founded in Chicago by Raymond O’Neil. 9 March: Eugene O’Neill’s expressionist drama The Hairy Ape opens with Louis Wolheim in the title role. 23 May: Anne Nichols’s innocuous comedy of an interethnic romance, Abie’s Irish Rose, begins its record-breaking 2,327-performance run. 29 August: George Kelly’s hit The Torch-Bearers opens and satirizes amateur theatre and, ironically, will be frequently produced by amateur theatres. 9 October: The Theatre Guild opens Czech dramatist Karel Capek’s “robot” play, R.U.R. 7 November: Jeanne Eagels scores a personal success playing prostitute Sadie Thompson in John Colton and Clemence Randolph’s adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham’s Rain. 16 November: Hamlet opens, directed by Arthur Hopkins and designed by Robert Edmond Jones, with John Barrymore in the title role, which he plays for 101 performances (to surpass Edwin Booth’s 100-performance record). 1923 5 February: Rachel Crothers’s Mary the Third opens. 10 February: Owen Davis’s drama, Icebound, opens and wins the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. 19 February: Philip Barry’s first successful comedy, You and I, opens. 19 March: The Theatre Guild opens Elmer Rice’s expressionist play, The Adding Machine, with Dudley Digges as the
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leading character, Mr. Zero. 9 July: Earl Carroll produces the first of nine annual editions of his Vanities. 1924 12 February: George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly’s comedy with an expressionist sequence, Beggar on Horseback, opens. 16 April: Rachel Crothers’s Expressing Willie opens. 21 April: Legendary Italian actress Eleonora Duse dies in Pittsburgh during her fourth American tour. May: A scandal erupts when George Kelly’s comedy The Show-Off loses the Pulitzer Prize to Hatcher Hughes’s Hell-Bent fer Heaven and questions are raised about the Pulitzer selection process. 15 May: Eugene O’Neill’s All God’s Chillun Got Wings, featuring African American actor Paul Robeson, opens and incites outrage over its depiction of an interracial relationship. 11 August: Dancing Mothers opens, starring Helen Hayes. 5 September: What Price Glory, coauthored by Maxwell Anderson and World War I veteran Laurence Stallings, opens and shocks audiences with the realistic dialogue of soldiers in war. 11 November: Eugene O’Neill’s tragedy Desire Under the Elms opens starring Walter Huston, with designs by Robert Edmond Jones. 24 November: Pauline Lord and Richard Bennett score personal successes in leading roles in the opening of Sidney Howard’s Pulitzer Prize–winning They Knew What They Wanted, produced by the Theatre Guild, and Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne commence their long stage partnership with the hit comedy The Guardsman. 12 December: Katharine Cornell is well-received in a revival of the opening of George Bernard Shaw’s Candida. 1925 Crisis and Opportunity magazines, both African American publications, establish playwriting contests to encourage black dramatists. Howard University professor Alain Locke publishes The New Negro. George Pierce Baker organizes the Yale University Drama Department, and Thomas Wood Stevens directs the newly opened Goodman Memorial Theatre at the Art Institute of Chicago. John Howard Lawson’s leftist expressionist drama, Processional, is produced. 10 September: Paul Robeson plays the title role in a revival of Eugene O’Neill’s The Emperor Jones. 3 October: George Kelly’s Craig’s Wife opens and wins the Pulitzer Prize. 14 October: Garland Anderson’s Appearances, the first full-length drama by an African American author to appear on Broadway (with a racially mixed cast) opens. 8 December: The hit Marx Brothers musical The Cocoanuts, by George S. Kaufman with songs by Irving Berlin, opens.
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1926 Eva Le Gallienne establishes the Civic Repertory Theatre with the goal of offering classic and new plays at low prices; the theatre is run exclusively by women and continues until 1933. The all-black Krigwa Players is established. 23 January: Eugene O’Neill’s experimental drama using masks, The Great God Brown, opens. 9 February: Lulu Belle, a lurid drama by Edward Sheldon and Charles MacArthur, opens with star Lenore Ulric controversially appearing in blackface. 26 April: Sex opens but the Society for the Suppression of Vice objects to it and actressplaywright Mae West is arrested; the publicity resulting from her brief prison sentence is invaluable. 16 September: Actor-director-playwright George Abbott coauthors and stages Broadway. 29 November and 20 December: Sidney Howard has two plays produced this year: Ned McCobb’s Daughter (29 November) and The Silver Cord (20 December). 30 December: Paul Green’s Pulitzer Prize–winning drama about black Southerners, In Abraham’s Bosom, opens at the Provincetown Theatre for a long run. Also opening is Chicago by Maurine Dallas Watkins. 1927 The Keith-Albee-Orpheum vaudeville circuit is created by a merger of the largest eastern and western circuits; it controls 700 theatres nationwide. Mae West’s The Drag, depicting homosexual characters, closes on the road. Shubert musical star Al Jolson appears in the first feature-length sound motion picture, The Jazz Singer, firmly establishing the “talkies.” 31 January: Robert E. Sherwood’s first important play, the antiwar comedy The Road to Rome, opens. 2 February: The lavish Ziegfeld Theatre, designed by architect Thomas Lamb and scenic artist Joseph Urban, opens with Rio Rita. 11 April: S. N. Behrman’s comedy, The Second Man, opens starring Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. 16 August: Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. produces the first edition of his Follies in two years; it is the first Follies to star a single entertainer, Eddie Cantor. 1 September: George Maker Watters and Arthur Hopkins’s backstage comedy-drama Burlesque opens. 10 September: The Theatre Guild opens Dubose and Dorothy Heyward’s Porgy. 8 November: George Abbott coauthors (with Ann Preston Bridges) and directs Coquette starring Helen Hayes. 26 December: A Broadway record is set when 11 shows open on one night. 27 December: Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. produces the landmark dramatic musical Show Boat, opening on 27 December, with music by Jerome Kern and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. 28 December: The Royal Family, a comedy by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber lampooning the Barrymore family, opens.
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1928 30 January: Eugene O’Neill’s drama Strange Interlude opens and wins a third Pulitzer Prize. Also produced this year are his Marco Millions (9 January) and Lazarus Laughed (9 April). 9 April and 1 October: Mae West performs in her own plays, Diamond Lil (9 April) and The Pleasure Man (1 October). 14 August: The Front Page, a comedy-melodrama by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur opens. September: Jessie Bonstelle founds the Detroit Civic Theatre. 7 September: Sophie Treadwell’s expressionist drama Machinal opens. 23 October: The Marx Brothers open in George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind’s comedy Animal Crackers. 26 November: Holiday, Philip Barry’s high comedy, opens. 1929 10 January: Elmer Rice’s tenement drama Street Scene opens and wins the Pulitzer Prize. 11 February: Eugene O’Neill’s Dynamo opens and fails to elicit critical approval. 21 February: Rachel Crothers’s comedy Let Us Be Gay opens. 3 October: Jeanne Eagels dies at age 36. 9 October: George S. Kaufman and Ring Lardner’s comedy June Moon, satirizing Tin Pan Alley, opens. 29 October: The stock market crash begins the Great Depression, which will have a significant impact on theatre. 1930 The Keith-Albee-Orpheum Circuit merges with Radio Corporation of America to establish Radio-Keith-Orpheum (RKO). The League of New York Theatres & Producers is founded. Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston collaborate on the drama Mule Bone, but it is not produced. 26 February: Marc Connelly’s all-black The Green Pastures, based on biblical stories, opens and wins the Pulitzer Prize. 24 September: Once in a Lifetime opens; it is the first of eight comedies that George S. Kaufman will write in collaboration with Moss Hart. 3 November: Maxwell Anderson’s verse drama Elizabeth the Queen opens. 1 December: Susan Glaspell’s Alison’s House opens, produced by Eva Le Gallienne’s Civic Repertory Theatre, and wins a Pulitzer Prize in 1931. 1930s As the Great Depression deepens, sound motion pictures draw audiences away from live theatre. Road tours of Broadway hits had already begun their decline during World War I, but now even vaudeville loses ground to movies and radio.
)NTRODUCTION
The period from 1880 to 1930, which can best be described as “modernism,” was an extraordinary era during which the evolution of theatrical activity directly reflected America’s renewed and ever-increasing optimism following the cataclysm of the Civil War. The New York stage —“Broadway”—is often described as the center of American theatre from the mid-19th to the mid-20th century, but as this volume demonstrates, American theatre was a truly national phenomenon. During the 1880s and 1890s, the “road”—a network of theatres served by railway transportation and visited by stars and journeyman actors—brought performances of every kind to cities, towns, and even rural communities across the country. The hurly-burly activity included not only plays ranging from Shakespeare and other classics to melodramas with cheap appeals, but also operettas, minstrel shows, dime museums, Wild West shows, vaudeville, burlesque, Chautauqua, and other popular entertainments. There was something for every American social and economic level. Ethnic stereotypes abounded in legitimate comedy as well as on variety stages, while those who laughed at the immigrant “other” might themselves be fairly fresh off the boat and not yet entirely assimilated into the melting pot. Audiences in the early 20th century continued to enjoy ethnic or dialect comedy and cliché-ridden sentimental boy-gets-girl plays, and yet there was a gradual progression toward greater sophistication. By the time of World War I, European influences on drama and stagecraft were merging with the new American playwriting that the little theatre movement encouraged. The 1920s brought both high spirits and cynicism, silly situation comedies and the new realism of plays about war and divorce, experimentation with new forms and the Harlem Renaissance. That decade also confirmed that the United States had found its Great American Playwright, an artist whose coming had been anxiously anticipated ever since 1820, when the Scottish clergyman Sydney Smith xxxi
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posed his famous question: “In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book? or goes to an American play? or looks at an American picture or statue?” The remark galvanized Americans to find and promote artists who could gain international recognition. Certainly American actors like Charlotte Cushman, Edwin Booth, and many others included in this dictionary won over English audiences when they dared to play Shakespeare in London. But the American playwright who could win a nod from abroad proved more elusive. The one who finally did it, of course, was Eugene O’Neill, who began his upward trajectory in 1915, and who won three of his four Pulitzer Prizes during the 1920s. Out of this crucible that we call modernism, the Golden Age of American drama of the first half of the 20th century was born.
-/$%2.)3Defining modernism—and those dramatists and artists identified as modernists—is no simple task, for its seeds may be found as early as the Enlightenment and, despite the emergence of new trends labeled postmodernism in the late 20th century, modernist principles continue to influence theatrical endeavor and to coexist with what has risen in its wake. Modernism denotes an attitude that welcomes the creation of new forms, and these forms reflect a consciousness quite different from the aesthetics of the romantic and realistic writers who dominated literature and drama during the first three-quarters of the 19th century. Modernism in the theatre derives most directly from the “social problem” plays of the Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen. Although his plays, from A Doll’s House (1879) to Hedda Gabler (1890), retain traditional dramatic narrative structures, their content raises serious questions about the existing order of things, and thus they must be factored into the changing of general attitudes that characterizes social evolution. Those decades brought the added influence of naturalism, manifested in the theories of Emile Zola and stage innovations of André Antoine in Paris, followed by the Swedish dramatist August Strindberg’s excursions into aberrant psychology, which segued into the work of German expressionists in the 1910s. The concurrent embrace of abstraction in the graphic arts and sculpture opened the way for departures from familiar ways of presenting reality on stage. The watershed
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moment may have occurred on 10 December 1896, when the Irish poet William Butler Yeats attended the first performance of Alfred Jarry’s Ubu roi at the Théâtre de l’Oeuvre in Paris. In his autobiography, Yeats recalled the apprehension he had then felt for the future of art: “After us the Savage God.”1 The term “modernism” expanded to encompass a range of antirealistic developments, including symbolism, futurism, Dada, surrealism, and expressionism, as well as the scenic innovations of Adolph Appia, Edward Gordon Craig, and Joseph Urban. All sought to reject old forms and what Craig called a slavish dependence on “photographic realism” in theatrical production. During the 1910s and 1920s, the plays of Italian dramatist Luigi Pirandello used metatheatrical devices so that his theatre commented upon itself as theatre, exposing established conventions for reexamination. American playwrights in turn experimented with a variety of approaches ranging from conventional realism to various avant-gardes. There were, for example, poetic dramas by Josephine Preston Peabody and Edna St. Vincent Millay, folk dramas by Paul Green, politically driven dramas by John Howard Lawson, dream sequences, flashbacks, allegories, masks, and more. Elmer Rice’s plays encompassed the comedy-mystery-thriller Cock Robin, the symphonic naturalism of Street Scene, and the expressionism of The Adding Machine and The Subway. Eugene O’Neill, Channing Pollock, Sophie Treadwell, and others dabbled in expressionism as well as other nonrealistic forms. It is tricky to situate modernism in relation to realism in the theatre, for realism is a relative term. That is, what passes on stage for absolute fidelity to observable reality in one era might be seen by the next generation as laughably overblown gestures in an actor’s performance and artificial-looking, flat painted cut-out pieces in a scenic environment. Moreover, to mainstream audiences during much of this era, “realism” suggested something morally compromised or antithetical to the very idea of art as a celebration of the beautiful. Critic Austin Latchaw echoed the sentiments of many when he wrote, “Yet the theater always has been and still should be the land of make-believe. . . . If we insist that the theater shall be real life always, real life no matter how ugly, we have, I believe, lost something very precious, something that could and should make real life, ugly though at times it may be, more enjoyable or more endurable, according to the circumstances.”2 Nevertheless, we can discern a broad pattern during the modernist era: while acting
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moved away from making “points” toward greater psychological realism, production values moved away from pictorial literalism toward stylization and theatricality.
&2/- 0!'% 4/ 34!'% When theatre scholars look to the past, the play text serves as primary source material even as it remains a literary genre subject to critical reinterpretation. Playwrights and plays are very much at the heart of this historical dictionary. Directly or indirectly, much of the best dramatic writing of the modernist era was stimulated by George Pierce Baker’s 47 Workshop at Harvard University. While plays of substance transmit ideas that were in the air, even the shallow situation comedies convey a notion of what tickled our ancestors’ funny bones. The racial injustices that prompted Marita Bonner to write her expressionist The Purple Flower simmer through the piece’s mystery and power. Philip Barry’s plays humorously and poignantly expose the foibles of the long-ago rich and famous. Plays like Merton of the Movies, The Butter and Egg Man, June Moon, and The Royal Family by George S. Kaufman and various collaborators afford us glimpses of aspects of show business that exist no longer. The astonishing variety of plays in the modernist era seems beyond recapitulation, but at least the plays are still available to us as printed texts. The more ephemeral components of theatre can be understood only through secondary sources. This is especially the case with actors and actresses. The evolution away from lines of business (leading man, leading woman, heavy or villain, juvenile, eccentric, walking, utility, etc.) to casting for characterization opened the art of acting to individual qualities that often translated into star power. But star quality is ineffable. As Eleonora Duse often noted, the art of the actress is “writ on water.” The hypnotic effect of Edwin Booth’s liquid vowels and his piercingly expressive dark eyes that elicited both a melting sensation and a shivery thrill in the matinee girl is beyond our power to feel. All of the critical encomia for Pauline Lord as Amy in They Knew What They Wanted cannot completely transport us into the experience of watching her turn that vulgar waitress into a warmly vulnerable and sympathetic woman who made a mistake that could dash her dreams. The names that once held so much evocative power—Lotta Crabtree, Minnie Maddern
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Fiske, Joseph Jefferson III, Otis Skinner, and so many more—must now be tied to photographs, critical reviews, and memoirs. During the modernist era, directing came into its own as a distinct artistic contribution apart from the duties of the company manager. The evolution of the directorial function might be traced back to David Garrick in 18th-century England, followed by George II, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, who was sometimes signaled as the “father of modern directing,” in mid- to late-19th-century Europe. From the 1890s to the 1920s, André Antoine, Aurélien Lugné-Poë, Firmin Gémier, and Jacques Copeau brought the creative contribution of the director to bear in French theatre. In London, the first to establish himself as a director not tied to the tradition of the actor-manager was Fyodor (or Theodore) Fyodorovich Komissarzhevsky in 1919.3 Most importantly, beginning in 1900 in Berlin, Max Reinhardt demonstrated the power of a single creative mind to conceive and orchestrate all aspects of production. Americans who traveled to work with Reinhardt in Europe and brought back his influence included designer Robert Edmond Jones and manager Winthrop Ames. In 1907, Ames made a tour of European art theatres, keeping a meticulous record of his observations and drawing upon them in the productions he staged in New York in the 1910s. A. M. Palmer has been credited as the one who, as early as the 1870s in New York, separated artistic direction from the business management side of theatre.4 At the turn of the century, Ben Teal may have been the first American to be listed in the playbill as director rather than producer or manager. Other early directors in New York besides Ames and Teal were William Seymour, R. H. Burnside, and Eugene Presbrey. The era brought a number of stellar directors, including David Belasco, George Abbott, Jed Harris, Arthur Hopkins, Brock Pemberton, Antoinette Perry, and Eva Le Gallienne. Stage design also made important strides during the modernist era. During the decades following the Civil War, traveling companies still relied on basic stock settings to cover all scenic needs: a street with houses or shops, a forest, a grand interior, a humble interior, and a prison. If a company did not carry its own roll drops for those five scenes, most opera houses could provide wings and backdrops for that range of locales, if not more. With increasing ease of rail transportation in the 1880s, the best touring ensembles tended increasingly to travel with their own more specialized settings created for specific plays in the repertoire. Still, most first-class theatres employed a scenic artist who
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could paint a backdrop as needed when the occasion arose. The ten, twent,’ thirt’ melodramas required very specific scenic effects for their cheap thrills, and they would carry their own mechanical devices that could be adapted to the trap and fly systems of various sizes of theatres on the road. Whereas the touring repertory companies of the 1880s carried scenery for as many as four or five plays, the combinations went out from New York in the 1890s and after each formed a single-play package that was much easier to tour. With the gradual acceptance of psychological realism in the drama, box sets became standard settings with real doors, furniture, and props. Ironically, it was not long after the meticulously realistic box set replaced painted canvas wings and drops on the American stage that the Viennese designer Joseph Urban joined the Boston Opera Company in 1912 and inspired the return to painted scenery that was known in the United States as the New Stagecraft. The New Stagecraft’s stylized treatment of line and color was easily adapted to the limited production resources of the small, non-commercial or “little” theatres that proliferated after 1915.
4(% ,)44,% 4(%!42% -/6%-%.4 What Americans called the little theatre movement was somewhat similar to Europe’s independent theatre movement, which encompassed André Antoine’s Théâtre Libre (1887) in Paris, Otto Brahm’s Freie Buehne (1889) in Berlin, J. T. Grein’s Independent Theatre Society (1892) in London, William Butler Yeats and Lady Gregory’s Irish Literary Theatre (1897; later the Abbey Theatre) in Dublin, and Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko’s Moscow Art Theatre (1898). The basic premise was to provide a venue for worthwhile plays that would not be likely to get produced commercially. Other goals included experimentation with innovative production techniques, developing a subscription audience, and maintaining an artistic ensemble. These factors applied also in the United States, with the added important motive of developing new American playwrights and plays. One-act plays worked particularly well for these amateur theatre groups. American little theatres also shared many interests with college theatres, and there was some crossover, as in the case of Thomas H. Dickinson, who moved from teaching English at the University of Wisconsin to founding the Wisconsin Dramatic Society in 1909.
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It is usual to date the little theatre movement from 1915, because that was the year in which three trailblazing theatre groups got their start: Washington Square Players, Provincetown Players, and the Neighborhood Playhouse. However, there were antecedents, such as the amateur dramatics at Jane Addams’s Chicago settlement house, performing under the name Hull-House Players from 1897. Maurice Browne’s Chicago Little Theatre was regarded as an important pioneering effort, begun in 1912, the same year as Jessie Bonstelle’s Northampton Municipal Theatre and the Little Country Theatre in Fargo, North Dakota. Indeed, Lawrence Langner, founder of the Washington Square Players and later the Theatre Guild, wrote in his autobiography that Maurice Browne and his wife Ellen van Volkenburg were “the progenitors of the entire ‘Little Theatre’ movement in America, a movement which has since become a very important part of the fabric of American cultural life.”5 Influenced by Browne’s presentation of plays by Shaw, Strindberg, and Schnitzler, Langner led Washington Square Players and the Theatre Guild to produce a selection of contemporary foreign plays alongside the new American writing. Provincetown Players launched the careers of Eugene O’Neill and several women playwrights, including Susan Glaspell, Mabel Dodge, Louise Bryant, Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Neith Boyce. With its 1920 production of O’Neill’s The Emperor Jones, Provincetown Players set an important precedent in integrated casting, as African American actor Charles Gilpin played the leading role, supported by a white cast. The movement grew rapidly after 1915, with more than 50 theatres established by 1917.6 Among them were Cleveland Playhouse (1916), Detroit Arts and Crafts Theatre (1916), Pasadena Playhouse (1918), and Dallas Little Theatre (1920). Over the decades the vast network of American community theatres created a solid foundation for the rise of professional regional resident theatres in the 1960s.
4(% "53).%33 /&