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  2. In the late 1990s and 2000s, American theater began to borrow from cinema and operas. For instance, Julie Taymor, director of The Lion King directed Die Zauberflöte at the Metropolitan Opera.

    • Overview
    • The American theatre
    • Popular entertainment

    The growth of the early American theatre owed more to its actors than to its dramatists. In the early decades of the 19th century, the finest English actors, notably Edmund Kean, William Charles Macready, and Charles Kemble, visited the United States and provided a stimulus for the local actors with whom they worked. Before long, the gesture was returned when such American actors as Edwin Booth, Edwin Forrest, and Charlotte Saunders Cushman appeared with some success on the London stage. Forrest, whose acting was characterized by muscular strength and great vocal power, was perhaps the first to popularize the virile outdoor image cultivated by many American actors ever since. His most famous role, Spartacus in Robert Bird’s Gladiator (1831), was specially written for him. The Booths were an eminent acting family: Junius Brutus Booth had acted with Edmund Kean, and his son Edwin with Irving, but they achieved notoriety when another son, John Wilkes Booth, assassinated Abraham Lincoln in 1865.

    By the middle of the 19th century, the number of theatres in the United States had multiplied. Many of them were based on English models and offered a high standard of comfort and luxury. Detailed historical accuracy in setting and costume first attracted attention in Charles Kean’s visiting production of Shakespeare’s King John (1846). The new box settings (three solid walls to suggest a room instead of the traditional side wings and backcloth arrangement) began to be used in Edwin Booth’s theatre from 1869, after which realistic staging became increasingly popular. This trend was stimulated by the introduction of gas lighting about 1825 and of electric lighting about 1885.

    Styles of acting also leaned increasingly toward realism as the century advanced. Joseph Jefferson, whose career spanned 71 years, was the leading comic actor of his day, best remembered in the title role of Dion Boucicault’s version of Rip Van Winkle in the 1860s. One of the great actress-managers was Louisa Lane Drew of Mrs. John Drew’s Arch Street Theatre Company in Philadelphia, who was famed for her frequently revived portrayal of Mrs. Malaprop in Sheridan’s Rivals. African American actors were rarely seen on the 19th-century stage except in segregated minstrel troupes and the short-lived African Grove Theatre in New York City. Black roles were instead usually played by white actors with black makeup, and the result was often shallow and stereotyped portrayals. One of the first playwrights to treat the African American seriously was Boucicault in The Octoroon (1859).

    After a surfeit of melodrama, a more distinctly American style of drama began to evolve through the work of Bronson Howard, whose first play, Saratoga (1870), helped to make him the first to earn his living solely by playwriting.

    The growth of the early American theatre owed more to its actors than to its dramatists. In the early decades of the 19th century, the finest English actors, notably Edmund Kean, William Charles Macready, and Charles Kemble, visited the United States and provided a stimulus for the local actors with whom they worked. Before long, the gesture was returned when such American actors as Edwin Booth, Edwin Forrest, and Charlotte Saunders Cushman appeared with some success on the London stage. Forrest, whose acting was characterized by muscular strength and great vocal power, was perhaps the first to popularize the virile outdoor image cultivated by many American actors ever since. His most famous role, Spartacus in Robert Bird’s Gladiator (1831), was specially written for him. The Booths were an eminent acting family: Junius Brutus Booth had acted with Edmund Kean, and his son Edwin with Irving, but they achieved notoriety when another son, John Wilkes Booth, assassinated Abraham Lincoln in 1865.

    By the middle of the 19th century, the number of theatres in the United States had multiplied. Many of them were based on English models and offered a high standard of comfort and luxury. Detailed historical accuracy in setting and costume first attracted attention in Charles Kean’s visiting production of Shakespeare’s King John (1846). The new box settings (three solid walls to suggest a room instead of the traditional side wings and backcloth arrangement) began to be used in Edwin Booth’s theatre from 1869, after which realistic staging became increasingly popular. This trend was stimulated by the introduction of gas lighting about 1825 and of electric lighting about 1885.

    Styles of acting also leaned increasingly toward realism as the century advanced. Joseph Jefferson, whose career spanned 71 years, was the leading comic actor of his day, best remembered in the title role of Dion Boucicault’s version of Rip Van Winkle in the 1860s. One of the great actress-managers was Louisa Lane Drew of Mrs. John Drew’s Arch Street Theatre Company in Philadelphia, who was famed for her frequently revived portrayal of Mrs. Malaprop in Sheridan’s Rivals. African American actors were rarely seen on the 19th-century stage except in segregated minstrel troupes and the short-lived African Grove Theatre in New York City. Black roles were instead usually played by white actors with black makeup, and the result was often shallow and stereotyped portrayals. One of the first playwrights to treat the African American seriously was Boucicault in The Octoroon (1859).

    After a surfeit of melodrama, a more distinctly American style of drama began to evolve through the work of Bronson Howard, whose first play, Saratoga (1870), helped to make him the first to earn his living solely by playwriting.

    Alongside the developments in “legitimate” theatre, the last decades of the 19th century saw the rise of several forms of popular entertainment that often reached much larger audiences and created a new range of star performers. In these traditions lay the seeds of the 20th century’s most popular theatrical genre, the musical comedy.

    One of the greatest showmen of the time was P.T. Barnum. Founder of the American notion of “show business,” he promoted melodrama, exhibited the midget Tom Thumb (Charles Stratton) in the United States and England, and finally merged with James A. Bailey in 1881 to form “The Greatest Show on Earth,” a three-ring circus, which was taken over in England by the Ringling Brothers after Barnum’s death. The American brand of spectacular entertainment achieved international fame through Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West shows, which featured a large cast of cowboys, “Indians,” and animals, as well as the famous sharp-shooter Annie Oakley. Another form that enjoyed enormous popularity in the United States and England throughout most of the century was the minstrel show, inspired by Thomas Darthmouth Rice. The performers were at first white men with black makeup, though, later, African Americans appeared in the shows. Sitting in a semicircle and playing banjos, tambourines, bones, and fiddles, they sang comic songs and sentimental ballads interspersed with soft-shoe dances and snatches of dialogue.

    By the 1880s the music hall was at the height of its popularity in England, with a proliferation of newly constructed halls all over London and in the main cities. As the audience widened from predominantly male working-class spectators to include middle-class men and women, the layout of the auditoriums changed. The old-style intimate halls with their drinking facilities and tables gave way to larger, more theatrelike buildings, one of the most luxurious of which was the London Pavilion. An evening’s bill could feature more than 20 different acts, including jugglers, acrobats, conjurers, ventriloquists, dancers, slapstick comedians, and singers ranging from vulgar to light classical. Two of the most famous performers of the 1880s were Marie Lloyd, who specialized in risqué songs, and the comedian Dan Leno, who, like many music-hall stars, made annual appearances in pantomime as well. Vesta Tilley, the male impersonator, created the character Burlington Bertie; Sir Harry Lauder was the finest Scottish comedian; Little Tich was famed for his short stature and elongated boots; Jules Léotard and Charles Blondin achieved international fame as acrobats; and Grock (original name Charles Adrien Wettach), the greatest clown after Grimaldi, played 20 instruments and delighted London audiences from 1903 until 1924. There was a similar form of entertainment in France, while in the United States vaudeville retained many of the features and acts of the English music hall. It was first presented in New York City in 1881 as an attempt to provide “clean” entertainment for respectable family audiences. By 1920 the music hall was in decline, unable to compete with the new forms of mass entertainment into which many of its performers were drifting—revue, musical comedy, film, radio, and, later, television.

    On a more sophisticated level, light opera was developing in Europe out of the German Singspiel and the French opéra-comique. Early examples were Jacques Offenbach’s classical burlesque, Orphée aux enfers (1858; Orpheus in the Underworld), Johann Strauss’s Die Fledermaus (1874; The Bat), and the satirical operas of Gilbert and Sullivan. These led to the romantic operettas of Victor Herbert in the United States and Franz Lehár in Austria. But it was Jerome Kern who in the early 20th century first developed a genuinely American sound from ballad and ragtime musical forms that helped to forge the particular identity of the American musical comedy.

  3. The Roots of American Theatre. The history of American theatre begins in the colonial era, long before the United States was a formed nation. Bringing a repertoire from England that included productions like Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Othello, the first American playhouse was started on the Palace Green in Williamsburg, Virginia by merchant ...

  4. From the start American theatre has been unique and diverse, reflecting society as America chased after its National identity. [106] The very first play performed, in 1752 in Williamsburg Virginia, was Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice." [107] Due to a temporary Puritan society, theatre was banned from 1774 until 1789. [108]

  5. The history of theatre in America dates as far back as the latter half of the 17th Century, when there is evidence of attempts being made to stage plays in some of the less Puritanical of the early American colonies.

  6. The first recorded performance of a play written by an American was in 1690 at Harvard College. The first permanent American theatre was built in Philadelphia in 1766; it was made of brick and imitated English buildings in arrangement and general architecture.

  7. Mar 28, 2008 · Summary. On 15 September 1752, in Williamsburg, the capital of Virginia, the first play performed in America by a fully professional company was presented. It was Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice; its Virginia Gazette advertisement ended with the formulaic phrase “Vivat Rex.”.

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