Cover image for Strange Duets : Impresarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914.
Strange Duets : Impresarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914.
Title:
Strange Duets : Impresarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914.
Author:
Marra, Kim.
ISBN:
9781587297410
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (379 pages)
Series:
Studies Theatre Hist & Culture
Contents:
Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Premier Assertions -- Pioneering on the Theatrical Frontier: Augustin Daly's Early Ventures -- A Troubled Republic: Daly and His Leading Ladies -- Birds of a Feather: The Queer Theatrical Empire of Charles Frohman and Maude Adams -- Through Fairy and Fowl: Civilization by Sexual Inversion on Frohman's Imperial Stages -- A Priestly Acting Pedagogy:David Belasco's Quest for Sexual Knowledge -- Drilling Her in the Emotional Parts: David Belasco Trains Mrs. Leslie Carter for the Stage -- Imperial Expiations: Belasco's Othered Worlds -- Epilogue: Phantoms of Broadway -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
Autocratic male impresarios increasingly dominated the American stage between 1865 and 1914. Many rose from poor immigrant roots and built their own careers by making huge stars out of "undiscovered," Anglo-identified actresses. Reflecting the antics of self-made industrial empire-builders and independent, challenging New Women, these theatrical potentates and their protégées gained a level of wealth and celebrity comparable to that of Hollywood stars today. In her engaging and provocative Strange Duets, Kim Marra spotlights three passionate impresario-actress relationships of exceptional duration that encapsulated the social tensions of the day and strongly influenced the theatre of the twentieth century. Augustin Daly and Ada Rehan, Charles Frohman and Maude Adams, and David Belasco and Mrs. Leslie Carter reigned over "legitimate" Broadway theatre, the venue of greatest social cachet for the monied classes. Unlike impresarios and actresses in vaudeville and burlesque, they produced full-length spoken drama that involved special rigors of training and rehearsal to sustain a character's emotional "truth" as well as a high level of physical athleticism and endurance. Their efforts compelled fascination at a time when most people believed women's emotions were seated primarily in the reproductive organs and thus were fundamentally embodied and sexual in nature. While the impresario ostensibly exercised full control over his leading lady, showing fashionable audiences that the exciting but unruly New Woman could be both tamed and enjoyed, she acquired a power of her own that could bring him to his knees.Kim Marra combines methods of cultural, gender, and sexuality studies with theatre history to explore the vexed mutual dependency between these status-seeking Svengalis and their alternately willing and resistant leading ladies. She illuminates how

their on- and off-stage performances, highly charged in this Darwinian era with "racial" as well as gender, sexual, and class dynamics, tapped into the contradictory fantasies and aspirations of their audiences. Played out against a backdrop of enormous cultural and institutional transformation, the volatile romance of Daly and Rehan, closeted homosexuality of Frohman and Adams, and carnal expiations of Belasco and Carter produced strange duets indeed.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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