Augustin Daly

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Daly, [John] Augustin (1838–99), producer, director, and playwright. The multi‐talented man of the theatre came from very nontheatrical origins. His father was a sea captain and his mother was a soldier's daughter. Daly's first exposure to the theatre was in Norfolk, Virginia, where his widowed mother had moved from their North Carolina home. After seeing James E. Murdoch play in Rookwood, he began to organize amateur theatricals. When the family's move to New York placed him closer to the theatrical mainstream, he took work at the Sunday Courier, soon becoming its drama critic. In 1862 he turned to playwriting, dramatizing S. H. von Mosenthal's Deborah as Leah, the Forsaken. First produced at the Boston Museum and brought to New York in January 1863, the play was an immediate hit. Several subsequent efforts were less successful, but in 1867 he wrote a largely original work, Under the Gaslight, which enjoyed widespread acclaim. Its sensational effects of an approaching railroad train and a man tied to the tracks in its path were widely copied. Two years later he leased the Fifth Avenue Theatre. His intention was to assemble the finest company and offer seasons mixing the best new works with revivals of the classics, although one of Daly's few faults was his insistence on rewriting even the most famous plays. “The old playwrights must have turned in their graves at his ruthlessness,” Otis Skinner observed. In a remarkable departure from accepted practice, he broke with the tradition of having each performer play only those roles in his or her “line.” Daly expected his artists to be able to switch from comic roles to serious ones and from heroes to villains. He annoyed some players by assigning them minor roles after they had played major ones. However, his plans succeeded famously, and within a short time his company was the only serious rival to Wallack's. Daly's tiny playhouse became known as the “parlor home of comedy.” One of his few disappointments was the reaction to most of the new American plays he offered. “American press writers,” he noted, “are proud of everything American except other American writers.”

When the Fifth Avenue Theatre burned in 1873, he quickly restored another old theatre, continuing until he temporarily retired in 1877. Among the plays he offered during this first period were London Assurance, Twelfth Night, As You Like It, Frou‐Frou, Fernande, Saratoga, Divorce, Article 47, The Fast Family, The School for Scandal, The Big Bonanza, Our Boys, and Pique. His company included Mrs. Gilbert, James Lewis, William Davidge, Charles Fisher, and several young ladies whose careers he promoted: Agnes Ethel, Fanny Morant, Fanny Davenport, and Clara Morris. During this time Daly attempted to operate other New York theatres, including the Grand Opera House, where he presented opéra bouffe and some musical spectacles. These proved burdensome and unpopular and were soon dropped. In 1879 he restored yet another old playhouse, renaming it after himself, and initiated what George Odell called “one of the most distinguished theatres in the history of the American stage.” Many of his former actors returned to his fold, including Mrs. Gilbert, Lewis, Davidge, Fisher, and the rising John Drew. For his leading lady, Daly enlisted Ada Rehan, who would become his finest and most beloved performer. Operettas and musical comedies were included in the repertory and, later, several London musical imports. The list of major hits this second company offered included Needles and Pins, Boys and Girls, 7‐20‐8, The Country Girl, Red Letter Nights, She Would and She Would Not, A Night Off, The Magistrate, The Taming of the Shrew, Dandy Dick, The Railroad of Love, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Lottery of Love, The Last Word, and Tennyson's The Foresters. Daly had sent out road companies of his earlier hit plays, but this second company he took as an ensemble not only across country, but on one visit to Germany, three visits to France, and numerous visits to England.

As playwright, Daly claimed credit for approximately one hundred plays, although virtually all his works were adapted from foreign pieces. Most of his sources were German or French, though he was not above rewriting Shakespeare and the 18th‐century English playwrights. Indeed, his modern editor, Catherine Sturtevant, suggests that so few of his plays are without known sources that it is not unreasonable to suppose we are merely ignorant of the models for his so‐called original plays. No source has been found for what many consider his finest work, Horizon (1871), a story set in the Wild West that recounted the adventures of a girl adopted by a villainous type after her father's murder. The hit plays Divorce (1871) and Pique (1875) were exceedingly free adaptations of novels. Modern research has revealed that many of the plays he took credit for were written largely by his brother Joseph. William Winter summed up Daly by noting, “He made the Theatre important, and he kept it worthy of the sympathy and support of the most refined taste and the best intellect of his time.” Biography: The Life of Augustin Daly, Joseph Francis Daly, 1917.

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Daly, Augustin, 1838-99, American theatrical manager and dramatist, b. Plymouth, N.C. After 1859 he was drama critic for several New York City newspapers and adapted many plays from French and German. In 1867 he made his debut as manager with his melodrama Under the Gaslight, and in 1869 he opened his first theater. At his famous Daly's Theatre on Broadway he presented noted productions of Shakespearean comedies. He was praised for his meticulous concern with details and hated for what his critics saw as his paternalistic handling of his company.

Bibliography

See biography by J. F. Daly (1917); M. Felheim, The Theatre of Augustin Daly (1956).

(1838-1899)

1863Leah, the Forsaken. The first theatrical success by one of the era's most prolific playwrights and producers is an adaptation of Salomon Herrmann von Mosenthal's German play Deborah. It concerns a Jewish woman in love with a Christian who betrays her and an apostate Jew's villainy. An advertisement for the play in James Joyce's Ulysses serves to remind Leopold Bloom of his Jewishness.
1867Under the Gaslight. Daly's first original play is a sensational melodrama featuring a climactic scene in which the heroine rescues the hero, who is tied to a railroad track as a train approaches. Possibly borrowed from the 1865 English drama The Engineer, the scene would become a staple of melodramas and early films.
1868A Flash of Lightning. The success of this melodrama, featuring a stirring climax aboard a burning steamboat, solidifies Daly's reputation as one of the era's preeminent dramatists and encourages him to form a permanent theatrical company in 1869, based at New York's Fifth Avenue Theatre.
1870Frou-Frou. Daly adapts a French play by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halevy about the sad end of a flirtatious young wife. It would be revised regularly during the nineteenth century, and the actress Sarah Bernhardt would perform in it on her American tour in 1880.
1871Divorce. The most successful play of the century explores divorce. Daly had borrowed his plot and characters from Anthony Trollope's novel He Knew He Was Right. A smash hit, the comedy runs simultaneously in Boston, Philadelphia, Buffalo, St. Louis, and New York, where it sets the performance record for a comedy at the time. It is the first play performed in Chicago after the great Chicago fire of 1871. Daly also creates the play Horizon, regarded by some as his best. This western drama, influenced by the contemporaneous Indian wars and by the fiction of Bret Harte, features a more complex characterization of Indians than was standard on stage at the time.
1875The Big Bonanza. Daly's comedy shows what happens when a professor is given $30,000 to invest successfully. Based on Gustav von Moser's German play Ultimo, it receives negative reviews but wins an audience and is performed until the end of the century. Daly also presents Pique, about an unhappily married couple brought together by the kidnapping of their child, a story that draws on a recent unsolved child kidnapping case.
1880Needles and Pins. Subtitled "A Comedy of the Present," Daly's play is a complicated marital drama involving a pushy mother who wants her weak son to marry a rich woman. Daly also presents The Last Word, a comedy about a young woman's defiance of her father's wishes in choosing a husband. It is one of Daly's last major successes.
18837-20-8; or, Casting the Boomerang. The title refers to a painting of a beautiful woman that compels a young man-about-town to seek the original. The play's success rescues Daly's company from bankruptcy.
1887The Railroad of Love. The title refers to the rapid pace of modern courtship, and Daly's comedy, one of his biggest successes, illustrates romantic complications in a high-speed society.
1888The Lottery of Love. Daly's adaptation of a French play takes aim at women's rights advocates in its depiction of a matriarch who makes life miserable for all concerned.


(1838–99) American director whose London theatre (Daly's) opened in 1893 with a performance of The Taming of the Shrew given by his company led by Ada Rehan , to whom much of his success was due. He took many liberties with the texts of Shakespeare, and Shaw wrote caustic reviews of his spectacular productions, but admired Ada Rehan , especially as Kate, in The Taming of the Shrew , and as Rosalind, in As You Like It . Shaw described Theseus’ panoramic passage from the forest to Athens as ‘more absurd than anything that occurs in the tragedy of Pyramus and Thisbe’.

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Augustin Daly

John Augustin Daly (July 20, 1838 – June 7, 1899) was an American theatrical manager and playwright active in both the US and UK.[1]

Contents

Biography

Daly was born in Plymouth, North Carolina and educated at Norfolk, Virginia, and in the public schools of New York City.

He was dramatic critic for several New York papers from 1859, and he adapted or wrote a number of plays, Under the Gaslight (1867) being his first success. In 1869 he became the manager of the Fifth Avenue Theatre on 24th St. and in 1873 the Fifth Avenue Theatre on 28th. In 1879 he built and opened Daly's Theatre at Broadway and 30th Street in New York, and, in 1893, Daly's Theatre in London.

At the first of these, he gathered a company of players, headed by Ada Rehan, which made for it a high reputation, and for them he adapted plays from foreign sources, and revived Shakespearean comedies in a manner before unknown in America. He took his entire company on tour, visiting England, Germany and France, and some of the best actors on the American stage have owed their training and first successes to him. Among these were Clara Morris, Sara Jewett, John Drew, Jr., Maurice Barrymore, Fanny Davenport, Agnes Ethel, Maude Adams, Mrs. Gilbert, Tyrone Power, Sr., Ada Dyas, Isadora Duncan and many others. Daly's willingness to, as he put it, "stoop to the curb and bestow upon the low, untried actor a chance at greatness" earned him the nickname "Little Man Auggie" among his peers. His play Leah the Forsaken, adapted from the Deborah of Hermann Salomon Mosenthal, was a star vehicle for Margaret Mather.

His Shakespeare productions were often severely criticized by George Bernard Shaw, who was active as a drama critic during those years. Shaw took Daly severely to task for cutting Shakespeare's plays and for presenting them in unorthodox ways, such as making Oberon, King of the Fairies, a woman in Daly's production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. (Shaw was a strong believer in presenting Shakespeare's plays uncut.) Several of Shaw's criticisms of Daly's Shakespeare productions were reprinted in the anthology Shaw on Shakespeare.[2]

Daly was a great book-lover, and his valuable library was dispersed by auction after his death, which occurred in Paris. Besides plays, original and adapted, he wrote Woffington: a Tribute to the Actress and the Woman (1888).

Notable works

Under the Gaslight (1867) is an example of Daly's mixture of realism and melodrama, seen in the authenticity of his depiction of real locations and in his use of social commentary.[3] The play is famous for introducing the cliched "thrill" device of having the villain tie someone to the railroad tracks—only in this case, it was the hero who was lashed to the tracks, and the heroine who ultimately saved him.[4]

A Flash of Lightning (1868), like Under the Gaslight, is pure melodrama, with water and fire spectacles providing action scenes and special effects for its eager audiences.[3]

Horizon (1871) is an adaptation of a Bret Harte story about the westward expansion of the States; it is an example of the popularity of western drama, coupled with Daly's interest in realism of the local color variety, although it remains melodramatic.[3]

Divorce (1871) and Pique (1875), both adaptations of British novels, demonstrate Daly's attempts to create social comedy, although the plays remain somewhat melodramatic.[3]

References

  1. ^ Daly, Joseph Francis (1917) The Life of Augustin Daly, Macmillan, New York
  2. ^ Amazon.com
  3. ^ a b c d Walter J. Meserve, An Outline History of American Drama, 2nd ed., 1994.
  4. ^ Under the Gaslight

Sources



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Frou-Frou (literature)
Frou-Frou (American theater)
William Morris (American Theater)
Charles J. Richman (American Theater)
Abram Joseph Ryan (literature)