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Edward Loomis Davenport

 
American Theater Guide: Edward Loomis Davenport

Davenport, E[dward] L[oomis] (1815–77), actor. The son of a Boston innkeeper, Davenport made his debut in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1837, billed simply as Mr. E. Dee and playing opposite Junius Brutus Booth in A New Way to Pay Old Debts. His first New York appearance was as Frederick Fitzallen in He's Not A‐Miss, in a company led by Mrs. Henry Hunt (the future Mrs. John Drew). Davenport later demonstrated the range of his repertory by first playing Othello to F. B. Conway's Iago, followed by Hamlet, Claude Melnotte, Sir Giles Overreach, and William (in Black‐Eyed Susan), as well as creating the part of Lanciotto in Boker's Francesca da Rimini. His performances regularly won critical acclaim, but for some reason he was never able to earn the affection of playgoers. His fellow actors, however, admired his talents, and at one time or another he was welcomed into all the major ensembles of his day: Burton's, Wallack's, and Daly's. Much of the time he toured in a company headed by himself and his wife, the former Fanny [Elizabeth] Vining (1829–91), highlighted by his Brutus to Lawrence Barrett's Cassius in a celebrated mounting of Julius Caesar (1875) and Edgar to Barrett's Lear (1876), his final New York appearance. His farewell was as Dan'l Druce in Washington in 1877. Attempting to explain Davenport's lack of popularity with the public, George Odell suggested, “Perhaps his versatility, his finish, his lack of sensational clap‐trap, militated against him with a people that admired the physical vigour of Forrest and the electrical effects of the elder Booth.” Whatever his failings, he fathered a large theatrical family. Four of his children attained some distinction in the theatre, most notably Fanny Davenport. His younger daughter, May Davenport (1856–1927), was an important member of the companies at the Chestnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia, Daly's, and the Boston Museum. His son Edgar L[ongfellow] (1862–1918) played at both the Chestnut and the Walnut Street in Philadelphia, toured as leading man with Kate Claxton and McKee Rankin, and was long a major actor at the Boston Museum. A younger son, Harry [George Bryant] (1866–1949), first gained fame as Sir Joseph Porter in the celebrated 1879 children's company of H. M. S. Pinafore and later became a popular leading man in both straight plays and musical comedies, creating the leading man's role of Harry Brown in The Belle of New York (1897). He was one of the earliest important performers to leave the stage for a career in silent films, though he continued to return to theatre as late as 1935. Biography: Edward Loomis Davenport, Edwin Francis, 1901.

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E. L. Davenport

Edward Loomis Davenport (18161 September 1877) was an American actor.

Born in Boston, he made his first appearance on the stage in Providence, Rhode Island in support of Junius Brutus Booth. Afterwards he went to England, where he supported Mrs. Anna Cora Mowatt (Ritchie) (1819–1870), William Charles Macready and others. In 1854 he was again in the United States, appearing in Shakespearian plays and in dramatizations of Dickens's novels. As Bill Sikes he was especially successful, and his Sir Giles Overreach and Brutus were also greatly admired. He died in Canton, Pennsylvania.

In 1849 he had married Fanny Vining (Mrs. Charles Gill) (d. 1891), an English actress also in Mrs. Mowatts company. Their son Harry Davenport (1866–1949) and daughter Fanny Davenport (1850–1898) were also actors.


 
 

 

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American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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