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George Henry Boker

 
American Theater Guide: George Henry Boker

Boker, George Henry (1823–90), playwright. Born into a comfortable Philadelphia family, he was educated at Princeton and prepared for a career in law, but he elected to travel and write instead. After publishing a volume of poetry, he turned to drama, and his first play, Calaynos, a tale of Spanish‐Moorish animosities, was published in 1848, produced successfully in London without authorization in 1849, and mounted by James E. Murdoch in Philadelphia's Walnut Street Theatre in 1851. Boker's comedy in verse, The Betrothal (1850) in which the heroine is saved from an unwanted marriage to a wicked merchant, was played successfully in several cities, and his prose comedy The World a Mask (1851) had a brief run at the Walnut. His two most distinguished plays were Leonor de Guzman (1853), which told of the tragic rivalry between the heroine and Queen Maria of Castile, and Francesca da Rimini (1855), based on the Paolo and Francesca story in Dante's Inferno. Boker's last produced play was a melodrama, The Bankrupt (1855). His unproduced Königsmark was published in 1868 but not until Lawrence Barrett's acclaimed revival of Francesca da Rimini in 1882 did Boker again take up playwriting. His last two plays, Nydia and Glaucus, both derived from Bulwer‐Lytton's Last Days of Pompeii, were never produced. He continued to write poetry and served as Minister to Turkey (1871–75) and Minister to Russia (1875–78). One of his modern editors, Richard Moody, has observed, “American audiences of the nineteenth century had an insatiable taste for romantic tragedy, as is clearly demonstrated by the repeated performances of Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth and Lear, but only George Henry Boker, among the native and foreign dramatists, produced an original romantic tragedy of notable quality for them.” Biography: George Henry Boker: Poet and Patriot, Edward S. Bradley, 1927.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: George Henry Boker
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Boker, George Henry ('kər), 1823-90, American poet and playwright, b. Philadelphia, grad. Princeton, 1842. He is best remembered for his romantic and heroic tragedies, written in the manner of Elizabethan drama. The best of these were Leonor de Guzman (1853) and Francesca da Rimini (1855), based on the story of Francesca and Paolo. He also wrote a series of love sonnets.

Bibliography

See biography by E. S. Bradley (1927, repr. 1972).

Works: Works by George Henry Boker
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(1823-1890)

1848Calaynos. Audiences in London, Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, and Albany enjoy Boker's first play, a tragedy about a Spanish nobleman, Calaynos, whose wife is seduced by her husband's guileful friend, who reveals that Calaynos has Moorish ancestry. It is especially notable for its depiction of the racial issues between the Spanish and the Moors.
1850The Betrothal. A successful comedy set in Tuscany about the marchioness di Tiburzzi's attempt to marry her daughter to a wealthy merchant although the girl is in love with Count Juranio.
1853Lenor de Guzman. Considered among the best of Boker's tragedies, the genre for which he is best known, the play is set in Castile in 1350 and concerns a powerful figure in Spain, who is killed by the mother of the succeeding king after the death of King Alfonso XII.
1855Francesca da Rimini. Boker's masterpiece, which some scholars rank as the best nineteenth-century American play, is a verse tragedy based on the story of Paolo and Francesca from the fifth canto of Dante's Inferno.
1864Poems of the War. Boker's collection of Civil War verse prompts the Continental Monthly to declare that it is comprised of "truly national poems" and that the verse "should be read at every hearthstone in our land."

Wikipedia: George Henry Boker
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George Henry Boker

George Henry Boker (October 6, 1823 – January 2, 1890) was an American poet, playwright, and diplomat.

Contents

Youth

Boker was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His father was Charles S. Boker, a wealthy banker, whose financial expertness weathered the Girard National Bank through the panic years of 1838-40, and whose honour, impugned after his 1857 death, was defended many years later by his son in "The Book of the Dead." Charles Boker was also a director of the Mechanics National Bank.

George Henry Boker was brought up in an atmosphere of ease and refinement, receiving his preparatory education in private schools, and entering Princeton in 1840. While there he helped found, and was first editor of, the college literary magazine, the Nassau Monthly (now the Nassau Lit.

He was left in easy circumstances, and was able to devote his time to literature, as well as boxing and dancing.

Charles Godfrey Leland, a relative, recounted:

"As a mere schoolboy, Boker's knowledge of poetry was remarkable. I can remember that he even at nine years of age manifested that wonderful gift that caused him many years after to be characterized by some great actor--I think it was Forrest--as the best reader in America.... While at college ... Shakespeare and Byron were his favourites. He used to quiz me sometimes for my predilections for Wordsworth and Coleridge. We both loved Shelly passionately."

Boker graduated from Princeton in 1842. His marriage to Miss Julia Riggs, of Maryland, followed shortly after, while he was studying law, a profession which was to serve him in good stead during his diplomatic years, but which he gave up for the stronger pull of poetry.

Literary recognition

In 1848 his first volume of verse, "The Lessons of Life, and other Poems," was published.

Also, he met Bayard Taylor and Richard Henry Stoddard, who would be long-lasting friends. This group of young men supported and encouraged each other in the face of official journalistic criticism.

Launched in the literary life, Boker began to write assiduously. His first play, Calaynos, went into two editions during 1848, and the following year was played by Samuel Phelps at Sadler's Wells Theatre, London, May 10. This tragedy is notable for its depiction of the racial issues between the Spanish and the Moors.

This was soon followed by other plays. The next to be staged was a comedy, The Betrothal (1850). Two other tragedies from this time are Anne Boleyn (1850) and Leonor de Guzman (1853).

During this time, in correspondence with his friends, Boker was determining to himself the distinction between poetic and dramatic style. But Boker was not wholly wed to theatrical demands; he still approached the stage in the spirit of the poet who was torn between loyalty to poetic indirectness, and necessity for direct dialogue.

Francesca da Rimini, (1853) is the play he is most well-remembered for. It is a verse tragedy based on the story of Paolo and Francesca from the fifth canto of Dante's Inferno. Boker published the original version, called the reading version, but used an acting version for the stage which had more directness and dramatic flow. This allowed for a compromise between the poet of the reading version and the demands of the theatre.

The American Civil War not only turned Boker's pen to the Union Cause, but changed him politically from a Democrat to a staunch Republican. In fact, his name is closely interwoven with the rehabilitation of the Republican party in Philadelphia. His volume "Poems of the War," was issued in 1864.

In the 1860s, the Union League Club was founded, with Boker as the leading spirit; through his efforts the war earnestness of the city was concentrated here; from 1863-71 he served as its secretary; from 1879-84 as its President. But Boker's thoughts were also concerned with poetry. In 1869, Boker issued Königsmark, The Legend of the Hounds and other Poems, and this ended his dramatic career until his return from abroad.

Diplomatic activities

President Ulysses S. Grant sent Boker to Constantinople, as U.S. Minister (his appointment dated November 3, 1871)--an honour undoubtedly bestowed in recognition of his national service. Here he remained four years, "and during that time secured the redress for wrongs done American subjects by the Syrians, and successfully negotiated two treaties, one having reference to the extradition of criminals, and the other to the naturalization of subjects of little power in the dominions of the other."

Boker's initial enthusiasm for Turkish scenery and culture was unbounded, but after a time, his ignorance of the tongue, and distrust of interpreters, contributed to his frustration. By the time his Government was ready to transfer him to another post he was glad to leave Turkey. Despite this, he had developed his diplomatic skills and shown a talent for cultivating personal contacts.

In 1875 he was transferred to Russia, which was considered a more prestigious position.

The new political administration resulting from the 1876 American election viewed Boker unfavorably. Despite support from Emperor Alexander II of Russia, Boker was recalled in 1878.

Later years

On January 15, 1878, Boker withdrew from diplomatic life, returning to the United States. At this time he was depressed, feeling that both his literary and diplomatic careers had been failures.

In 1882 Lawrence Barrett mounted a revival of Francesca da Rimini. This brought more public interest in Boker and his other work, which necessitated the reprinting of several of his books.

His home in Philadelphia—one of the literary centres of the time,--bore traces of his Turkish stay—carpets brought from Constantinople, Arabic designs on the draperies, and rich Eastern colours in the tapestried chairs.

Boker was also a director of the Mechanics National Bank of Philadelphia for several years later in his life.

Boker died in Philadelphia, January 2, 1890.

In addition to the works already mentioned, Boker also wrote hundreds of sonnets. A collection of these, Sequence on Profane Love, was discovered in manuscript after his death, and published in 1927. He has been compared to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow as one of the premier American sonnet writers.

References

External links

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Wayne MacVeagh
United States Ambassador to Turkey
1871 – 1875
Succeeded by
Horace Maynard
Preceded by
Marshall Jewell
United States Ambassador to Russia
1875 – 1878
Succeeded by
Edwin W. Stoughton

 
 

 

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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
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "George Henry Boker" Read more