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Robert Montgomery Bird

 
American Theater Guide: Robert Montgomery Bird

Bird, Robert Montgomery (1806–54), playwright. Born into a well‐to‐do New Castle, Delaware, family, he lived with relatives when his father died and attended Germantown Academy and then the medical school at the University of Pennsylvania. He had often written poetry, but while at medical school or soon thereafter turned to playwriting. Such works as the farce News of the Night; or, A Trip to Niagara, the tragic romance The Cowled Lover, the Gothic horror piece Caridorf; or, The Avenger, and the comedy of manners 'Twas All for the Best; or, 'Tis a Notion, and The City Looking Glass: A Philadelphia Comedy were strongly influenced by classic writers of the past, but none were produced in his lifetime. In 1830 Bird submitted Pelopidas; or, The Fall of the Polemarchs to one of Edwin Forrest's playwriting contests and the drama about the Theban revolt against the Spartans won first prize but was not produced. The actor was far more receptive to the author's next play, The Gladiator (1831), which was an immediate success and remained one of Forrest's most popular offerings. In 1832 Forrest produced his Oralloossa, concerned with the assassination of Pizarro, and two years later mounted his best play, The Broker of Bogota. Bird also revised Metamora for the actor, but shortly thereafter had a falling out with him when Forrest refused to pay several thousand dollars due him. Discouraged, he abandoned the theatre and turned to writing novels, one of which, Nick of the Woods; or, The Jibbenainosay, was dramatized by Louisa Medina in 1838 and long remained a stage favorite. From 1841 to 1843 he taught at the Philadelphia Medical College and then became editor of the North American and United States Gazette. Arthur Hobson Quinn has written: “Had he lived in a time when the American playwright received fair treatment, it is not easy to put a limit to his possible achievements. For he had a rare sense of dramatic effect, a power to visualize historic scenes and characters, to seize the spirit of the past out of the mass of facts and, in a few lines, to fuse those facts into life.” Biography: The Life and Dramatic Works of Robert Montgomery Bird, Clement E. Foust, 1919.

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Biography: Robert Montgomery Bird
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Robert Montgomery Bird (1806-1854) was an American dramatist and novelist of true skill who gradually moved toward literary attitudes that foreshadowed late-19th-century realism.

Robert Montgomery Bird was born in New Castle, Del. His father died when the boy was 4. Bird attended medical school at the University of Pennsylvania, taking his degree in 1827 as part of a plan to restore the family fortunes. The family looked to him for support, but he had no real desire to practice medicine and he turned to literature, thus embracing a career that would be plagued by financial adversity.

At first Bird wrote only plays: romantic tragedies and comedies of Philadelphia life, such as The City Looking Glass (1828), and historical dramas, such as The Gladiator (1831), probably his most popular play. But the financial arrangements he made with Edwin Forrest, his producer, were based on a verbal understanding, not written contracts, and trouble resulted. Though Bird's plays were highly successful and his Oralloossa (1832) and The Broker of Bogota (1834) showed that his dramatic power was developing, he was not treated fairly by Forrest. The producer made a fortune but the playwright received only a pittance. Deeply discouraged, Bird gradually broke away from the theater.

Trying his hand at prose, Bird published Calavar; or, The Knight of the Conquests (1834) and followed it with a sequel, The Infidel; or, The Fall of Mexico (1835). These fictional accounts of the Spanish conquests gained the praise of historian William H. Prescott, but Bird earned little money from them. He next wrote The Hawks of Hawk-Hollow (1835), the story of the ruin of a prominent loyalist family in Pennsylvania during the Revolution. In 1836 Bird published Sheppard Lee, perhaps the earliest novel to employ psychological therapy as its central device.

Bird's finest novel, which is still widely read, was Nick of the Woods (1837). It foreshadowed realism in that it relentlessly presented Native Americans as the exact opposite of the "noble savage" of James Fenimore Cooper's novels. Bird's work aroused considerable commentary. Peter Pilgrim (1838) and Robin Day (1839) are interesting but minor efforts, probably because he was seriously ill at the time.

Bird taught at the Pennsylvania Medical Academy from 1841 to 1843, and in 1847 he became an editor of the Philadelphia North American, where he remained until his death in 1854.

Further Reading

A documented biography of Bird is Clement E. Foust, The Life and Dramatic Works of Robert Montgomery Bird (1919). Mary Mayor Bird, Life of Robert Montgomery Bird (1945), is a biography edited by C. Seymour Thompson from the unpublished notebooks of Bird's wife. A thorough treatment is Curtis Dahl, Robert Montgomery Bird (1963). For background see Arthur H. Quinn, A History of the American Drama from the Beginning to the Civil War (1923; 2d ed. 1943), and Alexander Cowie, The Rise of the American Novel (1948).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Robert Montgomery Bird
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Bird, Robert Montgomery, 1806-54, American playwright and novelist, b. New Castle, Del., M.D. Univ. of Pennsylvania, 1827. He wrote several prizewinning verse plays for the actor Edwin Forrest, notably The Gladiator (1831) and The Broker of Bogota (1834). A financial misunderstanding led to a break between the two friends, and Forrest refused to release the copyrights he claimed to hold for the plays. Bird then wrote prose fiction, publishing the first of his popular romances set in Mexico, Calavar (1834), followed by a sequel, The Infidel (1835). Nick of the Woods (1837), his most popular novel, drew on his travels through America. In contrast to James Fenimore Cooper, Bird depicted the Native American as violent and debased. His romances, although complicated in plot, are dramatic and contain vivid character portrayals.

Bibliography

See biography by his wife, M. M. Bird (1945).

Works: Works by Robert Montgomery Bird
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(1806-1854)

1828The City Looking Glass. The novelist and dramatist's first drama is a comedy of Philadelphia life notable for its characters Ravin and Ringfinger, early examples of big-city scoundrels.
1830Pelopidas. A historical drama concerning the Theban uprising against Sparta, based on Plutarch's account. Although never produced, the play won $1,000 from the actor Edwin Forrest, who was searching for tragedies to stage in the Northeast.
1831The Gladiator. Bird's most popular play. It stars Edwin Forrest as Spartacus, the leader of the first century b.c. Roman slave revolt, and achieves immediate success. Praising its contemporary relevance, Walt Whitman declared that it "was as full of 'abolitionism' as an egg is of meat."
1832Oralloossa. A tragedy set in Peru just after the Spanish conquest. Bird had thoroughly researched the period and created the character of Oralloossa, who leads a revolt against Pizarro but is betrayed by his own people in the end.
1834The Broker of Bogota. A domestic drama concerning an honest money lender, Baptista Febro, and his eldest and most beloved son, Ramon, who plots against his father in an attempt to steal from his vaults to win his beloved's hand. Febro is devastated when the truth is revealed in the end, and Ramon commits suicide. This work is Bird's most critically acclaimed drama.
1834Calavar; or, The Knight of the Conquest. A historical romance concerning the consequences of Cortez's conquest of the Aztecs. The work is praised by the historian William Hickling Prescott for its historical accuracy. Edgar Allan Poe's review in the Southern Literary Messenger notes its "fertility of the imagination rarely possessed by his compeers."
1835The Hawks of Hawks Hollow. A novel set in the years following the Revolutionary War. The romance recounts the fate of a Pennsylvania family torn apart by the conflict between American patriots and Tories. The well-received novel represents a shift in Bird's writing from romances of great historical periods to a domestic novel of contemporary times. Bird also publishes The Infidel; or, The Fall of Mexico, a sequel to Calavar (1834). The work is acclaimed by Poe in the Southern Literary Messenger.
1836Sheppard Lee. Bird's anonymously published novel deals with the popular idea of metempsychosis, or reincarnation. The cultural satire follows an unsatisfied farmer who undergoes a spiritual journey in which he overtakes the bodies of men he thinks live better lives than his own. Critically hailed, the novel deftly analyzes and comically portrays many disparate sectors of 1830s America, including the agrarian, political, and aristocratic ways of life in the North and the South.
1837Nick of the Woods; or, The Jibbenainosay. A novel set in Kentucky in the aftermath of the Revolutionary War concerns a man with a split personality who is mockingly known in some circles as "Brother Nathan," for his complete hatred for violence, but who is also revealed to be "Nick of the Woods," the much-feared Indian killer. It is considered Bird's best novel and was immensely popular in its time.
1838Peter Pilgrim; or, A Rambler's Recollections. A collection of magazine sketches notable for providing the first detailed description of Mammoth Cave and a vivid account of life on a Mississippi steamboat.

Wikipedia: Robert Montgomery Bird
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Robert Montgomery Bird
Occupation Novelist, playwright, photographer, physician
Nationality American

Robert Montgomery Bird (February 5, 1806 – January 23, 1854) was an American novelist, playwright, photographer, and physician.

Contents

Background

Bird was born in New Castle, Delaware on February 5, 1806.[1] After attending the New Castle Academy and Germantown Academy, he graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1824.[2] He began to write fiction during his time in medical school and by 1827 had published in the Philadelphia Monthly Magazine. [2] After graduating from medical school, Bird attempted to begin a medical practice but became discouraged after one year and left medicine to pursue a literary career.[2]

Career

In 1828, Bird's play Pelopidas won a $1000 prize offered by the actor Edwin Forrest, but was never produced. Instead, Bird wrote another play for Forrest, The Gladiator, which was produced in 1831.[3] Bird wrote several other plays for Forrest. Forrest had promised to pay Bird more for these plays if they proved successful. Though they were, Forrest refused to give Bird additional money; Bird's frustration with Forrest pushed him into writing novels.[1] These include Calavar (1834), The Infidel (1835), The Hawks of Hawk-Hollow (1835), Sheppard Lee (1836), Nick of the Woods (1837), and The Adventures of Robin Day (1839).[4]

Bird also pursued a number of other interests. In 1837, he began a career as a journalist, working as the Associate Editor for The American Monthly Magazine. He became the editor of the North American Magazine and United States Gazette in 1847. He also taught medicine at the Pennsylvania Medical College and ran for Congress in 1842 (an attempt which was later aborted).[5]

According to Christopher Looby, "Bird's biographers say that the intensity of these literary labors led to a breakdown of his health, possibly including a mental disorder, and that he retired to a farm on the Eastern Shore of Maryland in 1840 to restore himself." During the final years of his life, Bird was an active photographer.[6]

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Ehrlich, Eugene and Gorton Carruth. The Oxford Illustrated Literary Guide to the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982: 217. ISBN 0195031865
  2. ^ a b c Looby, xxii
  3. ^ Looby, xxiii
  4. ^ Looby, xxiii–xxiv
  5. ^ Looby, xxv
  6. ^ Looby, xxiv

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Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. 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 "Robert Montgomery Bird" Read more