The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater

SHAKESPEARE IN AMERICAN

The plays of William Shakespeare (1564-1616) were frequently produced in North America from the earliest settlements by Europeans. Before American independence and well into the 19th century, English troupes, or British-trained actors, included Shakespeare's plays centrally in their repertories. The first performance of Shakespeare in New York is believed to have beenRichard III, staged in 1750 by Thomas Kean, but he used Colley Cibber's bowdlerization of Shakespeare for his text. Resistance to English players in America came to a violent head in the Astor Place riot in 1849, pitting supporters of rivals William Charles Macready, an English actor, and Edwin Forrest, America's greatest tragedian to date, against each other.African Americans made their first theatrical inroads when the African Grove Theatre launched careers for black Shakespeareans James Hewlett and Ira Aldridge. By the mid-19th century,Edwin Boothemerged as the premiere American Shakespearean, scoring a major triumph with hisHamlet, which ran for 100 consecutive performances in 1865. Shakespeare was central to the repertoires of Booth and other touring stars:Thomas W. Keene, Lawrence Barrett, Frederick Warde, Louis James, Marie Wainwright, E. L. Davenport, Emma Waller,John McCullough, andHelena Modjeska. As European immigrants poured into New York beginning in the 1890s, foreign-language productions of Shakespeare were frequently seen, including notableYiddish theatreperformances byJacob AdlerinThe Merchant of VeniceandKing Lear.
In the first decade of the 20th century,E. H. SothernandJulia Marlowerevived interest in Shakespeare on the road with their elaborately staged productions, from their 1904 triumph inRomeo and Julietuntil the 1920s.Charles Coburnand his wifeIvah Willsperformed virtually the entire Shakespearean canon on tour with their company. Modern European staging techniques began to have an impact on Shakespearean production in the United States with English director Harley Granville Barker's innovativeA Midsummer Night's Dreamin 1916 and others, but theNew Stagecrafttriumphed in the Arthur Hopkins-Robert Edmond Jones collaborations onRichard III(1920) andHamlet(1922), starringJohn Barrymore, whom many critics considered to be the greatest Hamlet since Booth.