The Great White Way
Broadway is the street in New York that has come to symbolize
live theater entertainment throughout the world. Today the
area, known to tourists and theater-goers, stretches from
W.41st Street, where the Nederlander Theater is located, up
to W. 53rd Street's Broadway Theater. Only four theaters are
located physically on Broadway, the Marquis at 46th Street,
the Palace at 47th Street, the Winter Garden at 50th Street
and the Broadway at 53rd. All the other legitimate houses are
located east or west of this twelve block stretch.
This was not always the case. In 1810, if you wandered up
Broadway, north from the Battery, towards the villages of
Greenwich or Harlem farther to the north of the common pasture,
Sheep's Meadow; past Wall St. and Maiden Lane, at City Hall
Park you would have passed The beautiful Park Theater on Park
Row. A second theater, "The Bowery", was built in 1821, on
the Bowery, of course, and the migration of "mid-town" towards
the north was well under way. The 19th Century saw the de-
velopment of American theater throughout the country. It also
saw the development of the all powerful "Syndicate", which
was a cartel of the owners of regional theaters who joined
forces under the influence of one of Broadway's early great
producers. Though often at odds with the Puritan morality
that underwrote the founding of the new nation, theater was
the only mass entertainment of the day.
European actors were imported and America soon produced its
own stars and companies. In 1821, Junius Brutus Booth came
from Drury Lane to perform, and established, with his sons,
Junius Jr., Edwin and John Wilkes, the first of the great
acting families of the American Stage. When the renowned actor
John Drew's sister, Georgina met and married Maurice Barrymore,
yet another family of Broadway "aristocrats" was established.
Because America was a land of freshly arriving immigrants,
most theater was imported from Europe. Plays and operettas
were deeply entrenched in a heavy style soon to be identified
as "Victorian". The great American playwrights didn't appear
until the 1920's, and most plays were formula contrivances
of morality with young maidens, Dapper Dan heroes and the
required shady evil villain who was always hissed and booed.
The style of acting of the day would be considered "over
the top", or at least, greatly exaggerated and emotionally
filled nonsense today. There was a common cry against that
particular form of "emoting" from both actors and critics
of the caliber of Edgar Allan Poe. It wasn't until the 20th
Century that that style of acting began to wane and the
century old argument for realism on the stage began to
overtake the Victorian style.
Shakespeare's plays managed for the most part to escape this
Victorian "emoting". They were performed from the earliest
days of American theater as part of the repertoire brought
by English actors. The first British actor of record is
George Fredrick Cook, who accepted an American engagement in
1796. He died in New York in 1812, and his remains were
deposited in a "stranger's crypt" until 1821, when a fellow
British actor, Edmond Kean, had them removed to the church-
yard and sponsored a memorial to be built over them. There is
a legend that not all of Mr. Cook was removed to the church-
yard however, and that Mr. Cook returned to the stage later
in the century in the role of Yorick.
The nature of theatergoers of the period can be attested by
the results of Kean's second tour of the U.S. in 1825.
The play was, Richard III, and Kean was driven from
the stage by eggs and rotten fruit. The actor escaped, but
the riot that followed wrecked the interior of the Park Theater.
By the 1830's America was exporting "stars" to Europe. The
first notable American actor to make a successful tour was
Edwin Forrest, who, at nineteen, had played Iago to Edmond
Kean's Othello. Forrest's second tour of Great Britain, in
the following decade didn't fare as well. He was hissed off
stage. Though the disruption of his tour was a personal
feud with a British actor, its results were well publicized
in the American Press and his return to the American stage
was received with populist fervor. This "personal feud"
became an international incident and demonstration of class
struggle in 1849, when the British actor in question was
scheduled to perform at the Astor Place Opera House in New
York. A riot ensued on the night of May 10th which was put
down with troops and cannon.
In 1852, Uncle Tom's Cabin was the novel of the day,
with 300,000 copies in print. It was a highly inflammatory
novel and was soon turned into a highly inflammatory play.
In August of that year, the first adaptation (with a newly
devised happy ending) appeared at the National Theater.
Though raged against by the press as, "an insult to the
south", and a vehicle that would, "poison the minds of our
youth with the pestilential principles of abolition", it ran
well and was revived a few times during the season. In
the following year, at the same theater, another production
was mounted which followed the original story line. The cast
was led by a five-year-old child prodigy, Miss Cordelia
Howard, and included most of her family. The play was an
instant success and a great part of that must be attributed
to the child star. The National Theater and Uncle
Tom's Cabin provided Broadway with its first matinee
performances, and the child appeared in 12 performances a
week. So much for 19th Century Child Welfare laws.
In the same year, another controversial play arrived on the
]American scene. In 1853, Miss Jean Davenport adapted and
starred in Camille, or, the Fate of a Coquette, the
Dumas drama which had received lauds from the Parisian aud-
iences the year before. Knowing the mind of America, Miss
Davenport had altered the story line such, that one critic
reported that, "divested of all the immoral, objectionable
features", it was, "an entertainment of virtuous instruction."
Miss Davenport's wasn't the only well received production of
Camille. Other performers also produced their versions
after copious changes to the story line, but there were
always pockets of objection to the moral tone of the play.
In 1857, Miss Matilda Heron presented her adaptation on
Broadway. Having seen a production in Paris, Miss Heron
changed nothing. La Dame aux Camelias presented
to Broadway a production with "startling realism in acting",
and a "problem play of contemporary 'real life'." Miss
Heron and company were greeted with standing ovations.
Why were there so many "adaptations"? It was common for
an actor or producer to write dramatizations of popular
works or re-write scenes of plays to show-case the performer
or merely refit the part to the available casting. Along
with Miss Davenport's there were several other "sanitized"
versions of Camille being presented during this
decade. America didn't always rate high in world literacy
tests, and the stage brought a good part of the population
its introduction to books and authors. The first copyright
law protecting playwrights wasn't passed until 1856. It
gave the playwright sole right, "to print, publish, or
perform, or represent the same". It was rather difficult
to enforce, though it was a start, and provided a means
for demanding royalties. Still, it was largely ignored,
and the "dramatization" of literature went on.
In 1851, Junius Booth refused to appear on Broadway feigning
illness. He sent as his stand-in, his eighteen-year-old son,
Edwin. The performance was applauded, and a new star was in
ascendancy. He returned to Broadway as a star in his own
right in 1857. He had made a name as an example of the new
"realism" on stage. Unlike Forrest (after whom, he was named)
and the generation that preceded him, Booth didn't "stand and
deliver" his lines, but moved on the stage and with,
"intonation, gesture, and posture", he introduced to theater-
goers, "a nervous embodiment of all the passions." The style
brought unanimous praise from his audiences and critics alike.
In 1860, Forrest, who was nearly 60, and Booth dueled it out
on Broadway. Forrest at Niblo's Garden, and Booth at the
Winter Garden were giving the audiences two interpretations
of the same roles. It seems that Booth was winning. The
Civil War disrupted this and Booth went to England. He
studied theater in England and France and returned to the
fray in 1863. After a year of personal tragedy, Booth
mounted a production of Julius Caesar in the Winter
Garden on November 25, 1864. Edwin played Brutus, His brother,
Junius Jr. played Cassius, and brother John played Mark Anthony.
It was the only time they were ever to act together.
On April 14, 1865, John Wilkes Booth found another way to make
headlines at the Ford Theater in Washington, D.C.. The assassination
of Lincoln brought Edwin Booth under suspicion as well
and sent him into instant retirement. It only lasted a year.
His contribution to the Broadway we know was not complete. The
audiences who attended his return were adamant is showing their
support and belief in his innocence and welcomed him joyously.
In 1869, Booth opened his own theater on 23rd and Sixth Ave.
It cost a million to build and amazed audiences with the effects
that were possible with the latest designs in stage equipment.
But Broadway (and technology) being what it is, the stir soon
abated. The theater failed under bad management and was razed
a few years later.
Plays had always had an orchestra to entertain theatergoers
while entering the theater and during intermission, and while
Vaudeville and Burlesque had its share of musical performers,
the Broadway Musical is purely an American art form.
While many consider 1927's Showboat as the first
great book musical, the use of drama, dance, and music in
one production all happened quite by accident and over seventy
years earlier.
In 1866, a Parisian ballet troupe was imported to perform at
the Academy of Music. The theater burned to the ground before
the show could be staged, stranding the performers and
financially draining the show's producers. They, in turn,
went to another impresario, William Wheatley, manager of
Niblo's Garden, who was preparing a melodrama called
The Black Crook. Niblo's Garden, on Broadway and Prince
Street, was a palatial theater by the day's standards. Built
in the early 1840's, it became famous for producing small
dramas and comedies interspersed with "musical entertainments".
Wheatley decided to turn The Black Crook into a musical
extravaganza. For the first time ever, audiences saw a drama;
were entertained by an orchestra, and saw a hundred gypsies
kicking up their heels. When it opened, it shocked, outraged
and totally delighted American audiences, and a new, totally
American art form, the Broadway Musical, had been created.
The Black Crook had a run of 16 months, and grossed
over 1 million dollars. A witness to this nightly event was
a young boy who sold programs to patrons in the audience:
his name... Charles Frohman.
In 1870, another Broadway institution was established. In
December of that year, actor George Holland died. British
by birth, he had debuted here in 1827 at The Bowery Theater.
After a long career that lasted into his eighties he had
recently retired. When approached for the arrangements
for the funeral, the Church of the Atonement refused to
conduct the services of an "actor". The Rector told
actor, producer, and theater owner, Joseph Jefferson,
who was representing the family, that there was a little
church around the corner. Jefferson is quoted as saying,
"Thank God for the Little Church Around the Corner." The
Church of the Transformation on 29th and Fifth Ave. aka,
"The Little Church Around the Corner", has been identified
with the theater profession ever since. One can visit the
church today and note the stained glass windows that depict
actors rather than saints.
In the years that followed, several other institutions
familiar to Broadway fans appeared. The Lamb's Club was
established to be the American equivalent of Garrick's Club,
the British arena that gave actors the ability to meet
"gentlemen and patrons of the drama on equal terms". Edwin
Forrest had bequeathed his home and an endowment to house
aging and indigent actors and actresses. And In 1882, the
combined efforts of Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, and Lester
Wallack resulted in the Actors Fund of America. For almost
a century, this organization supported itself through benefit
performances.
The final contribution Edwin Booth made to the Broadway we are
familiar with came in 1888. Booth had purchased a townhouse
facing Grammercy Park. He had it refurbished by the architect
Stanford White and reserving top floor for himself, he established
The Players on the lower floors. In 1888, the property became
legally the property of The Player's Club. Membership was
open not only to actors, but also to any member of the arts
and their patrons.
The Park Theater that had stood on 24th St. just West of
Broadway burned. Two brothers bought the space and financed
a new theater on the site. It opened in 1880. Its
magnificent interior was further enhanced by greater
technology than had been used by Booth, including a double
stage with elevator mechanics. Madison Square Theater
became the best known theater in the country, and not only
for the mechanical stage. The brothers, one of whom was
ordained, were editors of, The Churchman. A major
blow was struck in the long intellectual debate over the
morality of the theater in general and actors and actresses
particularly. The Madison Square Theater was the creation
and enterprise of unquestionably moral men. Employees of
this new theater included David Belasco and Daniel and Charles
Frohman.
Behind the scenes of this show-business world, long before
unions or Equity, was the all powerful Syndicate. Nineteenth
Century theater was based on stars or companies with a
repertoire of programs who would perform until they ran
out of material or audiences, and then move on to the next
theater. Entrepreneurs succeeded by building strings of theaters
and booking companies to travel their "circuit". To insure
profitable circuits for his productions nation-wide, in 1896,
producer Charles Frohman invited the owners and managers of
the country's theater chains to a conference. The result was
the "Syndicate", under the leadership of Abraham Lincoln
Erlinger, a booking magnate who dominated the south. The power
was vast, as the Syndicate controlled the bookings of theaters
all across the country. Erlinger booked everything from
actors to playwrights and without an association with the
Syndicate, it was difficult or impossible to book a show or
find employment as an actor. There were those who were
opposed to the Syndicate, especially the Shubert Brothers
who went into competition with the Syndicate. It eventually
became a war with the Syndicate being crushed by the Shubert
empire. Erlinger and his group were interested in only one
thing, and that was money. Others, especially the Shuberts,
had an interest in serving the arts as well as the box office.
Vaudeville and its low brow comic cousin, Burlesque, also
played a major role in entertainment at this time. Unlike
a Broadway musical or play with a script to follow, Vaudeville
was a series of acts presented by comics, singers, acrobats and
other performers. The Palace Theatre is the first thing that
comes to mind when one thinks of Vaudeville, but that
wasn't built until 1913 and Vaudeville was alive and
well long before the Palace opened its doors.
The "act" was held sacred by the Vaudevillians and
these performers toured the country perfecting their
act on the circuits hoping to make the big time. Similar
to the booking offices of Broadway, the Keith organization
dominated the bookings all over the country right up
until the time when Vaudeville began to die. Talking
motion pictures became Vaudeville's kiss of death, and the
replacement for low priced mass entertainment. Still,
Vaudeville was extremely popular entertainment and its growth
ran parallel to that of Broadway plays and musicals in
the next decade.
In the world of burlesque, the clownish Weber and Fields
performed their buffoonery in their Music Hall at 29th Street.
What is most interesting about their act was that they were
the first to lampoon Broadway shows, very much similar
to the Gerard Alessandro's Forbidden Broadway series
of the 1980's and 1990's. As it is now, it was considered
an honor to be a recipient of such lampoonery. However,
the Music Hall closed in 1904 as audience taste was
beginning to favor the more respected Vaudeville houses
and Broadway plays and musicals.
In 1891, the first electric marquis was lit on Broadway. The theater
was on Madison Square at the intersection of Broadway and Fifth Avenue at W.
23rd Street. The Flatiron Building now occupies the site.
By midway through the following decade, the street blazed with electric
signs as each theater announced its shows and stars in white lights. By the
turn of the 20th Century the street had an entirely different look, with as
many as sixteen theaters on Broadway itself and many others located on the
side streets or other avenues. Broadway was much more than a mere twelve
blocks. It started at 13th Street and wound its way a mile and a half up
the Avenue to 45th Street, ending in the heart of Longacre Square. This
first decade of the century also saw the construction of many theaters, most
notably the New Amsterdam on 42nd Street in 1903, along with four others in
that same year, that are still standing today.
Longacre Square had the first moving electric signs, and it was when the
Times Building was erected in 1904 that Longacre Square ceased to exist. It
was now known as Times Square. And because of the magnificent illumination
of the Avenue and the Square, Broadway had been christened "The Great White
Way".
In the 1900-1901 season there were seventy plays or musicals
being produced on Broadway. It was the beginning of the boom,
and the decades that followed saw that number quadruple. In
addition, there were seven Vaudeville houses and six Burlesque
theaters presenting their shows to a theater thirsty population of
just over three and a half-million inhabitants.
Join us each month as we take a look at Broadway, decade
by decade.
Next: 1900-1910: Give My Regards to Broadway
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