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The Decline of a Shakespearean Tradition in Charleston, South Carolina, 1869–1900

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2009

Extract

The Academy of Music in Charleston, South Carolina, opened its doors in December 1869 to a public who, according to the local newspaper, “for the past four years … had been sighing for, writing for, combining for, and begging for–a first class Opera House and Theatre.” This first post-Civil War theatre in Charleston had inherited a theatre history dating back to as early as 1703, as well as an ardent and long-standing interest in Shakespearean playgoing which, despite the Civil War's devastating interruption, continued to be an essential part of the city's way of life for the next two decades. Because of its importance as both a literary and a drama centre before the Civil War, Charleston has already attracted the attention of several theatre historians, and numerous studies have been made of this city's brilliant antebellum stage. However, there were no records of Charleston's post-Civil War theatre until I undertook my study of the Academy of Music, the principal playhouse between 1869 and 1936—indeed, its only post-Civil War theatre except for approximately seven years between 1888 and 1893 when the Charleston Opera House offered sporadic entertainment. Particularly in the first three decades of the Academy of Music, the worlds of audience and stage seem to have coincided to a remarkable degree. Charleston's theatre years between 1869 and 1899 offer insights into the changing cultural attitudes and needs of an impoverished Southern city as its leaders struggled to meet the challenges of that difficult time. The best theatrical index to such cultural changes I have found is the degree of the Charlestonians' response to Shakespearean drama during these transitional years.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society for Theatre Research 1990

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References

1 Charleston Daily Courie, 7 September 1869. (This newspaper became the News and Courier on 5 April 1873.)

2 In 1703, Anthony Aston, a strolling actor from England, presented The Fool's Opera to “Charlestowne” inhabitants. This was the second recorded performance in America; the first was shown in Accomac County, East Virginia, in 1665 and was entitled Ye Beare and Ye Cubb.

3 Records of antebellum Charleston drama can be found in: Willis, Eola, The Charleston Stage in the XVIII Century, with Social Settings of the Time (Columbia, S.C.: The State Company, 1924)Google Scholar; Hoole, W. Stanley, The Ante-Bellum Charleston Theater (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1946)Google Scholar; Dormon, James H., Theater in the Antebellum South, 1815–1861 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1967)Google Scholar; Curtis, Mary Julia, “The Early Charleston Stage: 1703–1709,” Ph.D. dissertation, Indiana University, 1968Google Scholar; and in essays by Holbein, Woodrow L., “Shakespeare in Charleston, 1800–1860,” in Shakespeare in the South, ed. Kolin, Philip C. (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1983)Google Scholar, and Sara Nalley, “Shakespeare on the Charleston Stage, 1764–1799,“ ibid.

4 Reviews, articles, and announcements of performances at the Academy of Music come from the Charleston Daily Courier and the News and Courier.

5 Shillingsburg, Miriam J., “Simms's Reviews of Shakespeare on the Stage,” Tennessee Studies in Literature 16 (1971): 124Google Scholar. Simms wrote poetical addresses for the new management of the Charleston Theater in 1828 and for the opening of the New Charleston Theater in 1837.

6 The Charleston Daily Courier, 2 December 1869, prints Simms's long poetical address in full.

7 Shillingsburg, 121–35.

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28 News and Courier, 23 December 1885.

29 News and Courier, 17 October 1877; News and Courier, 15 January 1877; Charleston Daily Courier, 11 April 1872.

30 Charleston Daily Courier, 24 February 1873.

31 Theae records of Shakespearean performances come from Hoole, The Antebellum Charleston Theater, 109–28; and Holbein, “Shakespeare in Charleston, 1800–1860,” 88.

32 Overatreet, 2.

33 Faulkner, 179.

34 Harrison (note 24 above). This dissertation is a thorough study of all the theatrical activity at the Grand Opera House during this time period.

35 Overstreet, appendices of performances.

36 News and Courier reviews of 6 and 8 March 1889 remarked upon the small audiences at the Prescott/McLean productions of Romeo and Juliet and A Winter's Tale.

37 News and Courier, 27 October 1903.

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48 Simkins, 101. The University of South Carolina, according to Tillman, was an “institution [which] had more teachers than the number of its students justified.”

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55 Ibid., 3.

56 News and Courier, 23 January 1896.

57 News and Courier, 28 October 1903.

58 News and Courier, 23 February 1912.

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