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*EARLY AMERICAN THEATRE: BOWERY THEATRE RARE LARGE 1858 STAGE BROADSIDE*

$ 79.19

Availability: 41 in stock
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    Description

    A rare original large Bowery Theatre, New York broadside circa 1858 for Lady of Lyons and Double Bedded Room. Dimensions twenty two by eight and seven eighths inches. Edgewear, small tears and light creasing otherwise good.
    Shipping discounts for multiple purchases. Inquiries always welcome. Please visit my other eBay items for more early theatre, opera, film and historical autographs, photographs and programs and great actor and actress cabinet photos and CDV's.
    From Wikipedia:
    The
    Bowery Theatre
    was a playhouse on the
    Bowery
    in the
    Lower East Side
    of
    Manhattan
    ,
    New York City
    . Although it was founded by rich families to compete with the upscale
    Park Theatre
    , the Bowery saw its most successful period under the
    populist
    , pro-American management of
    Thomas Hamblin
    in the 1830s and 1840s. By the 1850s, the theatre came to cater to immigrant groups such as the
    Irish
    ,
    Germans
    , and
    Chinese
    . It burned down four times in 17 years, a fire in 1929 destroying it for good. Although the theatre's name changed several times (Thalia Theatre, Fay's Bowery Theatre, etc.), it was generally referred to as the "Bowery Theatre".
    By the mid-1820s, wealthy settler families in the new ward that was made fashionable by the opening of
    Lafayette Street
    , parallel to the Bowery, wanted easy access to fashionable high-class European drama, then only available at the
    Park Theatre
    . Under the leadership of Henry Astor, they formed the New York Association and bought the land where Astor's
    Bull's Head Tavern
    stood,
    [1]
    facing the neighborhood and occupying the area between Elizabeth,
    Canal
    (then called Walker), and Bayard streets.
    [2]
    They hired architect
    Ithiel Town
    to design the new venue.
    Some notable investors included Samuel Laurence Gouverneur, son-in-law to President
    James Monroe
    , and
    James Alexander Hamilton
    , son of
    Alexander Hamilton
    .
    [3]
    The new playhouse, with its
    Neoclassical
    design,
    [4]
    was more opulent than the Park, and it seated 3,500 people, making it the biggest theatre in the United States at the time.
    [5]
    Frances Trollope
    compared it to the Park Theatre as "superior in beauty; it is indeed as pretty a theatre as I ever entered, perfect as to size and proportion, elegantly decorated, and the scenery and machinery equal to any in London...."
    [6]
    The Bowery Theatre opened on 22 October 1826 under the name
    New York Theatre
    , with the comedy
    The Road to Ruin,
    by
    Thomas Holcroft
    , under the management of Charles A. Gilfert. New York Mayor
    Philip Hone
    spoke at the opening ceremony, imploring the theatre's intended upper-class audience: "It is therefore incumbent upon those whose standing in society enables them to control the opinions and direct the judgment of others, to encourage, by their countenance and support, a well-regulated theatre."
    [7]
    Its first few seasons were devoted to
    ballet
    ,
    opera
    , and high drama. The theatre was by this time quite fashionable, and the northward expansion of
    Manhattan
    gave the theatre access to a large patronage. The theatre burnt out in 1828, but was rebuilt behind the same facade and reopened under the name
    Bowery Theatre
    .
    [8]
    Gilfert's understanding of
    advertising
    was keen, but in 1829 the owners fired him.
    Hamblin's tenure
    The owners hired
    Thomas Hamblin
    and
    James H. Hackett
    in August 1830 to manage the theatre. A month later, Hackett left Hamblin in complete control. After the Bowery burned down later that year, Hamblin rebuilt. He then took the theatre in a decidedly different direction for what would be its most innovative and successful period.
    American theatres stratified in the
    Jacksonian Era
    , and the Bowery emerged as the home of
    American nativists
    and
    populist
    causes, placing it in direct contrast to the Park Theatre's cultivated image of traditional European high culture. This was partially the result of an anti-British theatre riot at the Park; Hamblin renamed the playhouse "the
    American Theatre, Bowery
    " in reaction. Hamblin hired unknown
    American
    actors and playwrights and allowed them to play for long runs of up to a month. Before 1843, early
    blackface
    performers such as
    George Washington Dixon
    and
    Thomas D. Rice
    played there frequently, and acts such as
    J. B. Booth
    ,
    Edwin Forrest
    ,
    Louisa Lane Drew
    , and
    Frank Chanfrau
    also gained renown on the Bowery's stage.
    George L. Fox
    and his
    pantomime
    became the most popular act at the Bowery until after the Civil War. Bowery productions also debuted or popularized a number of new character types, including the
    Bowery B'hoy
    , the
    Yankee
    , the
    Frontiersman
    , and the blackface Negro.
    The pro-Americanism of the Bowery's audience came to a head during the
    Farren Riots
    of 1834. Farren,
    [9]
    the Bowery's British-born
    stage manager
    , had reportedly made anti-American comments and fired an American actor. Protesters reacted by attacking the homes, businesses, and churches of
    abolitionists
    and blacks in New York City and then storming the theatre on 9 July. Farren apologized for his comments, and George Washington Dixon sang popular songs to quell the rioters.
    Hamblin defied conventions of theatre as high culture by booking productions that appealed to
    working-class
    patrons and by advertising them extensively according to Gilfert's model. Animal acts, blackface
    minstrel shows
    , and
    melodrama
    enjoyed the most frequent billings, and hybrid forms, such as melodramas about dogs saving their human masters, became unprecedented successes. Spectacular productions with advanced
    visual effects
    , including water and fire, featured prominently. Hamblin also innovated by using
    gas lighting
    in lieu of candles and kerosene lamps. The Bowery Theatre earned the nickname "The Slaughterhouse" for its low-class offerings, and terms like "Bowery melodrama" and "Bowery actors" were coined to characterize the new type of theatre.
    [10]
    In the spring of 1834, Hamblin began buying shares in the theatre from the New York Association; he had enough to control the enterprise completely within 18 months. By the time the Bowery burned again in September 1836, it was the most popular playhouse in New York City,
    [11]
    despite steep increases in competition (the
    Bowery Amphitheatre
    was right across the street). Visual spectacle had become such an integral part of its appeal that Hamblin claimed ,000 in wardrobe losses from the fire.
    [12]
    Hamblin bought out the remaining shares in the theatre and rented the site to W. E. Dinneford and
    Thomas Flynn
    , who rebuilt. When this interim Bowery burned down in February 1838, Hamblin replaced it with a bigger and more opulent structure, which opened in May 1839.
    Through Hamblin's actions, working-class theatre emerged as a form in its own right, and melodrama became the most popular form of American theatre. Low-class patrons such as
    Bowery b'hoys and g'hals
    predominated in the audience.
    The Spirit of the Times
    described the Bowery's patrons:

    By reasonable computation there were about 300 persons on the stage and wings alone—soldiers in fatigue dresses—officers with side arms—a few jolly tars, and a number of 'apple-munching urchins.' The scene was indescribably ludicrous. Booth played [Richard III] in his best style, and was really anxious to make a hit, but the confusion incidental to such a crowd on the stage, occasioned constant and most humorous interruptions. It was every thing or any thing, but a tragedy. In the scene with Lady Anne, a scene so much admired for its address, the gallery spectators amused themselves by throwing pennies and silver pieces on the stage, which occasioned an immense scramble among the boys, and they frequently ran between King Richard and Lady Anne, to snatch a stray copper. In the tent scene, so solemn and so impressive, several curious amateurs went up to the table, took up the crown, poised the heavy sword, and examined all the regalia with great care, while Richard was in agony from the terrible dream; and when the scene changed, discovering the ghosts of King Henry, Lady Anne and children, it was difficult to select them from the crowd who thrust their faces and persons among the Royal shadows.
    The Battle of Bosworth Field capped the climax—the audience mingled with the soldiers and raced across the stage, to the shouts of the people, the roll of the drums and the bellowing of the trumpets; and when the fight between Richard and Richmond came on, they made a ring round the combattants to see fair play, and kept them at if for nearly a quarter of an hour by "Shrewsberry clock."
    [13]

    Some sources even suggest that patrons engaged in sexual behavior in the lobbies and boxes.
    [14]
    Understandably, Hamblin was careful to remain in this crowd's good graces. For example, he regularly offered use of the Bowery Theatre for the annual firemen's ball. Only the
    Chatham Garden Theatre
    boasted a rowdier audience.
    [15]
    Profits were harder to come by in the 1840s, as more playhouses sprung up in New York. Hamblin staged more effects-driven melodrama and later increased bookings of circus acts, minstrel shows, and other variety entertainments. The Bowery burned down once more in April 1845.
    [16]
    This time, Hamblin had
    fire insurance
    , and he rebuilt with an eye toward appealing to a more upscale patronage and to staging more spectacular melodrama. The theatre now seated 4,000 and with a stage 126 feet (38 m) square, secured its place as one of the largest playhouses in the world.
    [5]
    The architect and builder of the new theatre was J. M. Trimble.
    [17]
    Hamblin left the management to A. W. Jackson, though Jackson and later managers largely upheld Hamblin's emphasis on melodrama and visual splendor. Hamblin died in January 1853, and the theatre remained in his family until 1867.
    Successful plays of Hamblin's tenure included:
    The Elephant of Siam and the Fire Fiend
    by
    Samuel Beazley
    , which featured the elephant
    Mademoiselle D'Jeck
    and ran for 18 consecutive performances in early 1831.
    [18]
    Mazeppa
    , Or, The Wild Horse of Ukraine
    , which debuted on July 22, 1833 and had 43 consecutive performances, an astounding feat for its time.
    [18]
    Nick of the Woods
    , adapted by Louisa Honor de Medina from the popular novel, debuted in February 1838, and reappeared after a theatre fire in May 1839 starring
    Joseph Proctor
    .
    Putnam, the Iron Son of '76
    by
    Nathaniel Bannister
    . This play debuted on August 5, 1844 and ran for 78 consecutive performances.
    [19]
    [20]
    Later management
    By the middle of the 19th century, immigrant groups, notably the
    Irish
    , began populating the Bowery neighborhood. They came to form a significant portion of the Bowery's audience, mostly in the low-price gallery section. In order to cater to them, the theatre offered plays by James Pilgrim and other Irish playwrights. Meanwhile, the Bowery emerged as the theatrical center for New York's
    Lower East Side
    .
    Germans Gustav Amberg,
    Heinrich Conried
    , and
    Mathilde Cottrelly
    converted the Bowery into the
    Thalia Theatre
    in 1879, offering primarily German theatre during their ownership. In 1891,
    Yiddish theatre
    became the predominant attraction. Italian
    vaudeville
    succeeded this, followed by Chinese vaudeville.
    In 1894,
    Maria Roda
    addressed a large rally at the Thalia Theater celebrating
    Emma Goldman
    's release from prison. Although Roda spoke in Italian and Goldman understood none of it, she was moved by Roda's charismatic presence. She wrote, "Maria's strange beauty and the music of her speech roused the whole assembly to tensest enthusiasm. Maria proved a veritable ray of sunlight to me." She then pledged to become Maria Roda's "teacher, friend, comrade."
    [21]
    "Fay's Bowery Theatre" burned down on 5 June 1929 under Chinese management and was never rebuilt.