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WILLIAM DUNLAP (1766-1839) Producer,
Playwright, Actor, Historian
The first historian of the American
stage, William Dunlap was a passionate lover of the arts, a gifted painter,
a tireless chronicler of his day and a writer of considerable charm. He
wrote or adapted more than sixty plays. While subsequent scholarship has
found a considerable number of innacuracies in his historical work, his
first hand account of the tragedian in Memoirs of George Frederick
Cooke (1813), his three volume History of the American Theatre
(1832), and his posthumously published diaries are invaluable primary
sources for any serious student of American Theatre.
Born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, February 19, 1766, Dunlap
was the son of an army office who had been wounded in Quebec. While he
had little formal education, he developed a love of Shakespeare and Pope
as well as a passion for history. When he was eleven, his family moved
to New York City where he attended the plays that were so popular with
the British Officers. The following year (1778), he lost the sight in
his right eye when it was injured by a piece of firewood. While the accident
put a stop to his formal schooling, such as it was, it didn't prevent
him from pursuing his interest in painting. In 1783 he had an opportunity
to paint a portrait of George Washington. The following year, he traveled
to London to study with Benjamin West .While there, he saw Sheridan's
The School for Scandal (one of Dunlap's more famous paintings is
of the screen scene) and The Rivals at Drury Lane, the company
at the Haymarket, the extraordinary acting of John Philip Kemble and Sarah
Siddons at Covent Garden and "all Shakespeare's acting plays."
When he returned to America in late 1787, he wrote a comedy
to which he gave the "mawkish title" (his own term) The Modest Soldier
or Love in New York. with "a Yankee servant, a travelled American,
an officer in the late revolutionary army, a fop, such as fops then were
in New-York, and old gentleman and his two daughters, one of course lively,
the other serious." It had been inspired by the success of The Contrast which
had created such a sensation at its premiere in April. He offered his
new play to Lewis Hallam and John
Henry for their old American Company,
but while they saw the merits of the play and praised him for them,
it had no part for Hallam or his wife and so the play was never produced.

His next effort, The Father, or American
Shandyism corrected that grievous fault, was produced at the John
Street Theatre (right) September 7, 1789 and was a resounding success,
playing seven nights, no small feat at the time. In the prologue of this
maiden effort, Dunlap spelled out his purpose and the aesthetic that was
to guide most of his best work: Dunlap sought to reform the stage so as to
make it respectable by pursuing the goals that would have pleased the
French Neoclassicists: "to teach and to please." His moral instruction is
set apart by it's strong patriotic bent:
The comick muse, pleas'd with her new abode, Steps forth in
sportive, tho in moral mode: Proud of her dwelling in our new
made nation She's set about a serious reformation For, faith,
she'd almost lost her reputation |
The eminent comedian Thomas Wignell (1753-1893) spoke this Prologue and
played Quiescent (or Tattle), the doctor, to great effect. This character
embodied the "moral mode" for it offered instruction in the form of satire
of the medical profession. Wignell must have had faith in the young playwright's
abilities because he asked him to write a play for his benefit. Dunlap provided him Darby's Return (left) in which
Wignell's character (taken from John O'Keefe's very popular comic opera
The Poor Soldier) returns to his native sod of Ireland and comments
on his peregrinations in America in good rustic fashion. The performance
on November 24, 1789 was attended by General Washington himself. Dunlap
tells us that when the general heard himself described as
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A man who'd fought to free the land from woe, Like me had left
his farm a-soldiering to go; But having gain'd his point, he had,
like me, Return'd his own potatoe ground to see. But there he
coun't rest; with one accord He's called to be a kind of--not a
lord; I don't know what; he'd not a great man, sure, For poor
men love him, just as he was poor! They love him like a father or
a brother. |
Darby appeared quite serious, but then, when Mrs. Morris in
the character of Katherine asked, "How look'd he, Darby? Was he short
or tall?" and Darby answered:
Why sure I didn't see him. To be sure, As I was looking hard
from out the door, I saw a man in regimentals fine All lace
and glitter, botherum and shine; And so I look'd at him till all
was gone, And then I found that he was not the
one, |
Washington "indulged in that which was with him extremely
rare, a hearty laugh."
Despite this success (or perhaps even because of it),
in 1791 Thomas Wignell split off from the American Company to form his
own company in Philadelphia. In 1792, he left for England to assemble
his new company. John Henry (right) of the American Company had gone to
England for reinforcements. He returned with a number of able players
including John Hodgkinson who was to
become more popular than either Henry or Hallam.
After the failure of his next offering The Miser's
Wedding (Said Dunlap in characteristic candor, "The piece was murdered
(it deserved death) and never heard of more."), he penned what Professor
Quinn describes as "a well-conceived if unrelieved tragedy." Originally
called The Fatal Deception or the Progress of Guilt, it was
published as Leicester in 1806. At its premiere in 1794, a benefit
for John Hodgkinson, Henry was played by Hodgkinson and Matilda by Mrs.
Melmoth, whom Dunlap describes as "the best tragic actress the inhabitants
of New York, then living, had ever seen..." The play owes a great deal to
Macbeth and even prompted a denial of plagiarism from the author.
But the play, replete with mad scenes and murders, shows Dunlap's early
command of easy, speakable dialogue and a pragmatic sensitivity to giving
actors plenty to do. There followed in 1795 another tragedy (so-called by
the author, though Prof. Quinn labels it a "gothic romance") for Mr.
Hodgkinson and Mrs. Melmoth called Fountainville Abbey, adapted
from Mrs. Radcliffe's novel Romance of the Forest. Though praised
by his contemporaries "in good set terms" and published by Longworth a few
years after, it held the stage for only a few performances.
The following year, Dunlap wrote an "opera in three acts"
with the "very bad title," The Archers, or Mountaineers of Switzerland
with music by Mr. Carr, the principle singer. The play dealt with
the legend of William Tell and starred Mr. Hodgkinson as Tell.
Before his next play, Hodgkinson asked him to buy half his share
in the old American Company at The Park Theatre(left), which was to become
the most successful house in the city for many years to come. Hallam and
Hodgkinson lured him with the promise that he would have the final say
as to which plays would be presented. Hallam would retain a half-share
with Hodgkinson and Dunlap splitting the remaining half. The articles
of agreement were signed in June. The first production under the new arrangement
on October 31, 1796, was another gothic romanceThe Mysterious Monk,
again starring Mr. Hodgkinson as Ribbemont and Mrs. Melmoth as the
Countess. It was published in 1803 as Ribbemont, or The Feudal Baron.
January 1797 saw the first on many of Dunlap's adaptations of foreign
plays, A. L. B. Robineau's Jérôme Pointu which he called
Tell Truth and Shame the Devil.
But the new management was to prove a stormy one. Almost at
once, there were bitter disagreements between Hallam and Hodgkinson over
casting; Mrs. Hallam, who had been "withdrawn" from the stage was actively
seeking her return; performances were disrupted; factions were forming
within the company. The dramatist, as he always refers to himself in his
History, was frequently caught in the middle. Hallam was to withdraw from
active participation in the company in May, 1797. Soon after, Dunlap and Hodgkinson took over the lease of The Park but, the
new building was not ready until January 29, 1798, so they leased the
Haymarket in Boston (right) for what proved to be a financially unsuccessful
run. Says Dunlap, "Mr. Hodgkinson's partner sent on money and advice:
the one was taken, the other rejected."
His best known adaptation was clearly The Stranger
based on Kotzebue's
Misanthropy and Repentance.
PLAYS WRITTEN, TRANSLATED OR ADAPTED BY WILLIAM DUNLAP:
The Modest Soldier, or Love in New York, a comedy
The Father of an Only Child, 1788, acted in New York
The Miser's Wedding
Darby's Return, an interlude
Lord Leicester, a tragedy
William Tell, or The Archers, a comic opera; score by Benjamin
Carr
Fountainville Abbey, a tragedy
Ribbemont, or The Feudal Baron, a tragedy
André, a tragedy
Tell Truth and Shame the Devil, a farce
The Natural Daughter, a comedy
The Stranger, a comedy based on Kotzebue's
Misanthropy and Repentance
Lovers' Vows, a comedy
Sterne's Maria, or the Vintage, an opera
Count Benyowsky, a tragi-c0medy
Italian Father, a comedy
False Shame, a comedy
Force of Calumny, a comedy
Wild Goose Chase, an opera
The Robbery, a drama
Fraternal Discord, a comedy
Abælino, Where is He?, a farce
The Voice of Nature, a drama
The Glory of Columbia, her Yeomanry, a play in five acts
Bonaparte in England, a farce
The Proverb, or Conceit can kill, Conceit can cure, a comedy
Lewis of Monte Blanco, a play in five acts
The Wife of Two Husbands
Peter the Great
The Blind Boy
Yankee Chronology, an interlude
The Soldier of '76
La Perouse
The Stranger's Birth Day
The Good Neighbour
Indians in England
The Merry Gardener, an opera
Battle of New Orleans
Forty and Twenty, a comedy
School for Soldiers
Rinaldo Rinaldini
The Flying Dutchman
Thirty Years, or the Life of a Gambler
A Trip to Niagara
The Knight of the Guadalquiver, an opera
Nina
The Knight's Adventure
Robespierre
The Africans
"and other pieces unpublished..."
Under Construction: Come Back Soon for more
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