Career
as a Public
Reader
Engraving of Anna Cora Mowatt, circa 1848
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Anna Cora Mowatt is known to Theatre and Literary
historians primarily as a playwright, an actress, and a writer of novels, short
stories, and her best-selling autobiography. She also has a rather formidable reputation
for her work as a public reader in 1841-42 in the field of Performance Studies.
Mowatt’s contributions to this discipline are all the more impressive when one
realizes that her career as a public reader lasted a grand total of only four
months. She performed around a dozen
times.
Despite the fact that this field did not exist in the
1840s, the discipline still claims Mowatt as one of its founding spirits for
her trailblazing work in the oral interpretation of literature. As author David
Thompson says of her in his collection of essays on the history of Performance
Studies;
Anna Cora Mowatt's one
season of readings in 1841-42 was a success for her and a new departure in the
history of interpretation in America. Before her, only a very few men had
occasionally given a professional reading, and almost no women had done so. 1
In his excellent book on the largely ignored history of
solo performers during the nineteenth century in the U.S., “Cast of One:
One-Person Shows from the Chautauqua platform to the Broadway Stage,” John
Gentile defines the lasting impact of Mowatt’s career as a Public Reader this
way;
The brevity of Mowatt’s solo career
does not diminish its significance in the history of the one-person show in
America. Anna Cora Mowatt — a lady from respectable society — had
dared to appear as a professional platform reader. Her audacity paved the way
for other women to follow. 2
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Later in his summary of her career, Gentile goes on to
praise Mowatt for her advocacy of the stage in a time of still-strong
anti-theatrical prejudice;
Anna Cora Mowatt was
ahead of her time both in her willingness to appear on the public platform as a
professional reader and, later, in her acceptance of the theatre as a
respectable form of entertainment. In both instances, the country followed her
lead. In relation to women on the platform, only a few years elapsed before
members of polite society of either gender appeared in public on the platform
without ridicule. In relation to the theatre as an accepted form of
entertainment, a longer period of time was necessary. Indeed, the prejudice
against the theatre did not relax for over half a century. 3
Before continuing, allow me to step back and once more underline
the extreme brevity of Mowatt’s career as a Public Reader by providing you with
this quote from David Thompson’s book that enumerates each of her appearances;
The total of eight New York
readings included four nights at Stuyvesant Institute beginning November 18,
1841, one at the Lyceum in Brooklyn on November 27, the Rutger's Institute for
Young Ladies on December 8, and two at the Society Library on January 12 and
13, 1842. Those eight readings, preceded by the three in Boston and one in
Providence, made up the dozen readings during 1841-42 which constituted Anna
Cora Mowatt's entire career as a public reader. 4
Being cited as an inspirational figure of an entire
movement in U.S. performance history for twelve shows is certainly maximizing
the legacy potential for her effort. Why did these dozen performances end up
having so much impact?
The Nature and
Importance of Public Reading in the U.S. in the 1840s
All this praise of this obscure form of performance
artistry may have you asking what exactly a public reader is. Remember that in the U.S. in the 1830s and
40s many conservative religious and reputation conscious individuals still
maintained deep reservations about the propriety of Theatre. Although stars like Charlotte Cushman and
Edwin Forrest were respected and admired by the theater-going public, the line
between badly-paid chorus girl and prostitute was not always bright and
clear. Police conducted raids to clean
up complaints of solicitation at even Broadway’s most upscale venues. There were laws on the books in some states
equating actors with vagrants and forbidding the building of playhouses inside
the city limits of major metropolises.
Mimesis, the act of pretending to be someone else -- the
very basis of all performance -- was viewed by some devout thinkers as a form
of lying. Acting, therefore, was always
at its very core a sinful activity that imperiled both the souls of actors and
audience in the minds of such individuals.
Add to this philosophical perspective the immense popularity of theatre
with the political enemies of the Puritans and other religious extremists
before they left (or were forcibly ejected from) Europe and I’m sure you can
start to appreciate the toxic mix of factors that led to the long-standing
accumulation of anti-theatrical prejudices that lingered from colonial days to
the mid-nineteenth century in U.S. public opinion. These negative views were
formalized into legislation in localities scattered throughout the eastern
seaboard that in some cases remained on the books until as late as the early
twentieth century.
During this time, there were also many “museums” such as
the one in New York operated by P.T. Barnum that produced plays and were
theaters in all but name. Dramas mounted
at such venues emphasized educational and family-friendly content. Public
readings were another example of a form of entertainment meant to palliate the
sensibilities of those who found theatre offensive. Although many of the most famous and
successful public readers were actors, what they were doing was not classified
by their fans as acting. Readers were interpreting.
Reading is a minimalist form of performance. The audience
was not
meant to be fully caught up in the illusion of mimesis. Auditors are always
supposed to retain awareness at some level of the real identity of the person
performing on the stage before them.
Readers did not costume themselves as characters. Performers generally wore formal contemporary
garb, frequently in dignified tones of black or grey. They usually did not use props or elaborate
staging. A reader almost always carried
a large book or a manuscript. Their only tools were their faces and their
voices. The emphasis of such a performance was on the quality of the literary
text and the power of the spoken word.
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Chronology of Mowatt’s Public Reading Career
An element that makes Mowatt’s experiences as a public
reader easy to research and therefore easy to ascribe to her credit– despite
the short duration of this endeavor, her lack of notoriety at the time, and the
obscurity of the art form -- is that there is a pleasingly ample amount of
surviving documentation for the historian to draw upon. Mowatt devoted a full chapter of her
autobiography to her experiences. She describes her motivations, lists her
preparations for performance, gives us frank evaluations of her own abilities,
summarizes critical response, and relays the reactions of friends and family to
seeing her on stage, as well as providing dramatic and detailed first-hand
accounts of selected performances. In
short, Mowatt goes into as great if not greater detail for her ephemeral career
as a public reader as she does for her highest triumphs on stage as an actress
or playwright.
Plenty of independent reports of her recitals exist to
corroborate the narrative Mowatt provides in her autobiography. Although she
was an unknown embarking on a self-funded slate of appearances, her tour was
well-publicized by the standards of the day. Reviews of the events appeared in
each city’s major newspapers. In
addition to ads stating the time, place, and giving a full list of the material
to be performed, notices such as the following heralded her arrival in Boston
in advance of her very first performance;
Mrs. Mowatt, who gives
Elocutionary Readings at the Temple tomorrow night, belongs to one of the most
distinguished families in the city of New York.
She is said to be accomplished and beautiful, and to possess remarkable
talents for recitation. 5
The above appeared in the Boston Evening Transcript, which regular readers of this blog will
recognize as the home of Mowatt’s friend and ally, Epes Sargent. A slightly more dubious tone is detectable in
the announcement from the Boston Courier
printed the next day;
Mrs. Mowatt gives a series of
readings and recitations this evening, at the Masonic Temple. This lady appears among us with strong
recommendations from persons of respectability and taste, at the South, and we
doubt not, will fulfil the expectations of her friends. 6
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Epes
Sargent IV, from a portrait by Chester Harding, circa 1840
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The last comment about “friends” makes it sound a bit as
if the writer suspects this self-funded affair by an unknown amateur has a good
chance of being a self-indulgent boondoggle.
As if to make up for this hint of cynicism, the following eloquently ebullient
recommendation instantly appeared in the Daily
Atlas;
Mrs.
Mowatt's ELOCUTIONARY Recitations. -- We ask attention of our readers to
the card of Mrs. Mowatt, in another column of this paper, proposing to give at
the Temple this evening, a series of elocutionary recitations. From the commendatory
references which this gifted lady brings from other cities, we feel no
hesitation in asking for her the favor and attention of our intelligent and
literary community. Mrs. Mowatt is a young, accomplished and beautiful lady,
and has been accustomed to the most polished society of the city of New York,
and has added much to this natural riches of a mind of a superior character, by
two years residence in France and Germany. “Her family,” writes a friend from
New York, “is of the highest respectability—both of her grandfathers having
been revolutionary generals, and one— (General Francis Lewis) a signer of our
Declaration of Independence.”
Another friend writes us: “Mrs.
Mowatt is favorably known to the reading public, by her well-timed
contributions to the literature to the day. She visits your city for the
purpose of delivering lectures on elocution, a task for which all those who
have had the pleasure of hearing Mrs. M's recitations, in the days of her
prosperity, at her own soirées and those of her friends, judge her to be
particularly well qualified.
We hope and believe, that a public
whose reputation for literary taste is so well established as that of this
city, will not fail to avail itself of the rich intellectual treat that is
offered by Mrs. Mowatt. 7
None of these items carry the name of their author. However, I will note that Epes Sargent was
also a contributor to the Daily Atlas
at this time.
Boston
With her novelist’s eye for detail and flair for the
dramatic, Mowatt gives us a moment-by-moment account of her first opening night
in Chapter VIII of her autobiography.
This narration is a rare example of a description of a Victorian-era
public reading from the performer’s point of view;
Two minutes more, and I was
within view of the audience. Mr. Mowatt led me to the foot of the rostrum, but
I ascended the steps alone. I remember curtseying slightly, half stunned by the
repeated rounds of applause, the blaze of light, the dense crowd of faces all
turned towards me. I sat down by the table that held my books, and mechanically
opened the one from which I was to read. I rose with it in my hand. Again came
the bursts of applause — the hall swam and then grew dark before me — I could
not see the book that I held open in my hand — my veins were filled with ice —
I seemed to myself transformed into a statue. Although I still stood, I could
not, for a few seconds, have been more unconscious in a state of complete
inanition.
The opening piece I had selected
was the introduction to Scott's Lay of the Last Minstrel, and the first words I
had to utter were, —
"The way was long, the wind was cold."
I could deliver the line
feelingly, indeed, for I was shivering violently, and weary and long seemed the
way I had just entered.
At length, in an uncertain voice,
I commenced to read. Long before I had half-finished the poem, my
self-possession returned — a genial warmth displaced the icy chill, my voice
grew loud and clear, and I found it easy to divest myself of all consciousness
of the audience. I began also to become accustomed to the applause which at
first oppressed and frightened me. I went through the various selections in
order, and without betraying any further emotion.
When half the entertainment was
over, there was an intermission of ten minutes, and I was at liberty to
withdraw into the retiring room. There I was greeted by a host of friends, all
loud in their congratulations, and a note from my faithful ally, Mrs. B__ s,
told me of the delight of her party, and assured me of my perfect success. 8
Despite an initial
attack of nerves, Mowatt felt she performed well. However, we do not have to take the word of
Anna Cora and her friends for the success of the evening. The recital was amply covered by the Boston
press. A correspondent from the Boston Post
described the performance as follows;
Mrs. Mowatt’s Readings.—The novelty
of Mrs. Mowatt’s attempt, and the high character given her by many of the most
distinguished citizens of New York, brought together a large audience at the
Temple last evening. But the partial opinions of private friends are so seldom
confirmed by the less forgiving public, that it would be difficult to say
whether hope or fear predominated among the many in the audience who wished her
success. When she presented herself to the audience, however, all doubts
vanished; her youth and beauty, and the modesty and grace of her demeanor won
all hearts, and she was greeted by an enthusiastic burst of applause. Her soft
and musical voice confirmed the favorable impression which her appearance had
made; the audience were completely carried away, and at the end of her first
recitation—the introduction to the lay of the Last Minstrel, the first portion
of which her diffidence rendered almost inaudible in the remote parts of the
house, she was honored with long continued applause. This cheered and animated
her, gave firmness to her voice and freedom to her gestures, so that each
succeeding piece seemed better than the last until all were concluded.
Vandenhoff, in the favorite
recitation of Lochinvar, never drew louder plaudits from his audience than Mrs.
Mowatt received last night. She had not, of course, the professional art of the
old actor, but she had youth, beauty, and a joyous archness of voice and face
which he had not, and which more than compensated. Lochinvar, Genevieve, and
the extract from Mr Sprague’s Centennial Ode, were the gems of the evening.
Each piece was prefaced by a few critical and explanatory remarks which were
happily and gracefully expressed, and gave a favorable idea of the fair
speaker’s mental powers.
Mrs Mowatt’s experiment was in all
respects successful, and we risk nothing in predicting that on Saturday evening
next, when she gives her second series of readings, there will not be a vacant
seat in the house. 9
This account, like Mowatt’s own, focuses more on the
interaction between the performer and her audience rather than providing an
exacting critical evaluation of her skills as a reader. The composition and mood of Mowatt’s audience
is also highlighted in the following short but effusive report from the Boston Transcript;
Mrs. Mowatt was greeted by a
large and fashionable audience at the Temple last evening, which she highly
delighted by her recitations. She is
young, brilliant and beautiful as a moonlight night, and possesses a voice
singularly musical, flexible, and firm. 10
This reporter, like most covering Mowatt’s reading, makes
special mention of her youth, beauty, and exceptional voice as positive aspects
of the performance that endeared her to audiences and made the evening
enjoyable.
Newspapers in New York and New Jersey also covered
Mowatt’s debut. The Newark Daily Advertiser provided the following meticulous
account;
Readings and Recitations— By a
Lady.—There was a large and highly respectable audience last evening at the
Masonic Temple, attracted by a desire to listen to the Readings and Recitations
of Mrs. Mowatt. The entertainment was a novel one in Boston, but many of those
who were disposed to regard such entertainments with an eye of favor, and who
listened to the reading of our lamented Simmons, and Vandenhoff, the tragedian,
were apprehensive that a young, and beautiful, and sensitive woman, could
hardly acquit herself satisfactorily in delivering choice extracts from the
most gifted English and American authors. But such fears vanished, as the lady,
arrayed in a neat and appropriate costume, gracefully stepped upon the
platform. She was of course kindly received by the audience.
When she commenced her
recitations, she exhibited embarrassment, arising from her novel situation; but
her diffidence soon disappeared, beneath the smiles and plaudits of a
discriminating audience; and her efforts to give satisfaction, were crowned
with complete success. Her movements were singularly graceful, and with her
expressive features, and musical voice, and superior intellect, chastened by
refinement and taste, she gave some fine passages from eminent authors with a
degree of beauty, propriety, and power, which we have seldom seen surpassed. It
is possible, that in some of those passages, where she expressed the emotion of
the human heart, her recitation may not have been so critically correct, as could have been expected from a teacher of
elocution, or a distinguished tragedian; indeed, it is impossible that such should
be the case. But on the other hand, she recited with a sweetness, and delicacy
and grace, which has probably never been equaled in this city, and which won
for her repeated and well-deserved tokens of approbation. The exquisite ballade
of "Lochinvar” and "Genevieve,” although essentially different in
their characters, when recited by Mrs. Mowatt, seemed to acquire new beauties:
and the audience listened to all her recitation with an interest so profound,
that the slightest noise could have been heard throughout the Hall. In a word, the recitations of Mrs. Mowatt were
completely successful—and her introductory remarks, relating to each subject
introduced, were of a character to add much to the value and attraction of the
entertainment. Her remarks relating to the writings of Mrs. Hemans were
particularly just and discriminating. Our readers will learn with pleasure that
Mrs. Mowatt will favor the public with another series of Readings and
Recitations tomorrow evening. 11
This report contains more specifics of the evening than
any other than Mowatt’s in “Autobiography of an Actress.” It tallies very closely with the actress’
narrative – including her initial attack of nerves and her modest mode of
dress. Mowatt describes her costuming decision;
I had resisted all entreaties to
wear any rich attire, and was dressed in simple white muslin, a white rose in
my bosom, and another in my hair. I wore no ornaments. 12
While not harshly critical, the reporter from the Daily Advertiser does not over-praise
the performer. The writer strongly
commends the charm of the speaker and is very complementary about the
surprising level of skill demonstrated by a previously unknown artist. At the same time, the reporter does give
potential listeners fair warning not to expect the sort of high polish they
would anticipate from an experienced elocutionist such as famed British actor,
John Vandenhoff
.
The following economically compact review of Mowatt’s
debut, written for the New York Times,
was reprinted in several papers in cities as far away as Alexandria, Virginia
and Chambersburg, Pennsylvania;
RECITATIONS BY A LADY.—A young
lady in Boston, Mrs. Mowatt, has commenced a series of recitations from the
poets -- a species of public entertainment highly refined. The Times thus speaks of her first appearance:
Mrs. Mowatt's first series of
recitations from the poets was attended by one of the most select audiences we
ever saw in the Temple. She succeeded admirably. She was listened to with the
greatest attention, and appeared to give unmixed pleasure. The lady is quite
young—we should not think more than twenty-two or three—and singularly
interesting and beautiful in appearance. The truly feminine grace with which
she went through her somewhat novel und difficult task—the free, forcible, and
natural expression she gave to the feelings and emotions she depicted, never
overstepping the modesty of nature and never falling short of truthful
delineation; the sweet, musical, and varied tones of her voice; her accurate
conception of the beauties of the authors from whose writings she recited,
elicited hearty and frequent applause.
Rarely have we attended an
entertainment which afforded more refined and intellectual pleasure. 13
Like similar items written for Boston papers, this
account first draws note to the fact that Mowatt’s audience was wealthy and
fashionable. The writer next highlights the performer’s youth and beauty. However, as in previous accounts, the
reporter is careful to strike a balance in commending Mowatt’s physical appeal
and emphasizing the extent to which the performance itself is decorous and
intellectual in nature.
Rather than just covering the opening night of Mowatt’s
readings and ignoring the rest of the run as would have been fairly standard
practice for most entertainments, there are reviews for three of the four
nights of her appearances in Boston. A correspondent from the Daily Atlas gave the following glowing
review of the second night;
Mrs. Mowatt’s Elocutionary
Readings at the Temple Thursday evening were pre-eminently successful. She was
greeted with a crowded house, and her readings and recitations were received
with mingled admiration and delight. All
who were unable to hear this gifted lady on Thursday, as well as those were
more fortunate, will be pleased to perceive that she will repeat her
performances this evening. Those who
wish to go must be in season, for the rush, we hazard nothing in predicting,
will be very great. Her performances are
truly wonderful, and those who do not improve the present opportunity to hear
her, will deeply regret their loss when it will be too late. 14
Coverage of her third performance from this source was
similarly enthusiastic;
Mrs. Mowatt’s third series of
elocutionary recitations at the Temple on Tuesday evening were by far the most
successful she has yet had, and it added very much to the regret of all that it
was her last. Her recitation of Holmes’s
“Katydid,” Scott’s Lochinvar and Blanche of Devon, and Campbell’s Soldier’s
Dream, were exquisite and faultless. 15
The following review, which appeared in the Boston Traveler on November 2,
corresponding with the third performance, went so far as to favorably compare
Mowatt’s delivery with that of John Vandenhoff – although the writer felt that
the performer’s gender necessitated the bar for quality being lowered
considerably;
Elocution:
Mrs. A.C. Mowatt – To recite another’s composition properly, is far more
difficult than to speak our own: to comprehend his meaning, to understand his
sentiment, to catch the spirit which dictated his verse, to identify one’s self
with the author, and delineate the character he had drawn, in declamation,
requires the simultaneous exercise of the entire faculties of the soul and the
functions of the body; -- hence the magnitude of the performance of the task
acceptably to the refined judgement of an audience in modern times. Appropriate articulation, tone, inflection,
modulation, cadence, and emphasis, in reading; graceful attitude, posture, and
gesture in action are the attributes which the speaker should constantly
display while he is before the spectators.
The general trait of the first is of capacity; of the second, paucity.
The former charms the ear, the latter fascinates the eye. Of the great Garrick it is said, “he used
action less than any other actor of the day; but it always had a meaning – it
always spoke: by being less than that of other actors it had the greater force.” So with the voice. The movement of Vandenhoff’s finger, or his
sweet pronunciation of a single sentence, would speak volumes. When, therefore, a man has acquired the above
skill in rhetoric, he is indeed to be encouraged. But if a lady has attained it, she should be
“applauded to the echo that applauds again.”
Need we remind the reader that the fair elocutionist, whose name heads
this notice, embodies and develops in her accomplished mind and beautiful person,
the foregoing elements of this divine art? Does he ask for evidence of these
statements? Her crowded and polished
assemblies, their alternate breathless silence and rapturous applause to her
recitations, are positive proofs of it. We ask all who have any taste, to go
and judge of our declarations. 16
This review, despite its gender-based prejudices so
strongly rooted in that time period, contains the highest praise of Mowatt’s
skill as a performer. Note also that the writer in this instance chooses to
discuss her mastery of technique before mentioning her beauty or fashionable
friends. I also wished to include this report because I felt the writer did an
excellent job of enumerating some of the finer points of the technique of
elocution most appreciated by its aficionados.
As the writer indicates, elocution was an art that at
this time was primarily the province of male practitioners. In the 1840s, there were very few female
elocutionists recognized for the excellence of their vocal interpretive work.
Charlotte Cushman and Fanny Kemble were rare examples of women praised by
critics as masters of elocution.
Despite reviews such as these, in her autobiography
Mowatt seemed to view the comments of the critics as indulgence rather than
earned praise;
The critics dealt with me
tenderly, as with a spoiled child whom Boston had suddenly adopted and was
determined to protect. The papers teemed with notices; but they were eulogiums,
not critiques. By common consent, it seemed to be decided that I was to be
exempt from criticism. 17
The positive buzz generated by Mowatt’s good reviews was
sufficient to inspire items like the following expressing interest in inviting
the performer to schedule readings in cities such as Salem, Massachusetts and
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Mrs. Mowatt, a lady of great
refinement and cultivation, is giving public recitations in New York. She is the wife of a merchant in unfortunate
circumstances, and is trying, by honorable means, to render herself a
“helpmate.” In Boston she had crowded houses, and doubtless, if she possesses
true merit, she would be appreciated in this city. 18
Items such as the above lead me to suspect that Mowatt
probably had plans in motion for a tour of cities of the northeastern U.S.
beyond a few isolated visits to New York and Boston. Utilizing the press to
create positive publicity in advance of their arrival in a city would become a
standard tactic for the Mowatts when Anna Cora became an actress. I would not
be surprised to find that the couple, aided by their friend, newspaperman Epes
Sargent, was already trying out this technique at this point.
Providence and New York
Whether or not there were plans being formulated for a
tour of the Northeast, Mowatt did have further readings scheduled in the
opening weeks of November, 1841. She
described her experiences in Providence, Rhode Island and New York City as
follows;
In passing through Providence, I
read one night to a crowded audience. During the recitation of the Missing
Ship, written for me by Epes Sargent, and descriptive of the loss of the
steamship President, a lady present was so deeply moved that she was carried
from the hall in violent hysterics. This poem proved one of the most valuable
in my repertoire, for it never failed to impress an audience. The Light of the
Lighthouse, by the same author, (which I afterwards frequently read in public,)
was equally effective in the recitation. I made my selections as often as
possible from American poets.
From Providence we went to New
York, and a course of readings for four nights was announced to take place at
the Stuyvesant Institute. Curiosity drew me full audiences; but I did not feel
as though Sympathy sat side by side with Curiosity, as she had done in Boston.
I found it more difficult to read impressively than I had done before my indulgent
New England audiences. The sphere seemed different, the recipients less
impressible. I could not feel the same easy abandon — the utter freedom from
constraint. I had too many personal friends constantly present, and I thought
too much of what the Mrs. Grundies were saying. 19
The only account I was able to find of Mowatt’s
appearance in Providence was a brief mention in the Brooklyn Star. 20 The reporter disappointingly does not
provide any confirmation of Mowatt’s tale of the lady who fainted in the middle
of the reading of Epes Sargent’s poem.
There are more fulsome accounts of Mowatt’s recitals at
the Stuyvesant Institute in November.
The following review, as Mowatt indicated, although positive, is more
reserved in its praise for the performer than had been the case for her
performances in Boston.
Mrs.
Mowatt’s Readings.—Mrs. Mowatt was welcomed to town by a highly
intelligent and immense audience, upon the occasion of her first evening’s
reading at the Stuyvesant Institute. Her success we regard as complete, and the
entertainment afforded well repaying all who were disposed to while away and
hour or two. Such entertainments are
capable of being made profitable to all who listen and not only in hearing some
of the best authors, but in the taste which may be acquired for reading, and
hearing read that which cannot but improve and instruct. Mrs. Mowatt has a good person, great delicacy
and refinement of manners, a sweet voice, and for the most part, as we think, a
proper conception of the author and subject.
The recitations from Scott – the
Introduction to the Lay of the Last Minstrel, and the Interview between Lord
Cranston and Margret of Brackstone (from the Lay of the Last Minstrel,) and
Lochinvar (from Marmion,) were spoken with spirit, emphasis, and great
effect. So also “the Merry Heart,” “the
Poet’s Lot,” and “The Missing Ship.” The
recitations from the Corsair were also good, but spoken too hastily, with too
much passion. We speak, however, but in
comparison with the recitations we have referred to, from Scott and
others. The introductory remarks of Mrs.
Mowatt to several pieces did not please us so much, for the reason that the
tone, and manner of the pieces recited were thrown into the remarks, and as if
they were poetry, instead of plain prose giving a brief and simple sketch of
the subject and the author. We are not,
however, disposed to be critical, much less hypercritical, with Mrs. M.’s
performances. We regard her success as
complete, and do not remember ever to have passed an hour with more pleasure
than we did on Saturday evening. As the best proof of it, and as the best
compliment we can bestow, we were more pleased with the author’s quoted from,
and the subjects spoken, than ever before. 21
Reviews, even positive ones like the above, contained
caveats like “spoken too hastily, with too much passion.”
After this round of readings, Mowatt became ill. Scheduled performances had to be cancelled.
In early December, though, Anna Cora rallied and was able to make a successful
appearance at Rutgers and two final appearances at New York’s Society
Library. She describes the experience as
follows;
After fulfilling the course at
the Stuyvesant Institute, I became seriously ill, and was forced to make
several postponements of the time announced for my reading before the Rutger's
Institute for Young Ladies. When I was scarcely convalescent, I read there one
night. The hall was filled with an assemblage of lovely-looking young girls,
and their evident enjoyment inspired me to read with more energy and feeling
than I had done since my nights in Boston. 22
The correspondent for New York’s Evening Post who attended one of the Society Library recitals seems
to agree with her positive assessment of the quality of her final performances;
This lady appeared on Wednesday
evening, for the first time after a month’s indisposition, and she far
surpassed all her previous performances.
She was not the reciter, but the poet herself. Conceiving anew all the Bard’s conceptions,
which gained additional force and brilliancy from her mind and feeling, and
portraying his passions and emotions with an intensity and vividness which
carries the coldest hearer captive.
Byron’s Dream was given in a manner perfectly new and original, and we
may add in one at least equal to any we have ever heard. The Brothers was a masterpiece; its closing
scene filled us with horror; the expression of intense terror and agony
depicted on the face of Mrs. Mowatt at the sight of the dead brother seemed
reflected on that of a large part of the audience; and the Missing Ship, by one
of our own poets, was electrifying; the Fall of Babylon, also by an American
poet, evinced a power and volume of voice which we would have pronounced it
impossible for so young and delicate looking a being to possess. We confess we
are not, in general, admirers of ladies who dare to mount the rostrum, and meet
the indiscriminate gaze of the public, but there is a quiet grace, a
self-possessed modesty in the appearance of Mrs. Mowatt, which silences the
voices of those who would pronounce her pursuit unfeminine; she never seems to
seek or expect applause; indeed the very modesty of her appearance, and her
abandonment to her subjects, are calculated to impress the audience with a fear
of disturbing her with clamorous applause.
The chief defect in the evening’s performance, was a hurried and
careless style of reading the introductory remarks, which are in themselves
worth hearing; and we hope that Mrs. Mowatt’s own taste will suggest to her the
propriety, on her next appearance, or dwelling a little longer on her comments,
and reading them in a tone which, at least, is audible to the audience. 23
After these readings, Mowatt became ill again and had to
cancel the rest of her scheduled engagements.
This illness spelled an end to her career as a public reader. Years later, after she became an actress,
Mowatt reported that sometimes when she was on tour with her acting partner
E.L. Davenport, she would give recitations.
When invited to do so in cities too new, too small, or too conservative
to support a theatre, Davenport and Mowatt would put together a non-theatrical
evening’s entertainment. Typically these
programs would consist of Davenport singing popular ballads and Mowatt
performing poems such as Epes Sargent’s “The Missing Ship” and other audience
favorites. The actress greatly favored
acting over reciting, though, reporting;
In Columbus we devoted another
night, and another in Montgomery, to readings, intermingled with Mr.
Davenport's ballad singing. I greatly preferred the theatre to the lecture
room, and resolutely refused all solicitation to give a course of readings. In
the lecture room I missed the friendly footlights, which form a barrier between
the real and the ideal. I longed for the illusion — the self-forgetfulness. On
the stage I was somebody else — in the lecture room I could not rise out of
myself. 24
Despite her lack of enthusiasm for the art, after her
retirement from the stage, Mowatt gave readings as part of her fund raising
efforts for the Mt. Vernon Society.
Mowatt did not rest on her laurels as an elocutionist,
but continued to refine her vocal technique throughout her career. She was tutored for many years by John
William Stanhope Hows, drama critic for the Albion,
and Professor of Elocution at Columbia. Her skill led to critical triumphs in
roles packed with dense, difficult language such as Thomas Talford’s “Ion” and
John Oxenford’s “Ariadne.”
Conclusion
Although extremely brief in duration, Anna Cora Mowatt’s
career as a public reader was one of the most significant career choices in her
lifetime. Her experiences as a performer
connected her to individuals who would open pathways for her literary and
acting careers. Her prowess at fine
elocution was one of the charming characteristics Mowatt brought to the stage
that would put her in the top tier of performers of her day.
Public reading is a Victoria-era art form that we have
lost much of the context to be able to appreciate today. While not universal, the ability to read is now
so general that I don’t think we can any longer experience the same sense of
urgency many Victorian-era opinion leaders in the U.S. connected to the need to
encourage enthusiasm for literacy in the general population. In the young nation, public readings were not
just a form of entertainment. In the minds of many of its advocates, this art
form was a type of cultural outreach project meant to instill a love of reading
and stimulate greater intellectual curiosity.
These recitals were way of democratizing learning.
Today we may find many problems with the ways in which
those opinion leaders of the 1800s defined culture and literature. However, for a young American woman like Anna
Cora Mowatt to have the courage to stand up in public and perform the important
task of disseminating culture and knowledge to the masses while attempting to
display as much poise and skill as a British man like John Vandenhoff still
must stand as a fairly audacious act.
According to my research, Mowatt was not the very first woman
in the U.S. to become a public reader as some of her biographers have
claimed. She was among the very early,
though. Although brief, the amount of publicity and serious critical note paid
to her tour of performances seemed to help encourage other women to follow her
lead. In her autobiography, Mowatt
reports;
My success gave rise to a host
of lady imitators, one of whom announced “Readings and Recitations in the Style
of Mrs. Mowatt." I was rather curious to get an idea of my own style, and,
had my health permitted, would have gone some distance to have seen it
illustrated. At one time there were no less than six advertisements in the
papers, of ladies giving readings in different parts of the Union. 25
Just as she had served as an advocate for theatre reform
during her career as an actress, Mowatt’s presence in the recital hall as a
young woman of unimpeachable character from a wealthy family lent a stamp of
respectability to her foray into this field of entertainment. However, it is
quite probable that Mowatt’s career as a public reader was too brief to have
been remembered had she not later become a well-known actress and written a
best-selling autobiography in which she described her experience in depth.
Not all of the reaction to Mowatt’s performances was positive,
though. In addition to all the glowing reviews, praise, good publicity, and
worshipful imitators who would journey down the trail she blazed, there was
also a rather cruel backlash to Anna Cora Mowatt’s step on to the recital hall
stage. In reaction to her daring to
venture outside the boundaries of what was considered appropriate public
behavior for her gender and position in society, there were negative critiques
from reviewers, nasty speculations about her motivations, hurtful snubs, and
painful rejections from friends and family. The harshness of this combined
public and private negative reaction would plunge Mowatt into a physical
decline and mental health crisis that eventually led to her emersion in the
strange and chaotic world of mesmerism.
Notes:
- Thompson, David. “Early Actress-Readers: Mowatt,
Kemble, and Cushman.” Performance of
Literature in Historical Perspective. David Thompson, ed. (Lanham, MD:
University Press of America, 1983.) Page 633.
- Gentile, John Samuel. Cast of One: One-Person Shows from the Chautauqua platform to the
Broadway Stage. (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1989.) Pages 26-27
- Ibid, 30.
- Thompson, David. “Early Actress-Readers: Mowatt,
Kemble, and Cushman.” Performance of
Literature in Historical Perspective. David Thompson, ed. (Lanham, MD:
University Press of America, 1983.) Page 632.
-
Boston
Evening Transcript, Oct. 27, 1841
- Boston
Courier, Oct. 28, 1841.
- “Mrs. Mowatt’s Elocutionary Recitations.” Daily Atlas, Oct. 28, 1841
- Mowatt, Anna
Cora. Autobiography of an Actress; or
Eight Years on the Stage. (Ticknor, Reed, and Field: Boston, 1854.) Page
149-150.
- “All Sorts of Paragraphs.” Boston Post. Friday, Oct. 29, 1841.
- Boston
Evening Transcript. Oct. 29, 1841.
- “Readings and Recitations – By a Lady.” Newark Daily Advertiser. November 1,
1841. Page 2.
-
Mowatt, page 148.
- “Recitations by a Lady.” Alexandria Gazette. Nov. 5, 1841.
- Daily
Atlas. Oct. 30. Page 2.
-
Daily
Atlas. Nov. 4. Page 2.
- A. “Elocution: Mrs. A.C. Mowatt.” The Boston Traveler. Nov. 2, 1841. Page
3.
- Mowatt, page 151.
- North
American. Nov. 13. Page 2.
- Mowatt, pages 152-153.
-
Brooklyn
Evening Star. Nov. 8, 1841, Page 2, Col. 4.
-
“Mrs. Mowatt’s Readings.” New York Morning Express. Dec. 8. Page 3.
-
Mowatt, page 153.
-
“Mrs. Mowatt’s Readings.” Evening Post. Jan. 13, 1842. Page 2.
-
Mowatt, pages 255-256.
- Ibid, 157.
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