Ada Rehan

Ada Rehan

Ada Rehan in 1897
Born Delia Crehan
(1857-04-22)April 22, 1857
County Limerick, Ireland
Died January 9, 1916(1916-01-09) (aged 56)
New York City
Nationality American
Occupation Actress

Ada Rehan (April 22, 1857 - January 8, 1916) was an Irish born American actress known as one of the great comediennes of her day, and typifying the "personality" style of acting in the nineteenth century.

Early Life and Career

She was born Delia Crehan in County Limerick, Ireland. When she was five years old her family emigrated to the United States and settled in Brooklyn, NY. Her date of birth was later disputed by a critic who wrote in the Boston Globe on November 24, 1888, when she should have been 29, "Ada Rehan is forty years old and over. She makes up fairly for girlish roles ... but at close sight in the cold light of day she shows her age."[1] Many of Ada's family found work in the theater. Her older sister Kate preceded her onto the stage, and married fellow actor Oliver Doud Byron. Eventually Kate and Oliver's son, Arthur Byron, also became an actor. A second sister, Harriet, also had a long (but inconspicuous) career on the stage as Hattie Russell. Her two brothers William and Arthur were involved with the business side of theatre.[1]

Ada's first performance was in Newark, New Jersey in a play called Across the Continent, written by her brother-in-law, in which she filled in for an actress in a minor role who was sick and unable to go on. Her appearance was competent enough that her family decided she should continue pursuing a career in the theater. It was in her next performance, with Mrs. John Drew's Arch Street Theatre of Philadelphia, that she was misbilled as Ada C. Rehan and the name stuck. Ada then went to Louisville to join the stock company of Macauley's Theatre, where she remained one season (1875–6).[1] Subsequently, she appeared in Baltimore, Albany, and other cities with John W. Albaugh's company and played supporting roles alongside prominent actors like Edwin Booth and John Edward McCullough.[2]

Rehan's autograph on a theatre poster
Ada Rehan

Fame and Augustin Daly

Rehan was performing in one of Daly's own plays, Pique, produced by New York's Grand Opera House and starring Fanny Davenport when the successful theater manager Augustin Daly first took note of her in April 1879. Later that year when he opened his third New York theatre, Daly's Fifth Avenue Theatre, Rehan joined his company.[3] Rehan would continue to work with Daly until his death twenty years later, but their relationship, though marked by enormous professional success for both, was a turbulent one.

Rehan was part of Daly's company known as the "Big Four." John Drew, Jr., Mrs. Ann Hartley Gilbert, and James Lewis made the rest of the group. Under Daly's meticulous direction and management, the foursome won over critics and audiences with their specialties of Shakespearean comedies, Restoration comedies, and translations of German farces. In general the four leads playied variations on the same character types. Drew and Rehan were slotted in to the romantic hero and heroine roles, while Lewis and Gilbert took the older, character roles. As one reporter at the Herald described it, "They have one way of playing comedy at Daly's and only one. Whether the piece be Sheridan's or Shakespeare's or Schonthan's or Jerome's, the actors are always good, bright, middle-class Americans." [4] And none was more appealing than Rehan. While finding much success in "breeches roles", for her audiences in America and abroad she came to embody an ideal of femininity that was desirable, respectable, and aspirational. In his biography of her, one of Rehan's contemporaries, William Winter wrote, "Each part that she has undertaken has been permeated with something of herself...Her soul is given to her profession, and the nature of the woman herself is discerned in that of the character that she represents."[5] It soon became clear that Rehan was the star of Daly's company even within the Big Four, but Daly refused to acknowledge this with top billing or any other prioritizing treatment.

Rehan and Daly's professional relationship was further complicated by their personal one. It is generally acknowledged that Rehan became the married Daly's mistress early on in their partnership. Cornelia Otis Skinner writes of their relationship that "besides being leading lady, [she] enjoyed the offstage role of grand maitresse...To hold the whip handle by keeping a woman of her beauty and prominence in the compromising position and extra-marital liaison involved in those cautious times was a sop to his will to power."[6] Their romantic entanglement coupled with their professional symbiosis makes it easy to interpret their relationship as Svengali-esque.

Daly and Rehan's greatest achievement, and the production that most reflected their own combative power dynamics, was most likely their 1887 "The Taming of the Shrew". It ran in both New York and London and that initial run tallied 121 performances, which was quite a feat for a show in the nineteenth century.[7]

John Singer Sargent's 1895 portrait of Ada Rehan from The Met collection

Rehan was so popular in the 1880s and 90's that she played over 200 parts. George Bernard Shaw, Mark Twain, and Oscar Wilde (who wrote the part of Mrs. Erlynne in Lady Windermere's Fan with her in mind) were among her many admirers. And women everywhere strove to imitate her diction, demeanor, and even her dresses. The Chicgo Evening Mail reported on the fad of women impersonating Rehan's speech, ladies hats were named for her, and dressmakers offered her costumes for free in order to get their designs in front of the public.[8]

Retirement and Death

When Augustin Daly died in 1899, Rehan deserted the stage for an entire year. She returned with a production of Sweet Nell of Old Drury and a tour that revived some of her classic roles from her career with Daly's company. However, the staleness that Rehan's performances had become susceptible to as the 1890s wore on was even more evident in these post-Daly productions.[9] In a letter to William Winter, Rehan wrote, "I am very indifferent toward the future. If I ever go on again with my work, I fear it will be more of the machine than the artiste."[10] After a few more poorly received attempts, Rehan permanently retired from the stage in 1905 at the age of forty-eight.

Rehan lived out her remaining years between her homes in New York and the English coast. She died from arteriosclerosis and cancer in New York in 1916. Her ashes are buried in Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn.[11]

Legacy

Ada Rehan was widely admired in both America and Europe, having acted in Paris, Berlin, Hamburg, London, Edinburgh, Dublin, and Stratford-on-Avon.[12] When she died newspapers across the country mourned her passing, including a prominent obituary in the New York Times.[13]

Daly modelled the masthead of his theater, a depiction of Comedy, after Miss Rehan.[14]

Miss Rehan was the model for a solid silver statue of Justice that was presented as part of the State of Montana's mining exhibition at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893.[15] Rehan's nephew was actor Arthur Byron, son of her sister Kate and Oliver Doud Byron. More than 25 years after Ada Rehan died a WWII Liberty ship was named after her, USS Ada Rehan.

Roles

She also played the principal female characters in:[17]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Forrest Izard (1915) Heroines of the Modern Stage, Sturgis & Walton Company, New York
  2. Plotnicki, Rita (1993). Notable Women in the American Theatre: A Biographical Dictionary (entry for Rehan, Ada Delia). New York, NY: Greenwood Press. pp. 739, 993.
  3. Marra, Kim (2006). Strange Duets: Impressarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. p. 49.
  4. Marra, Kim (2006). Strange Duets: Impressarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. p. 53.
  5. Winter, William (1891). Ada Rehan: A Study. New York. p. 16.
  6. Skinner, Cornelia Otis (1948). Family Circle. Houghton Mifflin Company.
  7. Marra, Kim (2006). Strange Duets: Impressarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. p. 65.
  8. Marra, Kim (2006). Strange Duets: Impressarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. p. 58.
  9. James, Edward T. (1971). Notable American Women, 1607-1950. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 131.
  10. Marra, Kim (2006). Strange Duets: Impressarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. p. 70.
  11. James, Edward T. (1971). Notable American Women, 1607-1950. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 131.
  12. Eaton, Walter Prichard (1910). The American Stage of Today. New York, NY: P.F. Collier & Son.
  13. "Ada Rehan". New York Times. ProQuest. January 9, 1916.
  14. Marra, Kim (2006). Strange Duets: Impressarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865-1914. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. p. 48.
  15. Appelbaum, Stanley (1980). The Chicago Worlds Fair of 1893: A Photographic Record. New York, NY: Dover Publications, Inc.
  16. Folger Shakespeare Library holdings identify Ada Rehan in this play. ART File R345 no.18 PHOTO (size S)
  17.  Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1900). "Rehan, Ada". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.

Publications

External links

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