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Adah Isaacs Menken

Adah Isaacs Menken (June 15, 1835 – August 10, 1868) was an American actress, painter and poet, and was the highest earning actress of her time.[1] She was best known for her performance in the hippodrama Mazeppa, with a climax that featured her apparently nude and riding a horse on stage. After great success for a few years with the play in New York and San Francisco, she appeared in a production in London and Paris, from 1864 to 1866. After a brief trip back to the United States, she returned to Europe. She became ill within two years and died in Paris at the age of 33.[2]

Adah Isaacs Menken
Adah Isaacs Menken, age 19
Born(1835-06-15)June 15, 1835
DiedAugust 10, 1868(1868-08-10) (aged 33)
Occupation(s)Actress, painter, poet

Menken told many versions of her origins, including her name, place of birth, ancestry, and religion, and historians have differed in their accounts. Most have said she was born a Louisiana Creole Catholic, with European and African ancestry. A celebrity who created sensational performances in the United States and Europe, she married several times and was also known for her affairs. She had two sons, both of whom died in infancy.[3]

Though she was better known as an actress, Menken sought to be known as a writer. She published about 20 essays, 100 poems, and a book of her collected poems, from 1855 to 1868 (the book was published posthumously). Early work was devoted to family and after her marriage, her poetry and essays featured Jewish themes. Beginning with work published after moving to New York, with which she changed her style, Menken expressed a wide range of emotions and ideas about women's place in the world. Her collection Infelicia went through several editions and was in print until 1902.

Early life and education edit

Accounts of Menken's early life and origins vary considerably. In her autobiographical "Some Notes of Her Life in Her Own Hand," published in The New York Times in 1868, Menken said she was born in Bordeaux, France and lived in Cuba as a child before her family settled in New Orleans. There are many conflicting reports as to Menken's birth name, but she has been called Marie Rachel Adelaide de Vere Spenser and Adah Bertha Theodore, and Ed James, a journalist friend, wrote after her death: "Her real name was Adelaide McCord, and she was born at Milneburg, near New Orleans, on June 15, 1835."[4] Menken's birth year also varies, with some records stating 1835 and some stating 1832. [5] Elsewhere, in 1865, she wrote that her birth name was Dolores Adios Los Fiertes, and that she was the daughter of a French woman from New Orleans and a Spanish-Jewish man.[6] About 1940, the consensus of scholars was that her parents were Auguste Théodore, a free Black man, and Marie, a mixed-race Creole, and Adah was raised as a Catholic. She had a sister and a brother.[6]

Based on Menken's assertions of being a native of New Orleans, Wolf Mankowitz and others have studied Board of Health records for the city. They have concluded that Ada was born in the city as the legitimate daughter of Auguste Théodore, a free man of color (mixed race) and his wife Magdaleine Jean Louis Janneaux,[4][7] likely also a Louisiana Creole. Ada would have been raised as Catholic. However, in 1990, John Cofran, using census records, said that she was born as Ada C. McCord, in Memphis, Tennessee, in late 1830. He said she was the daughter of an Irish merchant, Richard McCord, and his wife Catherine.[8][9] According to Cofran, her father died when she was young and her mother remarried. The family then moved from Memphis to New Orleans.

Menken was said to have been a bright student; she became fluent in French and Spanish,[10] and was described as having a gift for languages.[6] As a child, Menken performed as a dancer in the ballet of the French Opera House in New Orleans. In her later childhood, she performed as a dancer in Havana, Cuba, where she was crowned "Queen of the Plaza."[10]

American career edit

 
Menken as The French Spy, 1863

After Cuba, Menken left dance for acting, and began working as an actress in Texas first. According to Gregory Eiselein, she gave Shakespeare readings, and wrote poems and sketches for The Liberty Gazette. She was married for the first time in Galveston County, in February 1855, to G. W. Kneass, a musician. The marriage had ended by sometime in 1856,[6] when she met and in 1856 married the man more generally considered her first husband, Alexander Isaac Menken, a musician who was from a prominent Reform Jewish family in Cincinnati, Ohio.[11]

He began to act as her manager, and Ada Menken performed as an actress in the Midwest and Upper South, also giving literary readings. She received decent reviews, which noted her "reckless energy," and performed with men who became notable actors: Edwin Booth in Louisville, Kentucky and James E. Murdoch in Nashville, Tennessee.[12]

In 1857, the couple moved to Cincinnati, where Menken created her Jewish roots, telling a reporter that she was born Jewish. She did study Judaism and stayed with the faith, although she never formally converted.[6] In this period, she published poetry and articles on Judaism in The Israelite in Cincinnati.[12] The newspaper was founded by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, who was crucial to the Reform Judaism movement in the United States.[13] She also began to be published in the Jewish Messenger of New York.[6]

Ada added an "h" to her first name and an "s" to Isaac, and by 1858 she billed herself as Adah Isaacs Menken. She eventually worked as an actress in New York and San Francisco, as well as in touring productions across the country.[14] She also became known for her poetry and painting. While none of her art was well received by major critics, she became a celebrity.[11]

At this time, Menken wore her wavy hair short, a highly unusual style for women of the time. She cultivated a bohemian and at times androgynous appearance. She deliberately created her image at a time when the growth of popular media helped to publicize it.[11]

In 1859, Menken appeared on Broadway in New York City in the play The French Spy. Her work was not highly regarded by critics. The New York Times described her as "the worst actress on Broadway." The Observer[clarification needed] said, "she is delightfully unhampered by the shackles of talent." Menken continued to perform small parts in New York, as well as reading Shakespeare in performance, and giving lectures.[4]

Her third husband was John C. Heenan, a popular Irish-American prizefighter whom she married in 1859. Some time after their marriage, the press discovered she did not yet have a legal divorce from Menken and accused her of bigamy. She had expected Menken to handle the divorce, which he eventually did.

As John Heenan was one of the most famous and popular figures in America, the press also accused Menken of marrying for his celebrity. She billed herself as Mrs. Heenan in Boston, Providence, Baltimore, and Philadelphia, using his name despite their divorce within a year of marriage.[11] They had a son, who died soon after birth.[10]

While in New York, Menken met the poet Walt Whitman and some others of his bohemian circle. She was influenced by his work and began to write in a more confessional style while adhering to common sentimental conventions of the time. In 1860–61, she published 25 poems in the Sunday Mercury, an entertainment newspaper in New York. These were later collected with six more in her only book, Infelicia, published a few months after her death.[12] By publishing in a newspaper, she reached a larger audience than through women's magazines, including both men and women readers who might go to see her perform as an actress.[11]

In 1860, Menken wrote a review titled "Swimming Against the Current," which praised Whitman's new edition of Leaves of Grass, saying he was "centuries ahead of his contemporaries."[11][12][15] She identified with the controversial poet, and declared her bohemian identity through her support for him.[11] That year, Menken also wrote an article on the 1860 election, an unusual topic for a woman, which further added to her image.[11]

When Menken met Charles Blondin, notable for crossing Niagara Falls on a tightrope, the two were quickly attracted to each other. She suggested she would marry him if they could perform a couple's act above the falls. Blondin refused, saying that he would be "distracted by her beauty."[10] The two had an affair, during which they conducted a vaudeville tour across the United States.

Mazeppa edit

 
Menken in Mazeppa, 1866

After it ended, she appealed to her business manager Jimmie Murdock to help her become recognized as a great actress. Murdock dissuaded Menken from that goal, as he knew she had little acting talent.[10] He offered her the "breeches role" (that of a man) of the noble Tartar in the hippodrama Mazeppa, based on the poem of that title by Lord Byron[1] (and ultimately on the life of Ivan Mazepa). At the climax of this hit, the Tartar was stripped of his clothing, tied to his horse, and sent off to his death.[16] The audiences were thrilled with the scene, although the production used a dummy strapped to a horse, which was led away by a handler giving sugar cubes. Menken wanted to perform the stunt herself.[9] Dressed in nude tights and riding a horse on stage, she appeared to be naked and caused a sensation.[9] New York audiences were shocked but still attended and made the play popular.

Menken took the production of Mazeppa to San Francisco. Audiences again flocked to the show.[10][17] She became known across the country for this role, and San Francisco adopted her as its performer.

In 1862, she married Robert Henry Newell, a humorist and editor of the Sunday Mercury in New York, who had recently published most of her poetry. They were together about three years. Next she wed James Paul Barkley, a gambler, in 1866, but soon returned without him to France, where she was performing. There she had their son, whom she named Louis Dudevant Victor Emanuel Barkley. The baby's godmother was the author George Sand (A. F. Lesser).[1] Louis died in infancy.[1]

 
A previous version of Astley's Amphitheatre, showing the horse ring

Menken arranged to play in a production of Mazeppa in London and France for much of 1864 to 1866. Controversy arose over her costume, and she responded to critics in the newspapers of London by saying that she was influenced by classical sculpture, and that her costume was more modest than those of ballet or burlesque. The show opened on October 3, 1864, at the Astley Theatre to "overflowing houses."[18] She was so well known that she was referred to as "the Menken," needing no other name.[11]

Jokes and poems were printed about the controversy, and Punch wrote:[18]

Here's half the town - if bills be true -
To Astley's nightly thronging,
To see the Menken throw aside
All to her sex belonging,
Stripping off woman's modesty,
With woman's outward trappings -
A barebacked jade on barebacked steed,
In Cartlich's old strappings!

(The last line refers to John Cartlich, equestrian performer [19])

During this time of her greatest earning, she was generous to friends, theatre people in need, and charities.[1] While in Europe, the Menken continued to play to the American public as well, in terms of her image.[11] As usual, she attracted a crowd of male admirers, including such prominent figures as the writer Charles Dickens, the humorist Tom Hood, and the dramatist and novelist Charles Reade.[20]

Later life edit

 
Menken with Alexandre Dumas, 1866

Playing in a sold-out run of Les pirates de la savane in Paris in 1866, Menken had an affair with the French novelist Alexandre Dumas, père, considered somewhat scandalous as he was more than twice her age. Returning to England in 1867, she struggled to attract audiences to Mazeppa and attendance fell off. During this time she had an affair with the English poet Algernon Charles Swinburne.[1]

She fell ill in London and was forced to stop performing, struggling with poverty as a result. Few realized that the glamorous star was ill until she collapsed during rehearsal and died a few weeks later.[4] She began preparing her poems for publication and moved back to Paris, where she died on August 10, 1868.[1] She had just written to a friend:

I am lost to art and life. Yet, when all is said and done, have I not at my age tasted more of life than most women who live to be a hundred? It is fair, then, that I should go where old people go.[10]

How long she had been a consumptive no one knew but, from what is known, she was dead at 33 – the flamelike quality that Dickens had called the “world’s delight” extinguished forever. They buried her in a corner of the little Jewish cemetery in Montparnasse, and on her grave stone are the words, “Thou Knowest,” an epitaph she had chosen from Swinburne, the poet who had said of her, “A woman who has such beautiful legs need not discuss poetry.”


She was believed to have died of peritonitis and/or tuberculosis,.[10] Late twentieth-century sources suggest she had cancer.[1] She was buried in Montparnasse Cemetery.[1] The inscription on her tomb reads "Thou knowest."[21]

In 1862, Menken had written about her public and private personae:

I have always believed myself to be possessed of two souls, one that lives on the surface of life, pleasing and pleased; the other as deep and as unfathomable as the ocean; a mystery to me and all who know me.[5]

Her only book, Infelicia, a collection of 31 poems, was published several days after her death.

Literary career edit

Menken wanted to be known as a writer, but her work was overshadowed by her sensational stage career and private and public life. In total, she published about 20 essays, 100 poems and a book of her collected poems, from 1855 to 1868; the book was published posthumously. Her work was not received well by contemporary critics. George Merriam Hyde, one of the most respected critics of his day, refused to critique Menken's work, saying (privately) that "it would be an insult to himself and his profession".[citation needed] Van Wyck Brooks joked (in public) that "her work is the best example of unintentional wit and accidental humour".[citation needed]

Her early work was devoted to family and romance. After her marriage to Menken and her study of Judaism, her poetry and essays for years into the 1860s featured Jewish themes. After her marriage and divorce from Heenan and meeting with writers in New York, she changed her style, adopting some influence from Walt Whitman. She was said to be the "first poet and the only woman poet before the twentieth century" to follow his lead in using free verse.[6] The New York Times reported that Walt Whitman had disassociated himself from Menken's work, implying he thought little of it.

Beginning in New York, her poetry expressed a wider range of emotions related to relationships, sexuality, and also about women's struggle to find a place in the world. Her collection Infelicia went through several editions and was in print until 1902. In the late nineteenth century, critics were hard on women writers, and Menken's public notoriety caused even more critical scrutiny of her poems. Later critics (such as A. R. Lloyd in his book, The Great Prize Fight and Graham Gordon in his book Master of the Ring) generally dismiss her work as being devoid of talent. Admirers included Christina Rossetti and Joaquin Miller.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Palmer, Pamela Lynn, "Adah Isaacs Menken", Handbook of Texas Online, published by the Texas State Historical Association, accessed August 10, 2012.
  2. ^ The Antebellum Crisis and America's First Bohemians; Lause, Mark A.; Kent, OH; Kent State University Press, 2009.
  3. ^ Ackerman, Alan. "Adah Isaacs Menken". Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved January 4, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d Barca, Dane. "Adah Isaacs Menken: Race and Transgendered Performance in the Nineteenth Century." MELUS, Volume 29. Number 3–4. (2004): pp. 293–306. ISBN 978-0-554-93218-7.
  5. ^ a b Menken (September 6, 1868). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 22, 2010. Retrieved August 10, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Menken, Adah Isaacs (2002). Gregory Eiselein (ed.). Infelicia and Other Writings. Peterborough: Broadview Press. pp. 15–16. ISBN 9781551112848.
  7. ^ Mankowitz, Wolf, Mazeppa: The Lives, Loves, and Legends of Adah Isaacs Menken, New York: Stein and Day, 1982.
  8. ^ Cofran, John, "The Identity of Adah Isaacs Menken: A Theatrical Mystery Solved," Theatre Survey, Vol. 31, 1990.
  9. ^ a b c Brooks, Daphne A. "Lady Menken's Secret: Adah Isaacs Menken, Actress Biographies and the Race for Sensation." Legacy, Volume 15. Number 1. (1998): pp. 68–77.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Dickson, Samuel, "Adah Isaacs Menken" March 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, KPO/KNBC radio script later collected in San Francisco Is Your Home, Stanford University Press, 1947; reprinted at Virtual Museum of San Francisco website, accessed August 8, 2012.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sentilles, Renée M. Performing Menken: Adah Isaacs Menken and the Birth of American Celebrity (2003), (ISBN 978-0-521-82070-7).
  12. ^ a b c d Kleitz, Dorsey, "Adah Isaacs Menken", in Encyclopedia of American Poetry: The Nineteenth Century, ed. Eri L. Haralson, pp. 294–296 (1998) (ISBN 978-1-57958-008-7).
  13. ^ "Adah Isaacs Menken", Jewish Virtual Library, 2012, accessed August 8, 2012.
  14. ^ Eichin, Carolyn Grattan, From San Francisco Eastward: Victorian Theater in the American West, (Reno: University of Nevada Press, 2020), 29, 77, 177
  15. ^ Alcaro, Marion Walker. Walt Whitman's Mrs. G: A Biography of Anne Gilchrist, pp. 129–30 (1991) (ISBN 978-0-8386-3381-6).
  16. ^ Buszek, Maria-Elena. "Representing 'Awarishness': Burlesque, Feminist Transgression and the 19th-Century Pin-Up," TDR, Volume 43. Number 4 (1988): pp. 141–162.
  17. ^ Tarnoff, Benjamin (2014). The Bohemians: Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature. Penguin Books. pp. 52–54. ISBN 978-1594204739.
  18. ^ a b Diamond, Michael, Victorian Sensation, Or, the Spectacular, the Shocking, and the Scandalous in Nineteenth-Century Britain, Anthem Press, 2003, p. 270.
  19. ^ "Behind the Scenes at Astley's | Unknown | V&A Explore the Collections". 1840.
  20. ^ Schuele, Donna C. "None Could Deny the Eloquence of the Lady: Women, Law and Government in California, 1850–1890," California History, Volume 81. Number 3-4. (2003): pp. 169–198.
  21. ^ Stephens, Autumn (1956). Wild Women. USA: Conari Press. p. 7. ISBN 0-943233-36-4.

[1]

Further reading edit

  • Abernethy, Francis Edward, ed. (1981). Legendary Ladies of Texas. Adah Isaacs Menken: From Texas to Paris, Pamela Lynn Palmer. Publications of the Texas Folklore Society, 43. Dallas: E-Heart.
  • Bloom, Harold (2007). The Best Poems of the English Language: From Chaucer through Robert Frost. New York: Harper Perennial. p. 716. ISBN 978-0-06-054042-5.
  • Brooks, Elizabeth (1896). Prominent Women of Texas. Akron, Ohio: Werner Publishing.
  • Cofran, John (May 1990). The Identity of Adah Isaacs Menken: A Theatrical Mystery Solved. Theatre Survey. 31.
  • Diamond, Michael (2003). Victorian Sensation, Or, the Spectacular, the Shocking, and the Scandalous in Nineteenth-Century Britain. London, England: Anthem Press. pp. 268–271. ISBN 978-1-84331-150-8.
  • Dickson, Samuel (1955). Tales of Old San Francisco. Redwood City, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0488-5.
  • Foster, Michael; Foster, Barbara (2011). A dangerous woman: The life, loves, and scandals of Adah Isaacs Menken, 1835-1868, Americas original superstar. Guilford, Connecticut: Lyons Press. ISBN 978-1-59921-602-7.
  • Eichin, Carolyn Grattan (2020). From San Francisco Eastward: Victorian Theater in the American West. Reno, Nevada: University of Nevada Press.
  • James, Edward T.; James, Janet Wilson; Boyer, Paul S., eds. (1971). Notable American Women, 1607-1950: A Biographical Dictionary. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 526–529. ISBN 0-674-62731-8.
  • Lloyd, Alan (1977). The Great Prize Fight. London, United Kingdom: Cassell. ISBN 0-304-29780-1.
  • Mankowitz, Wolf (1982). Mazeppa: The Lives, Loves, and Legends of Adah Isaacs Menken. Briarcliff Manor, New York: Stein and Day. ISBN 0-8128-2868-2.
  • Wright, Alan (1994). Tom Sayers : The Last Great Bare-knuckle Champion. Sussex, England: Book Guild. ISBN 0-86332-929-2.

External links edit

  1. ^ Adah Isaacs Menken; an illustrated biography. The Press Printers. 1921.

adah, isaacs, menken, june, 1835, august, 1868, american, actress, painter, poet, highest, earning, actress, time, best, known, performance, hippodrama, mazeppa, with, climax, that, featured, apparently, nude, riding, horse, stage, after, great, success, years. Adah Isaacs Menken June 15 1835 August 10 1868 was an American actress painter and poet and was the highest earning actress of her time 1 She was best known for her performance in the hippodrama Mazeppa with a climax that featured her apparently nude and riding a horse on stage After great success for a few years with the play in New York and San Francisco she appeared in a production in London and Paris from 1864 to 1866 After a brief trip back to the United States she returned to Europe She became ill within two years and died in Paris at the age of 33 2 Adah Isaacs MenkenAdah Isaacs Menken age 19Born 1835 06 15 June 15 1835DiedAugust 10 1868 1868 08 10 aged 33 Paris FranceOccupation s Actress painter poetMenken told many versions of her origins including her name place of birth ancestry and religion and historians have differed in their accounts Most have said she was born a Louisiana Creole Catholic with European and African ancestry A celebrity who created sensational performances in the United States and Europe she married several times and was also known for her affairs She had two sons both of whom died in infancy 3 Though she was better known as an actress Menken sought to be known as a writer She published about 20 essays 100 poems and a book of her collected poems from 1855 to 1868 the book was published posthumously Early work was devoted to family and after her marriage her poetry and essays featured Jewish themes Beginning with work published after moving to New York with which she changed her style Menken expressed a wide range of emotions and ideas about women s place in the world Her collection Infelicia went through several editions and was in print until 1902 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 American career 3 Mazeppa 4 Later life 5 Literary career 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and education editAccounts of Menken s early life and origins vary considerably In her autobiographical Some Notes of Her Life in Her Own Hand published in The New York Times in 1868 Menken said she was born in Bordeaux France and lived in Cuba as a child before her family settled in New Orleans There are many conflicting reports as to Menken s birth name but she has been called Marie Rachel Adelaide de Vere Spenser and Adah Bertha Theodore and Ed James a journalist friend wrote after her death Her real name was Adelaide McCord and she was born at Milneburg near New Orleans on June 15 1835 4 Menken s birth year also varies with some records stating 1835 and some stating 1832 5 Elsewhere in 1865 she wrote that her birth name was Dolores Adios Los Fiertes and that she was the daughter of a French woman from New Orleans and a Spanish Jewish man 6 About 1940 the consensus of scholars was that her parents were Auguste Theodore a free Black man and Marie a mixed race Creole and Adah was raised as a Catholic She had a sister and a brother 6 Based on Menken s assertions of being a native of New Orleans Wolf Mankowitz and others have studied Board of Health records for the city They have concluded that Ada was born in the city as the legitimate daughter of Auguste Theodore a free man of color mixed race and his wife Magdaleine Jean Louis Janneaux 4 7 likely also a Louisiana Creole Ada would have been raised as Catholic However in 1990 John Cofran using census records said that she was born as Ada C McCord in Memphis Tennessee in late 1830 He said she was the daughter of an Irish merchant Richard McCord and his wife Catherine 8 9 According to Cofran her father died when she was young and her mother remarried The family then moved from Memphis to New Orleans Menken was said to have been a bright student she became fluent in French and Spanish 10 and was described as having a gift for languages 6 As a child Menken performed as a dancer in the ballet of the French Opera House in New Orleans In her later childhood she performed as a dancer in Havana Cuba where she was crowned Queen of the Plaza 10 American career edit nbsp Menken as The French Spy 1863After Cuba Menken left dance for acting and began working as an actress in Texas first According to Gregory Eiselein she gave Shakespeare readings and wrote poems and sketches for The Liberty Gazette She was married for the first time in Galveston County in February 1855 to G W Kneass a musician The marriage had ended by sometime in 1856 6 when she met and in 1856 married the man more generally considered her first husband Alexander Isaac Menken a musician who was from a prominent Reform Jewish family in Cincinnati Ohio 11 He began to act as her manager and Ada Menken performed as an actress in the Midwest and Upper South also giving literary readings She received decent reviews which noted her reckless energy and performed with men who became notable actors Edwin Booth in Louisville Kentucky and James E Murdoch in Nashville Tennessee 12 In 1857 the couple moved to Cincinnati where Menken created her Jewish roots telling a reporter that she was born Jewish She did study Judaism and stayed with the faith although she never formally converted 6 In this period she published poetry and articles on Judaism in The Israelite in Cincinnati 12 The newspaper was founded by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise who was crucial to the Reform Judaism movement in the United States 13 She also began to be published in the Jewish Messenger of New York 6 Ada added an h to her first name and an s to Isaac and by 1858 she billed herself as Adah Isaacs Menken She eventually worked as an actress in New York and San Francisco as well as in touring productions across the country 14 She also became known for her poetry and painting While none of her art was well received by major critics she became a celebrity 11 At this time Menken wore her wavy hair short a highly unusual style for women of the time She cultivated a bohemian and at times androgynous appearance She deliberately created her image at a time when the growth of popular media helped to publicize it 11 In 1859 Menken appeared on Broadway in New York City in the play The French Spy Her work was not highly regarded by critics The New York Times described her as the worst actress on Broadway The Observer clarification needed said she is delightfully unhampered by the shackles of talent Menken continued to perform small parts in New York as well as reading Shakespeare in performance and giving lectures 4 Her third husband was John C Heenan a popular Irish American prizefighter whom she married in 1859 Some time after their marriage the press discovered she did not yet have a legal divorce from Menken and accused her of bigamy She had expected Menken to handle the divorce which he eventually did As John Heenan was one of the most famous and popular figures in America the press also accused Menken of marrying for his celebrity She billed herself as Mrs Heenan in Boston Providence Baltimore and Philadelphia using his name despite their divorce within a year of marriage 11 They had a son who died soon after birth 10 While in New York Menken met the poet Walt Whitman and some others of his bohemian circle She was influenced by his work and began to write in a more confessional style while adhering to common sentimental conventions of the time In 1860 61 she published 25 poems in the Sunday Mercury an entertainment newspaper in New York These were later collected with six more in her only book Infelicia published a few months after her death 12 By publishing in a newspaper she reached a larger audience than through women s magazines including both men and women readers who might go to see her perform as an actress 11 In 1860 Menken wrote a review titled Swimming Against the Current which praised Whitman s new edition of Leaves of Grass saying he was centuries ahead of his contemporaries 11 12 15 She identified with the controversial poet and declared her bohemian identity through her support for him 11 That year Menken also wrote an article on the 1860 election an unusual topic for a woman which further added to her image 11 When Menken met Charles Blondin notable for crossing Niagara Falls on a tightrope the two were quickly attracted to each other She suggested she would marry him if they could perform a couple s act above the falls Blondin refused saying that he would be distracted by her beauty 10 The two had an affair during which they conducted a vaudeville tour across the United States Mazeppa editSee also Cultural legacy of Mazeppa nbsp Menken in Mazeppa 1866After it ended she appealed to her business manager Jimmie Murdock to help her become recognized as a great actress Murdock dissuaded Menken from that goal as he knew she had little acting talent 10 He offered her the breeches role that of a man of the noble Tartar in the hippodrama Mazeppa based on the poem of that title by Lord Byron 1 and ultimately on the life of Ivan Mazepa At the climax of this hit the Tartar was stripped of his clothing tied to his horse and sent off to his death 16 The audiences were thrilled with the scene although the production used a dummy strapped to a horse which was led away by a handler giving sugar cubes Menken wanted to perform the stunt herself 9 Dressed in nude tights and riding a horse on stage she appeared to be naked and caused a sensation 9 New York audiences were shocked but still attended and made the play popular Menken took the production of Mazeppa to San Francisco Audiences again flocked to the show 10 17 She became known across the country for this role and San Francisco adopted her as its performer In 1862 she married Robert Henry Newell a humorist and editor of the Sunday Mercury in New York who had recently published most of her poetry They were together about three years Next she wed James Paul Barkley a gambler in 1866 but soon returned without him to France where she was performing There she had their son whom she named Louis Dudevant Victor Emanuel Barkley The baby s godmother was the author George Sand A F Lesser 1 Louis died in infancy 1 nbsp A previous version of Astley s Amphitheatre showing the horse ringMenken arranged to play in a production of Mazeppa in London and France for much of 1864 to 1866 Controversy arose over her costume and she responded to critics in the newspapers of London by saying that she was influenced by classical sculpture and that her costume was more modest than those of ballet or burlesque The show opened on October 3 1864 at the Astley Theatre to overflowing houses 18 She was so well known that she was referred to as the Menken needing no other name 11 Jokes and poems were printed about the controversy and Punch wrote 18 Here s half the town if bills be true To Astley s nightly thronging To see the Menken throw aside All to her sex belonging Stripping off woman s modesty With woman s outward trappings A barebacked jade on barebacked steed In Cartlich s old strappings The last line refers to John Cartlich equestrian performer 19 During this time of her greatest earning she was generous to friends theatre people in need and charities 1 While in Europe the Menken continued to play to the American public as well in terms of her image 11 As usual she attracted a crowd of male admirers including such prominent figures as the writer Charles Dickens the humorist Tom Hood and the dramatist and novelist Charles Reade 20 Later life edit nbsp Menken with Alexandre Dumas 1866Playing in a sold out run of Les pirates de la savane in Paris in 1866 Menken had an affair with the French novelist Alexandre Dumas pere considered somewhat scandalous as he was more than twice her age Returning to England in 1867 she struggled to attract audiences to Mazeppa and attendance fell off During this time she had an affair with the English poet Algernon Charles Swinburne 1 She fell ill in London and was forced to stop performing struggling with poverty as a result Few realized that the glamorous star was ill until she collapsed during rehearsal and died a few weeks later 4 She began preparing her poems for publication and moved back to Paris where she died on August 10 1868 1 She had just written to a friend I am lost to art and life Yet when all is said and done have I not at my age tasted more of life than most women who live to be a hundred It is fair then that I should go where old people go 10 How long she had been a consumptive no one knew but from what is known she was dead at 33 the flamelike quality that Dickens had called the world s delight extinguished forever They buried her in a corner of the little Jewish cemetery in Montparnasse and on her grave stone are the words Thou Knowest an epitaph she had chosen from Swinburne the poet who had said of her A woman who has such beautiful legs need not discuss poetry She was believed to have died of peritonitis and or tuberculosis 10 Late twentieth century sources suggest she had cancer 1 She was buried in Montparnasse Cemetery 1 The inscription on her tomb reads Thou knowest 21 In 1862 Menken had written about her public and private personae I have always believed myself to be possessed of two souls one that lives on the surface of life pleasing and pleased the other as deep and as unfathomable as the ocean a mystery to me and all who know me 5 Her only book Infelicia a collection of 31 poems was published several days after her death Literary career editMenken wanted to be known as a writer but her work was overshadowed by her sensational stage career and private and public life In total she published about 20 essays 100 poems and a book of her collected poems from 1855 to 1868 the book was published posthumously Her work was not received well by contemporary critics George Merriam Hyde one of the most respected critics of his day refused to critique Menken s work saying privately that it would be an insult to himself and his profession citation needed Van Wyck Brooks joked in public that her work is the best example of unintentional wit and accidental humour citation needed Her early work was devoted to family and romance After her marriage to Menken and her study of Judaism her poetry and essays for years into the 1860s featured Jewish themes After her marriage and divorce from Heenan and meeting with writers in New York she changed her style adopting some influence from Walt Whitman She was said to be the first poet and the only woman poet before the twentieth century to follow his lead in using free verse 6 The New York Times reported that Walt Whitman had disassociated himself from Menken s work implying he thought little of it Beginning in New York her poetry expressed a wider range of emotions related to relationships sexuality and also about women s struggle to find a place in the world Her collection Infelicia went through several editions and was in print until 1902 In the late nineteenth century critics were hard on women writers and Menken s public notoriety caused even more critical scrutiny of her poems Later critics such as A R Lloyd in his book The Great Prize Fight and Graham Gordon in his book Master of the Ring generally dismiss her work as being devoid of talent Admirers included Christina Rossetti and Joaquin Miller 6 References edit a b c d e f g h i Palmer Pamela Lynn Adah Isaacs Menken Handbook of Texas Online published by the Texas State Historical Association accessed August 10 2012 The Antebellum Crisis and America s First Bohemians Lause Mark A Kent OH Kent State University Press 2009 Ackerman Alan Adah Isaacs Menken Jewish Women s Archive Retrieved January 4 2017 a b c d Barca Dane Adah Isaacs Menken Race and Transgendered Performance in the Nineteenth Century MELUS Volume 29 Number 3 4 2004 pp 293 306 ISBN 978 0 554 93218 7 a b Menken September 6 1868 Some Notes of Her Life in Her Own Hand The New York Times Archived from the original on July 22 2010 Retrieved August 10 2012 a b c d e f g h Menken Adah Isaacs 2002 Gregory Eiselein ed Infelicia and Other Writings Peterborough Broadview Press pp 15 16 ISBN 9781551112848 Mankowitz Wolf Mazeppa The Lives Loves and Legends of Adah Isaacs Menken New York Stein and Day 1982 Cofran John The Identity of Adah Isaacs Menken A Theatrical Mystery Solved Theatre Survey Vol 31 1990 a b c Brooks Daphne A Lady Menken s Secret Adah Isaacs Menken Actress Biographies and the Race for Sensation Legacy Volume 15 Number 1 1998 pp 68 77 a b c d e f g h Dickson Samuel Adah Isaacs Menken Archived March 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine KPO KNBC radio script later collected in San Francisco Is Your Home Stanford University Press 1947 reprinted at Virtual Museum of San Francisco website accessed August 8 2012 a b c d e f g h i j Sentilles Renee M Performing Menken Adah Isaacs Menken and the Birth of American Celebrity 2003 ISBN 978 0 521 82070 7 a b c d Kleitz Dorsey Adah Isaacs Menken in Encyclopedia of American Poetry The Nineteenth Century ed Eri L Haralson pp 294 296 1998 ISBN 978 1 57958 008 7 Adah Isaacs Menken Jewish Virtual Library 2012 accessed August 8 2012 Eichin Carolyn Grattan From San Francisco Eastward Victorian Theater in the American West Reno University of Nevada Press 2020 29 77 177 Alcaro Marion Walker Walt Whitman s Mrs G A Biography of Anne Gilchrist pp 129 30 1991 ISBN 978 0 8386 3381 6 Buszek Maria Elena Representing Awarishness Burlesque Feminist Transgression and the 19th Century Pin Up TDR Volume 43 Number 4 1988 pp 141 162 Tarnoff Benjamin 2014 The Bohemians Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature Penguin Books pp 52 54 ISBN 978 1594204739 a b Diamond Michael Victorian Sensation Or the Spectacular the Shocking and the Scandalous in Nineteenth Century Britain Anthem Press 2003 p 270 Behind the Scenes at Astley s Unknown V amp A Explore the Collections 1840 Schuele Donna C None Could Deny the Eloquence of the Lady Women Law and Government in California 1850 1890 California History Volume 81 Number 3 4 2003 pp 169 198 Stephens Autumn 1956 Wild Women USA Conari Press p 7 ISBN 0 943233 36 4 1 Further reading editAbernethy Francis Edward ed 1981 Legendary Ladies of Texas Adah Isaacs Menken From Texas to Paris Pamela Lynn Palmer Publications of the Texas Folklore Society 43 Dallas E Heart Bloom Harold 2007 The Best Poems of the English Language From Chaucer through Robert Frost New York Harper Perennial p 716 ISBN 978 0 06 054042 5 Brooks Elizabeth 1896 Prominent Women of Texas Akron Ohio Werner Publishing Cofran John May 1990 The Identity of Adah Isaacs Menken A Theatrical Mystery Solved Theatre Survey 31 Diamond Michael 2003 Victorian Sensation Or the Spectacular the Shocking and the Scandalous in Nineteenth Century Britain London England Anthem Press pp 268 271 ISBN 978 1 84331 150 8 Dickson Samuel 1955 Tales of Old San Francisco Redwood City California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0488 5 Foster Michael Foster Barbara 2011 A dangerous woman The life loves and scandals of Adah Isaacs Menken 1835 1868 Americas original superstar Guilford Connecticut Lyons Press ISBN 978 1 59921 602 7 Eichin Carolyn Grattan 2020 From San Francisco Eastward Victorian Theater in the American West Reno Nevada University of Nevada Press James Edward T James Janet Wilson Boyer Paul S eds 1971 Notable American Women 1607 1950 A Biographical Dictionary Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 526 529 ISBN 0 674 62731 8 Lloyd Alan 1977 The Great Prize Fight London United Kingdom Cassell ISBN 0 304 29780 1 Mankowitz Wolf 1982 Mazeppa The Lives Loves and Legends of Adah Isaacs Menken Briarcliff Manor New York Stein and Day ISBN 0 8128 2868 2 Wright Alan 1994 Tom Sayers The Last Great Bare knuckle Champion Sussex England Book Guild ISBN 0 86332 929 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Adah Isaacs Menken nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Menken Adah Isaacs Adah Isaacs Menken Bertha Theodore 1835 1868 The Vault at Pfaff s hosted at Lehigh University includes several photos Charles Warren Stoddard La Belle Menken National Magazine 1905 at Open Archive includes several photos Adah Isaacs Menken Jewish Virtual Library 2012 Images related to Adah Isaacs Menken NYPL Digital Gallery 21 photos including one with Alexandre Dumas Billy Rose Collection Works by Adah Isaacs Menken at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Adah Isaacs Menken at Open Library Menken Adah Isaacs Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Adah Isaacs Menken an illustrated biography The Press Printers 1921 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adah Isaacs Menken amp oldid 1207531793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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