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Edmund Kean

Edmund Kean (4 November 1787 – 15 May 1833) was a celebrated British Shakespearean stage actor born in England, who performed, among other places, in London, Belfast, New York, Quebec, and Paris. He was known for his short stature, tumultuous personal life, and controversial divorce.

Edmund Kean
Kean as Sir Giles Overreach in Massinger's A New Way to Pay Old Debts
Born(1787-11-04)4 November 1787[1]
Westminster, London
Died15 May 1833(1833-05-15) (aged 45)
NationalityBritish
OccupationActor
SpouseMary Chambers
ChildrenCharles Kean

Biography edit

Early life edit

Kean was born in Westminster, London. His father was probably Edmund Kean, an architect's clerk, and his mother was an actress, Anne Carey, daughter of the 18th-century composer and playwright Henry Carey.[2]

Kean made his first appearance on the stage, aged four, as Cupid in Jean-Georges Noverre's ballet of Cymon. As a child his vivacity, cleverness and ready affection made him a universal favorite, but his harsh circumstances and lack of discipline, both helped develop self-reliance and fostered wayward tendencies. About 1794 a few benevolent persons paid for him to go to school, where he did well; but finding the restraint intolerable, he shipped as a cabin boy at Portsmouth. Finding life at sea even more restricting, he pretended to be both deaf and lame so skilfully that he deceived the doctors at Madeira.[2]

On his return to England, he sought the protection of his uncle, Moses Kean, a mimic, ventriloquist and general entertainer, who, besides continuing his pantomimic studies, introduced him to the study of Shakespeare. At the same time, Charlotte Tidswell, an actress who had been especially kind to him from infancy, taught him the principles of acting.[2]

On the death of his uncle, she took charge of him, and he began the systematic study of the principal Shakespearean characters, displaying the peculiar originality of his genius by interpretations entirely different from those of John Philip Kemble, then considered the great exponent of these roles. Kean's talents and interesting countenance caused a Mrs Clarke to adopt him, but he took offense at the comments of a visitor and suddenly left her house and went back to his old surroundings.[2]

Discovery edit

Aged 14, he obtained an engagement to play leading characters for 20 nights in the York Theatre, appearing as Hamlet, Hastings and Cato. Shortly afterwards, while he was in Richardson's Theatre, a travelling theatre company, the rumor of his abilities reached George III, who commanded him to appear at Windsor Castle. He subsequently joined Saunders's circus, where in the performance of an equestrian feat he fell and broke both legs—the accident leaving traces of swelling in his insteps throughout his life.[2]

About this time, he picked up music from Charles Incledon, dancing from D’Egville, and fencing from Angelo. In 1807, he played leading parts in the Belfast theater with Sarah Siddons, who began by calling him "a horrid little man" and on further experience of his ability said that he "played very, very well," but that "there was too little of him to make a great actor." He made an early appearance with Mrs. Baker's company. In 1808, he joined the provincial troupe of the actor Samuel Butler and went on to marry Mary Chambers of Waterford, the leading actress, on 17 July.[2] His wife gave birth to two sons, one of whom was actor Charles Kean.

Drury Lane and New York edit

 
A print of Edmund Kean as Shylock in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice.

For several years, his prospects were very gloomy, but in 1814, the committee of Drury Lane Theatre, which was on the verge of bankruptcy, resolved to give him a chance among the "experiments" they were making to win a return of popularity. When the expectation of his first appearance in London was close upon him, he was so feverish that he exclaimed, "If I succeed I shall go mad."[2] As he was unable to afford medical treatment for some time, his elder son died the day after he signed the three-year Drury Lane contract.

His opening at Drury Lane on 26 January 1814 as Shylock roused the audience to almost uncontrollable enthusiasm.[2][3] Contemporaries recognized that Kean had brought dignity and humanity to his portrayal of the character.[4] Jane Austen refers to his popularity in a letter to her sister Cassandra dated 2 March 1814: "Places are secured at Drury Lane for Saturday, but so great is the rage for seeing Kean that only a third and fourth row could be got".[5] Successive appearances in Richard III, Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth and King Lear demonstrated his mastery of the range of tragic emotion. His triumph was so great that he himself said on one occasion, "I could not feel the stage under me."[2]

 
Portrait of Edmund Kean as Richard III

In 1817, a local playwright named Charles Bucke submitted his play The Italians, or; The Fatal Accusation to Drury Lane, for which Kean was to play the lead. The play was well received by both council and actors until Kean seemed to have a change of heart and began to make several offhand remarks that his part was not big enough for him. Then, after a performance in February 1819 where Kean went out of his way to botch the opening night of Switzerland by historical novelist Jane Porter, for whom Kean had had a personal dislike, Bucke pulled the play out of contempt for Kean's conduct.[6] After much cajoling to still perform the play by the theater staff, Mr. Bucke then later had it republished with a preface concerning the incident, including excerpts from correspondences between the involved parties, which was later challenged in two books, The Assailant Assailed and A Defense of Edmund Kean, Esq. The result was loss of face on both sides and the play being performed anyway on 3 April 1819 to a disastrous reception thanks to the controversy already surrounding the play and Kean's previous conduct.[7]

On 29 November 1820, Kean appeared for the first time in New York City as Richard III at the Anthony Street Theatre. The success of his visit to America was unequivocal, although he fell into a vexatious dispute with the press.[2] In 1821, he appeared in Boston with Mary Ann Duff in The Distrest Mother, by Ambrose Philips, an adaptation of Racine's Andromaque. On 4 June 1821, he returned to England.[2]

Kean was the first to restore the tragic ending to Shakespeare's King Lear, which had been replaced on stage since 1681 by Nahum Tate's happy ending adaptation The History of King Lear. Kean had previously acted Tate's Lear, but told his wife that the London audience "have no notion of what I can do till they see me over the dead body of Cordelia."[8] Kean played the tragic Lear for a few performances. They were not well received, though one critic described his dying scene as "deeply affecting",[9] and with regret, he reverted to Tate.[10]

 
Newspaper notice for meeting of the Boston Debating Society: "Would the public be justified in expelling Kean the tragedian from the stage on account of his private character?" (October 1825)[11]

Private life edit

Kean's lifestyle became a hindrance to his career. As a result of his relationship with Charlotte Cox, the wife of a London city alderman, Kean was sued by Mr Cox for damages for criminal conversation (adultery). Damages of £800 were awarded against him by a jury that had deliberated for just 10 minutes. The Times launched a violent attack on him.[citation needed] The adverse decision in the criminal conversation case of Cox v. Kean on 17 January 1825 caused his wife to leave him, and aroused against him such bitter feeling that he was booed and pelted with fruit when he re-appeared at Drury Lane and nearly compelled him to retire permanently into private life.[12] For many years, he lived at Keydell House, Horndean.

Second American visit edit

A second visit to America in 1825 was largely a repetition of the persecution which he had suffered in England. Some cities showed him a spirit of charity; many audiences subjected him to insults and even violence. In Quebec City, he was much impressed with the kindness of some Huron Indians who attended his performances, and he was purportedly made an honorary chief of the tribe, receiving the name Alanienouidet.[13] Kean's last appearance in New York was on 5 December 1826 in Richard III, the role in which he was first seen in America.[12]

Decline and death edit

He returned to England and was ultimately received with favour, but by now he was so dependent on the use of stimulants that the gradual deterioration of his gifts was inevitable. Still, his great powers triumphed during the moments of his inspiration over the absolute wreck of his physical faculties. His appearance in Paris was a failure owing to a fit of drunkenness.[12] He appeared in the title part of Ben Nazir by Thomas Colley Grattan in 1827 as a comeback role at Drury Lane, but the play was not a success. He turned down Alfred the Great by James Sheridan Knowles, a role that went to William Macready[14]

His last appearance on the stage was at Covent Garden on 15 March 1833, when he played Othello to the Iago of his son, Charles Kean, who was also an accomplished actor. At the words "Villain, be sure," in scene 3 of act iii, he suddenly broke down, and crying in a faltering voice "O God, I am dying. Speak to them, Charles," fell insensible into his son's arms.[12] He died a few weeks later in Surrey,[15] and is commemorated in the Parish Church where there is a floor plaque marking his grave as well as a wall plaque that was originally on the outside, but was moved inside and heavily restored during restoration work in 1904. He is buried in the parish church of All Saints, in the village of Catherington, Hampshire. His last words were alleged to have been "dying is easy; comedy is hard."[16] In Dublin, Gustavus Vaughan Brooke took up the part of William Tell vacated by Kean.

Artistic legacy edit

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, it was in the impersonation of the great creations of Shakespeare's genius that the varied beauty and grandeur of the acting of Kean were displayed in their highest form, although probably his most powerful character was Sir Giles Overreach in Philip Massinger's A New Way to Pay Old Debts, the effect of his first performance of which was such that the pit rose en masse, and even the actors and actresses themselves were overcome by the terrific dramatic illusion. His main disadvantage as an actor was his small stature. Coleridge said, "Seeing him act was like reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning."[17][12]

Eccentricity edit

His eccentricities at the height of his fame were numerous. He chose his dinner according to the role he was to play. For a tyrant pork, for a murderer beef and for a lover mutton.[18]

Sometimes he would ride recklessly on his horse, Shylock, throughout the night. He was presented with a tame lion with which he might be found playing in his drawing-room.[12] The prize-fighters Mendoza and Richmond the Black were among his visitors and Henry Grattan was his devoted friend.

Appraisals edit

 
Kean as Lucius Junius Brutus in Brutus.

In his earlier days, François Talma said of him, "He is a magnificent uncut gem; polish and round him off and he will be a perfect tragedian." William Macready, who was much impressed by Kean's Richard III and met the actor at supper, speaks of his "unassuming manner ... partaking in some degree of shyness" and of the "touching grace" of his singing. Kean's delivery of the three words "I answer—No!" in the part of Sir Edward Mortimer in The Iron Chest, cast Macready into an abyss of despair at rivalling him in this role. So full of dramatic interest is the life of Edmund Kean that it formed the subject for the play "Kean" by Jean-Paul Sartre as well as a play by Alexandre Dumas, entitled Kean, ou Désordre et génie, in which the actor Frédérick Lemaître achieved one of his greatest triumphs.[12]

In 1924 director Alexandre Volkoff adapted the Dumas play into a French silent feature film starring Russian actor Ivan Mosjoukine, who was then living in Paris. Kean: Genius or Scoundrel (Italian: Kean - Genio e sregolatezza) co-written, directed by and starring Vittorio Gassman, is a 1956 Italian dramatization of the life of Kean. It is based on the drama play Kean (1836) by Alexandre Dumas and its 1953 adaptation by Jean-Paul Sartre. It was screened at the Locarno Film Festival in 1957. The film's sets were designed by the art director Gianni Polidori. Much of the film was shot at the Teatro Valle in Rome.

Theatrical works edit

Several theatrical works have been based on Kean's life:

Cultural influence edit

The acclaimed latter 20th-century British theatre and film actor Peter O'Toole owned a finger-ring that had once belonged to Kean, and used it as a literary muse for the writing of the second volume of his autobiography Loitering With Intent: The Apprentice (1997).[21] O'Toole delivered the line, "dying is easy; comedy is hard" and attributed it to the last words of Kean in the 1982 movie My Favorite Year.

References edit

  1. ^ . Provincial Grand Lodge of Glasgow. Archived from the original on 22 October 2020. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Chisholm 1911, p. 705.
  3. ^ . Cleveland Jewish News. Archived from the original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  4. ^ Simpson, Louis (4 April 1993). "There, They Could Say, Is the Jew". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  5. ^ Jane Austen letters 28A11/B26
  6. ^ The Works of Lord Byron, footnote pg. 202
  7. ^ "The Italians, or; The Fatal Accusation", preface pages v through xxvi
  8. ^ Edward Dowden, "Introduction to King Lear" in Shakespeare Tragedies, Oxford University Press, 1912, p. 743.
  9. ^ George Daniel, quoted in Grace Ioppolo, William Shakespeare's King Lear: A Sourcebook. London, Routledge, 2003, p. 79.
  10. ^ Stanley Wells, "Introduction" from King Lear Oxford University Press, 2000, p. 69.
  11. ^ Boston Commercial Gazette, 10-27-1825
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911, p. 706.
  13. ^ * Hillebrand, Harold Newcomb. Edmund Kean New York, Columbia University Press, 1933 p 275
  14. ^ Ziter, Edward. The Orient on the Victorian Stage. Cambridge University Press, 2003. p.59
  15. ^ "BBC - Shakespeare on Tour - Hell-raising actor appears in Penzance". BBC. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  16. ^ Kahan, Jeffrey (2006). The Cult of Kean. Ashgate Publishing. p. 2. ISBN 9780754656500.
  17. ^ Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, Table Talk, 27 April 1823 in Coleridge, Samuel Taylor; Morley, Henry (1884). Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Christobel, &c. New York: Routledge. p. 38.
  18. ^ Read, Jan (1981). The Great British Breakfast. London: Michael Joseph. p. 119. ISBN 0718120043.
  19. ^ "Derek Jacobi". Los Angeles Times. 9 June 1991.
  20. ^ Thaxter, John (31 May 2007). "Kean Theatre Review". The Stage. Retrieved 29 August 2008.
  21. ^ 'The South Bank Show' - 'Peter O'Toole', London Weekend Television documentary (1993).

Sources edit

  • Francis Phippen, Authentic memoirs of Edmund Kean, containing a specimen of his talent at composition (London, 1814)
  • B. W. Procter, The Life of E. K. (London, 1835)
  • Frederick William Hawkins, The life of Edmund Kean (Tinsley Brothers, London, 1869)
  • George Henry Lewes, On Actors and the Art of Acting (Smith Elder, London, 1875)
  • Henry Barton Baker Our Old Actors, (R. Bentley & Son, London, 1881)
  • Edwin Booth, "Edmund Kean," in Actors and Actresses of Great Britain and the United States from the days of David Garrick to the present time, edited by Brander Matthews and Laurence Hutton, volume iii (Cassell & Co., New York, 1886)
  • Joseph Fitzgerald Molloy, The Life and Adventures of Edmund Kean, Tragedian, 1787-1833 (Downey & Co. Limited, London, 1897)
  • Edward Stirling, Old Drury Lane: Fifty Years' Recollections of Author, Actor, and Manager (Chatto and Windus, London, 1887).
  • Lynch, Jack (2007). Becoming Shakespeare: The Strange Afterlife That Turned a Provincial Playwright into the Bard. New York: Walker & Co.
  • Hillebrand, Harold Newcomb: Edmund Kean, New York, Columbia University Press, 1933
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Kean, Edmund". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 705–706.

External links edit

edmund, kean, november, 1787, 1833, celebrated, british, shakespearean, stage, actor, born, england, performed, among, other, places, london, belfast, york, quebec, paris, known, short, stature, tumultuous, personal, life, controversial, divorce, kean, giles, . Edmund Kean 4 November 1787 15 May 1833 was a celebrated British Shakespearean stage actor born in England who performed among other places in London Belfast New York Quebec and Paris He was known for his short stature tumultuous personal life and controversial divorce Edmund KeanKean as Sir Giles Overreach in Massinger s A New Way to Pay Old DebtsBorn 1787 11 04 4 November 1787 1 Westminster LondonDied15 May 1833 1833 05 15 aged 45 Richmond then in Surrey now in London NationalityBritishOccupationActorSpouseMary ChambersChildrenCharles Kean Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Discovery 1 3 Drury Lane and New York 1 4 Private life 1 5 Second American visit 1 6 Decline and death 2 Artistic legacy 3 Eccentricity 4 Appraisals 5 Theatrical works 6 Cultural influence 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Kean was born in Westminster London His father was probably Edmund Kean an architect s clerk and his mother was an actress Anne Carey daughter of the 18th century composer and playwright Henry Carey 2 Kean made his first appearance on the stage aged four as Cupid in Jean Georges Noverre s ballet of Cymon As a child his vivacity cleverness and ready affection made him a universal favorite but his harsh circumstances and lack of discipline both helped develop self reliance and fostered wayward tendencies About 1794 a few benevolent persons paid for him to go to school where he did well but finding the restraint intolerable he shipped as a cabin boy at Portsmouth Finding life at sea even more restricting he pretended to be both deaf and lame so skilfully that he deceived the doctors at Madeira 2 On his return to England he sought the protection of his uncle Moses Kean a mimic ventriloquist and general entertainer who besides continuing his pantomimic studies introduced him to the study of Shakespeare At the same time Charlotte Tidswell an actress who had been especially kind to him from infancy taught him the principles of acting 2 On the death of his uncle she took charge of him and he began the systematic study of the principal Shakespearean characters displaying the peculiar originality of his genius by interpretations entirely different from those of John Philip Kemble then considered the great exponent of these roles Kean s talents and interesting countenance caused a Mrs Clarke to adopt him but he took offense at the comments of a visitor and suddenly left her house and went back to his old surroundings 2 Discovery edit Aged 14 he obtained an engagement to play leading characters for 20 nights in the York Theatre appearing as Hamlet Hastings and Cato Shortly afterwards while he was in Richardson s Theatre a travelling theatre company the rumor of his abilities reached George III who commanded him to appear at Windsor Castle He subsequently joined Saunders s circus where in the performance of an equestrian feat he fell and broke both legs the accident leaving traces of swelling in his insteps throughout his life 2 About this time he picked up music from Charles Incledon dancing from D Egville and fencing from Angelo In 1807 he played leading parts in the Belfast theater with Sarah Siddons who began by calling him a horrid little man and on further experience of his ability said that he played very very well but that there was too little of him to make a great actor He made an early appearance with Mrs Baker s company In 1808 he joined the provincial troupe of the actor Samuel Butler and went on to marry Mary Chambers of Waterford the leading actress on 17 July 2 His wife gave birth to two sons one of whom was actor Charles Kean Drury Lane and New York edit nbsp A print of Edmund Kean as Shylock in Shakespeare s Merchant of Venice For several years his prospects were very gloomy but in 1814 the committee of Drury Lane Theatre which was on the verge of bankruptcy resolved to give him a chance among the experiments they were making to win a return of popularity When the expectation of his first appearance in London was close upon him he was so feverish that he exclaimed If I succeed I shall go mad 2 As he was unable to afford medical treatment for some time his elder son died the day after he signed the three year Drury Lane contract His opening at Drury Lane on 26 January 1814 as Shylock roused the audience to almost uncontrollable enthusiasm 2 3 Contemporaries recognized that Kean had brought dignity and humanity to his portrayal of the character 4 Jane Austen refers to his popularity in a letter to her sister Cassandra dated 2 March 1814 Places are secured at Drury Lane for Saturday but so great is the rage for seeing Kean that only a third and fourth row could be got 5 Successive appearances in Richard III Hamlet Othello Macbeth and King Lear demonstrated his mastery of the range of tragic emotion His triumph was so great that he himself said on one occasion I could not feel the stage under me 2 nbsp Portrait of Edmund Kean as Richard IIIIn 1817 a local playwright named Charles Bucke submitted his play The Italians or The Fatal Accusation to Drury Lane for which Kean was to play the lead The play was well received by both council and actors until Kean seemed to have a change of heart and began to make several offhand remarks that his part was not big enough for him Then after a performance in February 1819 where Kean went out of his way to botch the opening night of Switzerland by historical novelist Jane Porter for whom Kean had had a personal dislike Bucke pulled the play out of contempt for Kean s conduct 6 After much cajoling to still perform the play by the theater staff Mr Bucke then later had it republished with a preface concerning the incident including excerpts from correspondences between the involved parties which was later challenged in two books The Assailant Assailed and A Defense of Edmund Kean Esq The result was loss of face on both sides and the play being performed anyway on 3 April 1819 to a disastrous reception thanks to the controversy already surrounding the play and Kean s previous conduct 7 On 29 November 1820 Kean appeared for the first time in New York City as Richard III at the Anthony Street Theatre The success of his visit to America was unequivocal although he fell into a vexatious dispute with the press 2 In 1821 he appeared in Boston with Mary Ann Duff in The Distrest Mother by Ambrose Philips an adaptation of Racine s Andromaque On 4 June 1821 he returned to England 2 Kean was the first to restore the tragic ending to Shakespeare s King Lear which had been replaced on stage since 1681 by Nahum Tate s happy ending adaptation The History of King Lear Kean had previously acted Tate s Lear but told his wife that the London audience have no notion of what I can do till they see me over the dead body of Cordelia 8 Kean played the tragic Lear for a few performances They were not well received though one critic described his dying scene as deeply affecting 9 and with regret he reverted to Tate 10 nbsp Newspaper notice for meeting of the Boston Debating Society Would the public be justified in expelling Kean the tragedian from the stage on account of his private character October 1825 11 Private life edit Kean s lifestyle became a hindrance to his career As a result of his relationship with Charlotte Cox the wife of a London city alderman Kean was sued by Mr Cox for damages for criminal conversation adultery Damages of 800 were awarded against him by a jury that had deliberated for just 10 minutes The Times launched a violent attack on him citation needed The adverse decision in the criminal conversation case of Cox v Kean on 17 January 1825 caused his wife to leave him and aroused against him such bitter feeling that he was booed and pelted with fruit when he re appeared at Drury Lane and nearly compelled him to retire permanently into private life 12 For many years he lived at Keydell House Horndean Second American visit edit A second visit to America in 1825 was largely a repetition of the persecution which he had suffered in England Some cities showed him a spirit of charity many audiences subjected him to insults and even violence In Quebec City he was much impressed with the kindness of some Huron Indians who attended his performances and he was purportedly made an honorary chief of the tribe receiving the name Alanienouidet 13 Kean s last appearance in New York was on 5 December 1826 in Richard III the role in which he was first seen in America 12 Decline and death edit He returned to England and was ultimately received with favour but by now he was so dependent on the use of stimulants that the gradual deterioration of his gifts was inevitable Still his great powers triumphed during the moments of his inspiration over the absolute wreck of his physical faculties His appearance in Paris was a failure owing to a fit of drunkenness 12 He appeared in the title part of Ben Nazir by Thomas Colley Grattan in 1827 as a comeback role at Drury Lane but the play was not a success He turned down Alfred the Great by James Sheridan Knowles a role that went to William Macready 14 His last appearance on the stage was at Covent Garden on 15 March 1833 when he played Othello to the Iago of his son Charles Kean who was also an accomplished actor At the words Villain be sure in scene 3 of act iii he suddenly broke down and crying in a faltering voice O God I am dying Speak to them Charles fell insensible into his son s arms 12 He died a few weeks later in Surrey 15 and is commemorated in the Parish Church where there is a floor plaque marking his grave as well as a wall plaque that was originally on the outside but was moved inside and heavily restored during restoration work in 1904 He is buried in the parish church of All Saints in the village of Catherington Hampshire His last words were alleged to have been dying is easy comedy is hard 16 In Dublin Gustavus Vaughan Brooke took up the part of William Tell vacated by Kean Artistic legacy editAccording to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition it was in the impersonation of the great creations of Shakespeare s genius that the varied beauty and grandeur of the acting of Kean were displayed in their highest form although probably his most powerful character was Sir Giles Overreach in Philip Massinger s A New Way to Pay Old Debts the effect of his first performance of which was such that the pit rose en masse and even the actors and actresses themselves were overcome by the terrific dramatic illusion His main disadvantage as an actor was his small stature Coleridge said Seeing him act was like reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning 17 12 Eccentricity editHis eccentricities at the height of his fame were numerous He chose his dinner according to the role he was to play For a tyrant pork for a murderer beef and for a lover mutton 18 Sometimes he would ride recklessly on his horse Shylock throughout the night He was presented with a tame lion with which he might be found playing in his drawing room 12 The prize fighters Mendoza and Richmond the Black were among his visitors and Henry Grattan was his devoted friend Appraisals edit nbsp Kean as Lucius Junius Brutus in Brutus In his earlier days Francois Talma said of him He is a magnificent uncut gem polish and round him off and he will be a perfect tragedian William Macready who was much impressed by Kean s Richard III and met the actor at supper speaks of his unassuming manner partaking in some degree of shyness and of the touching grace of his singing Kean s delivery of the three words I answer No in the part of Sir Edward Mortimer in The Iron Chest cast Macready into an abyss of despair at rivalling him in this role So full of dramatic interest is the life of Edmund Kean that it formed the subject for the play Kean by Jean Paul Sartre as well as a play by Alexandre Dumas entitled Kean ou Desordre et genie in which the actor Frederick Lemaitre achieved one of his greatest triumphs 12 In 1924 director Alexandre Volkoff adapted the Dumas play into a French silent feature film starring Russian actor Ivan Mosjoukine who was then living in Paris Kean Genius or Scoundrel Italian Kean Genio e sregolatezza co written directed by and starring Vittorio Gassman is a 1956 Italian dramatization of the life of Kean It is based on the drama play Kean 1836 by Alexandre Dumas and its 1953 adaptation by Jean Paul Sartre It was screened at the Locarno Film Festival in 1957 The film s sets were designed by the art director Gianni Polidori Much of the film was shot at the Teatro Valle in Rome Theatrical works editSeveral theatrical works have been based on Kean s life Kean a drama by Alexandre Dumas pere 1836 Kean a comedy by Jean Paul Sartre 1953 produced 1954 with Pierre Brasseur revived London 1990 starring Derek Jacobi 19 and in 2007 starring Antony Sher 20 Kean a Broadway musical by Peter Stone Robert Wright and George Forrest 1961 Kean 1978 a BBC Play of the Month with Anthony Hopkins Kean 1983 a YTV biography with Ben Kingsley Kean IV a tragicomedy by Grigoriy Gorin 1991Cultural influence editThe acclaimed latter 20th century British theatre and film actor Peter O Toole owned a finger ring that had once belonged to Kean and used it as a literary muse for the writing of the second volume of his autobiography Loitering With Intent The Apprentice 1997 21 O Toole delivered the line dying is easy comedy is hard and attributed it to the last words of Kean in the 1982 movie My Favorite Year References edit Edmund Kean MM St Marks Lodge at Glasgow No 102 Provincial Grand Lodge of Glasgow Archived from the original on 22 October 2020 Retrieved 4 November 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Chisholm 1911 p 705 This day May 15 in Jewish history Cleveland Jewish News Archived from the original on 19 May 2014 Retrieved 18 May 2014 Simpson Louis 4 April 1993 There They Could Say Is the Jew The New York Times Retrieved 2 October 2014 Jane Austen letters 28A11 B26 The Works of Lord Byron footnote pg 202 The Italians or The Fatal Accusation preface pages v through xxvi Edward Dowden Introduction to King Lear in Shakespeare Tragedies Oxford University Press 1912 p 743 George Daniel quoted in Grace Ioppolo William Shakespeare s King Lear A Sourcebook London Routledge 2003 p 79 Stanley Wells Introduction from King Lear Oxford University Press 2000 p 69 Boston Commercial Gazette 10 27 1825 a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911 p 706 Hillebrand Harold Newcomb Edmund Kean New York Columbia University Press 1933 p 275 Ziter Edward The Orient on the Victorian Stage Cambridge University Press 2003 p 59 BBC Shakespeare on Tour Hell raising actor appears in Penzance BBC Retrieved 19 May 2021 Kahan Jeffrey 2006 The Cult of Kean Ashgate Publishing p 2 ISBN 9780754656500 Coleridge Samuel Taylor Table Talk 27 April 1823 in Coleridge Samuel Taylor Morley Henry 1884 Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Christobel amp c New York Routledge p 38 Read Jan 1981 The Great British Breakfast London Michael Joseph p 119 ISBN 0718120043 Derek Jacobi Los Angeles Times 9 June 1991 Thaxter John 31 May 2007 Kean Theatre Review The Stage Retrieved 29 August 2008 The South Bank Show Peter O Toole London Weekend Television documentary 1993 Sources editFrancis Phippen Authentic memoirs of Edmund Kean containing a specimen of his talent at composition London 1814 B W Procter The Life of E K London 1835 Frederick William Hawkins The life of Edmund Kean Tinsley Brothers London 1869 George Henry Lewes On Actors and the Art of Acting Smith Elder London 1875 Henry Barton Baker Our Old Actors R Bentley amp Son London 1881 Edwin Booth Edmund Kean in Actors and Actresses of Great Britain and the United States from the days of David Garrick to the present time edited by Brander Matthews and Laurence Hutton volume iii Cassell amp Co New York 1886 Joseph Fitzgerald Molloy The Life and Adventures of Edmund Kean Tragedian 1787 1833 Downey amp Co Limited London 1897 Edward Stirling Old Drury Lane Fifty Years Recollections of Author Actor and Manager Chatto and Windus London 1887 Lynch Jack 2007 Becoming Shakespeare The Strange Afterlife That Turned a Provincial Playwright into the Bard New York Walker amp Co Hillebrand Harold Newcomb Edmund Kean New York Columbia University Press 1933 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Kean Edmund Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 705 706 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edmund Kean Richard Henry Dana on Edmund Kean s Acting report by Carol McCluer of an Aesthetic Realism lecture by Eli Siegel Caricatures cartoons and portraits of Edmund Kean 1812 1833 held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Theater Arts Manuscripts An Inventory of the Collection at the Harry Ransom Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edmund Kean amp oldid 1207553815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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