fbpx
Wikipedia

Maurice Barrymore

Herbert Arthur Chamberlayne Blythe (21 September 1849[1] – 25 March 1905),[2] known professionally by his stage name Maurice Barrymore, was an Indian-born British stage actor. He is the patriarch of the Barrymore acting family, father of John, Lionel and Ethel, and great-grandfather of actress Drew.[3]

Maurice Barrymore
Born
Herbert Arthur Chamberlayne Blythe

(1849-09-21)21 September 1849
Died25 March 1905(1905-03-25) (aged 55)
Resting placeMount Vernon Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Occupation(s)Actor, playwright
Years active1874–1901
Spouse(s)
(m. 1876; died 1893)

Mamie Floyd (1894–?; divorced by 1900)
FamilyBarrymore

Early life

Born Herbert Arthur Chamberlayne Blythe in Amritsar, India, he was the son of William Edward Blythe, a surveyor for the British East India Company, and his wife Charlotte Matilda Chamberlayne de Tankerville. Herbert, the youngest of seven, had an older brother named Will and two sisters named Emily and Evelin. Three other siblings had died in infancy.[4] Matilda, after a difficult pregnancy, died shortly after giving birth to Herbert on 21 September 1849. In his formative years Herbert was raised by his Aunt Amelia Blythe, his mother's sister, and later by other family members. Amelia, a Chamberlayne by birth, had married a brother of Herbert's father and was a Blythe by marriage.

Herbert was sent back to England for education at Harrow School, and studied law at Oxford University, where he was captain of his class football team in 1868. Herbert also became enamored of the sport of boxing. The Marquess of Queensberry Rules were firmly established at this time but it was not unusual to see bare knuckle fights. On 21 March 1872 Herbert won the middleweight boxing championship of England[dubious ]. Years later many of Herbert's friends would be sports figures of the day, particularly boxers and wrestlers such as William Muldoon, John L. Sullivan, James J. Corbett and a young actor named Hobart Bosworth, the latter of whom Herbert would stage in an amateur bout with his son Lionel.[1]

Herbert's father expected him to become a barrister, but Herbert fell in with a group of actors, which scandalized the elder Blythe. That same year 1872 Herbert sat for his first posed theatrical photographic portrait by Oliver Sarony, older brother of the better remembered Napoleon Sarony. In order to spare his father the "shame" of having a son in such a "dissolute" vocation, he took the stage name Maurice Barrymore (though he never legally changed from "Blythe"), inspired by a conversation he had with fellow actor Charles Vandenhoff about William Barrymore (1759–1830),[5] an early 19th-century English thespian, after seeing a poster depicting Barrymore in the Haymarket Theatre. He wanted his first name to be pronounced in the French manner (môr-ĒS) instead of the English (MÔR-is). His friends avoided that altogether by simply calling him "Barry".[6]

Career and marriage to Georgiana Drew

 
Maurice Barrymore as Wilding in Captain Swift (1888) by C. Haddon Chambers[7]
 
Maurice Barrymore mid 1890s.

On 29 December 1874, Barrymore emigrated to the United States, sailing aboard the SS America to Boston, and joined Augustin Daly's troupe, making his début in Under the Gaslight. He made his Broadway début in December 1875 in Pique opposite Emily Rigl; in the cast was a young actress, Georgiana Drew, known as Georgie. Maurice and Georgiana had been introduced earlier by her brother John Drew Jr. who had befriended Maurice when he first arrived in America. Drew Jr. and Georgiana later brought Barrymore home to Philadelphia to be introduced to her mother, the formidable Mrs. John Drew, who for some reason wasn't too enthralled by the young man.

After a brief courtship, Barrymore and Georgie married on 31 December 1876, and had three children: Lionel (born 1878), Ethel (born 1879), and John (born 1882). While their parents were on tour, the children lived with Georgiana's mother in Philadelphia. Barrymore had a lifelong love of animals and in the 1890s bought a farm on Staten Island to keep his collection of exotic animals. Georgiana died 2 July 1893, from consumption, leaving Maurice a widower with three teenage children. For a summer in 1896, Lionel and John were left on the farm in the care of the man who fed the animals. Exactly one year after Georgie's death Barrymore married Mamie Floyd, much to Ethel's consternation.

Shooting

On 19 March 1879, in Marshall, Texas, Barrymore and fellow actor Ben Porter were shot by a notorious gunfighter and bully named Jim Currie.[8] Barrymore and Porter had played cards earlier with Currie, winning some money from him. That evening, while Barrymore, Porter and the actress Ellen Cummins dined at the White House Saloon, an intoxicated Currie began insulting and goading them into a fight. Barrymore challenged Currie to a fistfight. Currie shot him in the chest and then shot Porter in the stomach. John Drew, Jr., also with the company, showed up at the doorway after being alerted by all the commotion but Currie didn't shoot him, possibly having run out of bullets. Porter was killed, while doctors spent the night operating on Barrymore to save his life. Georgie, then several months pregnant with Ethel, rushed to Texas to be at her husband's side enduring a long train trip. He made a full recovery, and returned to Marshall for the legal procedures that followed. Currie's brother was Andrew Currie, mayor of Shreveport, Louisiana, from 1878 to 1890 and later a member of the Louisiana state legislature,[9] who apparently used his influence to secure a not guilty verdict (after a 10-minute deliberation).[8] An enraged Barrymore vowed never to return to Texas.

According to a 2004 A&E Biography piece, after the Ben Porter tragedy, Barrymore asked Georgiana to tour with him and Helena Modjeska in a play he had written. Georgiana and the children had converted to Catholicism under Helena's influence. Learning that he and Helena had resumed their romance, Georgiana, who had been given ownership of the play by Barrymore, forced his hand by closing it. Helena's husband, its producer, sued her. The real reason for Georgiana's actions never got into the press. However, Barrymore's many dalliances did make the newspapers.[citation needed]

Nadjezda

In 1884, Barrymore wrote a play titled Nadjezda (meaning "hope").[10] During this period he sailed with his wife Georgiana and their children Lionel, Ethel and John, then respectively 6, 5 and 2, to England to visit relatives he hadn't seen since migrating to America. (He had inherited some money from his aunt Amelia, one of his family members who helped raise him.) During the trip Barrymore met the great French actress and star Sarah Bernhardt. Without copyrighting his play, he gave her a copy of the manuscript. In 1886, Victorien Sardou, a friend of Bernhardt's, wrote his play La Tosca, which later achieved great fame as an opera. Barrymore claimed that Bernhardt had given his play to Sardou and that La Tosca plagiarized it, and sought an injunction to stop Fanny Davenport from putting on further performances. In affidavits read out in court Bernhardt said that she had never seen the play and knew nothing about it, and Sardou said that preliminary material for the play had been in his desk for fifteen years. In fact, the only resemblance to La Tosca is the unholy bargain the heroine makes to save her husband's life, similar to that of Tosca and Baron Scarpia. As Sardou pointed out in his affidavit, this plot device is a common one and had been notably used by Shakespeare in Measure for Measure.

Last years

 
Lithograph of Barrymore with Mrs. Leslie Carter in The Heart of Maryland, 1895

In 1896, Barrymore became the first major Broadway star to headline in Vaudeville—a brave foray at the time. During his career, Maurice Barrymore played opposite many of the reigning female stars of the time including Helena Modjeska, Mrs. Fiske, Mrs. Leslie Carter, Olga Nethersole, Lillian Russell, and Lily Langtry. In the 1895 theater season on Broadway he co-starred with Mrs. Leslie Carter in The Heart of Maryland. In the 1899 season on Broadway he had a success playing opposite Mrs. Fiske in the part of Rawdon Crawley in Becky Sharp.[11] This play was based on a character from William Thackeray's novel Vanity Fair. Becky Sharp was Barrymore's last Broadway success. In 1900, Barrymore toured the U.S. with a play called The Battle of the Strong co-starring a young Holbrook Blinn. In the company of this play was a five-year-old child actress, Blanche Sweet, who grew up to be a silent movie actress and acted with Lionel in his first Biograph film. When the Battle of the Strong company stopped in Louisville, Kentucky Barrymore sat for his last posed photograph. Also during this time he got to spend time with his son John, who was now in his late teens. Lionel and Ethel were on the road in theater companies, having already started their careers.

Mental breakdown and death

On 28 March 1901, Barrymore was performing at the Lion Palace Theatre in New York when he suddenly departed from his monologue and shocked the audience with what was described as "a blasphemous attack on the Jews" and a rant of "such an emotional pitch that tears rolled down his face." After further erratic behavior, Barrymore was committed to Bellevue Hospital by a court order obtained by his son (John).[12] In reporting his death on 25 March 1905, The New York Times recalled that "He was playing a vaudeville engagement [in 1901] at a Harlem theatre when he suddenly dropped his lines and began to rave." The following day he became violent and was taken to Bellevue insane ward by his son, John, who lured him under the pretense of starring in a new play. At Bellevue and later Amityville he was diagnosed with the lingering effects of syphilis, an incurable disease at the time. During his stay at Bellevue he almost strangled his daughter Ethel during a visit.[13] Ethel, through her early success on the stage, paid for her father's stay in the institutions. A trained boxer, Barrymore's strength remained, as in a scuffle with one of the Bellevue attendants, he picked the man up over his head and threw him into a corner.

In 1905, Barrymore's son Lionel visited him at Amityville and the subject of San Francisco came up. Maurice called Lionel a "goddamned liar" and stated that San Francisco had been destroyed by fire and earthquake. Lionel writes in his autobiography that his father had foreseen the great 1906 earthquake a full year before it took place.[14]

Barrymore died at Amityville in his sleep, and Ethel had him buried at Glenwood Cemetery in Philadelphia.[15][3][16] When the cemetery later was closed, his remains were moved to Mount Vernon Cemetery, also in Philadelphia, where his first wife and her family are buried. Barrymore was fondly remembered, and his death was widely reported in the country's newspapers. He had lived long enough to see all three of his children enter the family business of acting.[17]

In memoriam

In honor of his life, Michael J. Farrand penned the memorial narrative poem "The Man Who Brought Royalty to America" in 2000, based on the definitive biography Great Times, Good Times: The Odyssey of Maurice Barrymore by James Kotsilibas Davis (Doubleday, 1977).

References

  1. ^ a b James Kotsilibas Davis (ca. 1977) Great Times Good Times: The Odyssey of Maurice Barrymore
  2. ^ The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Brooklyn New York Mar. 25 1905 Saturday
  3. ^ a b Said that Maurice had died in Amityville, New York, pp. 21–22, 41.
  4. ^ ...(Wayback Machine)
  5. ^ American and British Theatrical Biography page 74 c.1979 by J.P. Wearing Retrieved 12 August 2015 ISBN 0-8108-1201-0
  6. ^ American History From About[permanent dead link] at americanhistory.about.com
  7. ^ C. Haddon Chambers (1888) Captain Swift at Hathi Trust Digital Library
  8. ^ a b DeArment, Robert K. (30 March 2012). Deadly Dozen: Forgotten Gunfighters of the Old West. Vol. 2. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 37–46. ISBN 9780806138633.
  9. ^ Brock, Eric J. (31 January 2001). Eric Brock's Shreveport. ISBN 9781455603862.
  10. ^ "Literary gossip". The Week: A Canadian Journal of Politics, Literature, Science and Arts. 1 (10): 158. 7 February 1884. Retrieved 25 April 2013.
  11. ^ Famous Actors and Actresses On the American Stage: Documents of the American Theater History Vol. 1 A-J by William C. Young c.1975; (Maurice Barrymore entry pages75-81 with splendid photo as Rawdon Crawley)
  12. ^ "Barrymore in an Asylum", Chicago Daily Tribune, 30 March 1901, p1
  13. ^ St. Louis Post-Dispatch Saturday March 30, 1901
  14. ^ Lionel Barrymore writing in We Barrymores c.1951
  15. ^ "Maurice Barrymore (1849-1905)". www.greenroomchatter.blogspot.com. 10 August 2009. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  16. ^ The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Saturday March 25, 1905 page22
  17. ^ by actor/friend Henry Miller(Wayback version)

External links

  • Maurice Barrymore at the Internet Broadway Database
  • photo galleries of Maurice Barrymore throughout his Broadway & Vaudeville career
  • Maurice Barrymore and Georgiana Drew 1870s or 1880s
  • Maurice Barrymore as Marquis de Montauran in The Chouans whose world premiere occurred 1886-11-10 at the Union Square Theatre in New York.
(Source: Brown, Thomas Allston (1903) A History of the New York Stage, Vol. 3. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company; p. 178)
  • Maurice Barrymore, North American Theater Online biography and photo
  • Maurice Barrymore in Prussian style costume with Iron Cross circa 1870s
  • still from The Heart of Maryland 1895
  • Maurice Barrymore: Broadway Photographs(Univ of South Carolina)
  • In the play "Alabama" 1891
  • Gallery of Players from the Illustrated American, Volume 1, Issues 1-9

maurice, barrymore, herbert, arthur, chamberlayne, blythe, september, 1849, march, 1905, known, professionally, stage, name, indian, born, british, stage, actor, patriarch, barrymore, acting, family, father, john, lionel, ethel, great, grandfather, actress, dr. Herbert Arthur Chamberlayne Blythe 21 September 1849 1 25 March 1905 2 known professionally by his stage name Maurice Barrymore was an Indian born British stage actor He is the patriarch of the Barrymore acting family father of John Lionel and Ethel and great grandfather of actress Drew 3 Maurice BarrymorePhoto by W M MorrisonBornHerbert Arthur Chamberlayne Blythe 1849 09 21 21 September 1849Amritsar Punjab IndiaDied25 March 1905 1905 03 25 aged 55 Amityville New York U S Resting placeMount Vernon Cemetery Philadelphia PennsylvaniaOccupation s Actor playwrightYears active1874 1901Spouse s Georgiana Drew m 1876 died 1893 wbr Mamie Floyd 1894 divorced by 1900 FamilyBarrymore Contents 1 Early life 2 Career and marriage to Georgiana Drew 3 Shooting 4 Nadjezda 5 Last years 6 Mental breakdown and death 7 In memoriam 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditBorn Herbert Arthur Chamberlayne Blythe in Amritsar India he was the son of William Edward Blythe a surveyor for the British East India Company and his wife Charlotte Matilda Chamberlayne de Tankerville Herbert the youngest of seven had an older brother named Will and two sisters named Emily and Evelin Three other siblings had died in infancy 4 Matilda after a difficult pregnancy died shortly after giving birth to Herbert on 21 September 1849 In his formative years Herbert was raised by his Aunt Amelia Blythe his mother s sister and later by other family members Amelia a Chamberlayne by birth had married a brother of Herbert s father and was a Blythe by marriage Herbert was sent back to England for education at Harrow School and studied law at Oxford University where he was captain of his class football team in 1868 Herbert also became enamored of the sport of boxing The Marquess of Queensberry Rules were firmly established at this time but it was not unusual to see bare knuckle fights On 21 March 1872 Herbert won the middleweight boxing championship of England dubious discuss Years later many of Herbert s friends would be sports figures of the day particularly boxers and wrestlers such as William Muldoon John L Sullivan James J Corbett and a young actor named Hobart Bosworth the latter of whom Herbert would stage in an amateur bout with his son Lionel 1 Herbert s father expected him to become a barrister but Herbert fell in with a group of actors which scandalized the elder Blythe That same year 1872 Herbert sat for his first posed theatrical photographic portrait by Oliver Sarony older brother of the better remembered Napoleon Sarony In order to spare his father the shame of having a son in such a dissolute vocation he took the stage name Maurice Barrymore though he never legally changed from Blythe inspired by a conversation he had with fellow actor Charles Vandenhoff about William Barrymore 1759 1830 5 an early 19th century English thespian after seeing a poster depicting Barrymore in the Haymarket Theatre He wanted his first name to be pronounced in the French manner mor ES instead of the English MOR is His friends avoided that altogether by simply calling him Barry 6 Career and marriage to Georgiana Drew Edit Maurice Barrymore as Wilding in Captain Swift 1888 by C Haddon Chambers 7 Maurice Barrymore mid 1890s On 29 December 1874 Barrymore emigrated to the United States sailing aboard the SS America to Boston and joined Augustin Daly s troupe making his debut in Under the Gaslight He made his Broadway debut in December 1875 in Pique opposite Emily Rigl in the cast was a young actress Georgiana Drew known as Georgie Maurice and Georgiana had been introduced earlier by her brother John Drew Jr who had befriended Maurice when he first arrived in America Drew Jr and Georgiana later brought Barrymore home to Philadelphia to be introduced to her mother the formidable Mrs John Drew who for some reason wasn t too enthralled by the young man After a brief courtship Barrymore and Georgie married on 31 December 1876 and had three children Lionel born 1878 Ethel born 1879 and John born 1882 While their parents were on tour the children lived with Georgiana s mother in Philadelphia Barrymore had a lifelong love of animals and in the 1890s bought a farm on Staten Island to keep his collection of exotic animals Georgiana died 2 July 1893 from consumption leaving Maurice a widower with three teenage children For a summer in 1896 Lionel and John were left on the farm in the care of the man who fed the animals Exactly one year after Georgie s death Barrymore married Mamie Floyd much to Ethel s consternation Shooting EditOn 19 March 1879 in Marshall Texas Barrymore and fellow actor Ben Porter were shot by a notorious gunfighter and bully named Jim Currie 8 Barrymore and Porter had played cards earlier with Currie winning some money from him That evening while Barrymore Porter and the actress Ellen Cummins dined at the White House Saloon an intoxicated Currie began insulting and goading them into a fight Barrymore challenged Currie to a fistfight Currie shot him in the chest and then shot Porter in the stomach John Drew Jr also with the company showed up at the doorway after being alerted by all the commotion but Currie didn t shoot him possibly having run out of bullets Porter was killed while doctors spent the night operating on Barrymore to save his life Georgie then several months pregnant with Ethel rushed to Texas to be at her husband s side enduring a long train trip He made a full recovery and returned to Marshall for the legal procedures that followed Currie s brother was Andrew Currie mayor of Shreveport Louisiana from 1878 to 1890 and later a member of the Louisiana state legislature 9 who apparently used his influence to secure a not guilty verdict after a 10 minute deliberation 8 An enraged Barrymore vowed never to return to Texas According to a 2004 A amp E Biography piece after the Ben Porter tragedy Barrymore asked Georgiana to tour with him and Helena Modjeska in a play he had written Georgiana and the children had converted to Catholicism under Helena s influence Learning that he and Helena had resumed their romance Georgiana who had been given ownership of the play by Barrymore forced his hand by closing it Helena s husband its producer sued her The real reason for Georgiana s actions never got into the press However Barrymore s many dalliances did make the newspapers citation needed Nadjezda EditIn 1884 Barrymore wrote a play titled Nadjezda meaning hope 10 During this period he sailed with his wife Georgiana and their children Lionel Ethel and John then respectively 6 5 and 2 to England to visit relatives he hadn t seen since migrating to America He had inherited some money from his aunt Amelia one of his family members who helped raise him During the trip Barrymore met the great French actress and star Sarah Bernhardt Without copyrighting his play he gave her a copy of the manuscript In 1886 Victorien Sardou a friend of Bernhardt s wrote his play La Tosca which later achieved great fame as an opera Barrymore claimed that Bernhardt had given his play to Sardou and that La Tosca plagiarized it and sought an injunction to stop Fanny Davenport from putting on further performances In affidavits read out in court Bernhardt said that she had never seen the play and knew nothing about it and Sardou said that preliminary material for the play had been in his desk for fifteen years In fact the only resemblance to La Tosca is the unholy bargain the heroine makes to save her husband s life similar to that of Tosca and Baron Scarpia As Sardou pointed out in his affidavit this plot device is a common one and had been notably used by Shakespeare in Measure for Measure Last years Edit Lithograph of Barrymore with Mrs Leslie Carter in The Heart of Maryland 1895 In 1896 Barrymore became the first major Broadway star to headline in Vaudeville a brave foray at the time During his career Maurice Barrymore played opposite many of the reigning female stars of the time including Helena Modjeska Mrs Fiske Mrs Leslie Carter Olga Nethersole Lillian Russell and Lily Langtry In the 1895 theater season on Broadway he co starred with Mrs Leslie Carter in The Heart of Maryland In the 1899 season on Broadway he had a success playing opposite Mrs Fiske in the part of Rawdon Crawley in Becky Sharp 11 This play was based on a character from William Thackeray s novel Vanity Fair Becky Sharp was Barrymore s last Broadway success In 1900 Barrymore toured the U S with a play called The Battle of the Strong co starring a young Holbrook Blinn In the company of this play was a five year old child actress Blanche Sweet who grew up to be a silent movie actress and acted with Lionel in his first Biograph film When the Battle of the Strong company stopped in Louisville Kentucky Barrymore sat for his last posed photograph Also during this time he got to spend time with his son John who was now in his late teens Lionel and Ethel were on the road in theater companies having already started their careers Mental breakdown and death EditOn 28 March 1901 Barrymore was performing at the Lion Palace Theatre in New York when he suddenly departed from his monologue and shocked the audience with what was described as a blasphemous attack on the Jews and a rant of such an emotional pitch that tears rolled down his face After further erratic behavior Barrymore was committed to Bellevue Hospital by a court order obtained by his son John 12 In reporting his death on 25 March 1905 The New York Times recalled that He was playing a vaudeville engagement in 1901 at a Harlem theatre when he suddenly dropped his lines and began to rave The following day he became violent and was taken to Bellevue insane ward by his son John who lured him under the pretense of starring in a new play At Bellevue and later Amityville he was diagnosed with the lingering effects of syphilis an incurable disease at the time During his stay at Bellevue he almost strangled his daughter Ethel during a visit 13 Ethel through her early success on the stage paid for her father s stay in the institutions A trained boxer Barrymore s strength remained as in a scuffle with one of the Bellevue attendants he picked the man up over his head and threw him into a corner In 1905 Barrymore s son Lionel visited him at Amityville and the subject of San Francisco came up Maurice called Lionel a goddamned liar and stated that San Francisco had been destroyed by fire and earthquake Lionel writes in his autobiography that his father had foreseen the great 1906 earthquake a full year before it took place 14 Barrymore died at Amityville in his sleep and Ethel had him buried at Glenwood Cemetery in Philadelphia 15 3 16 When the cemetery later was closed his remains were moved to Mount Vernon Cemetery also in Philadelphia where his first wife and her family are buried Barrymore was fondly remembered and his death was widely reported in the country s newspapers He had lived long enough to see all three of his children enter the family business of acting 17 In memoriam EditIn honor of his life Michael J Farrand penned the memorial narrative poem The Man Who Brought Royalty to America in 2000 based on the definitive biography Great Times Good Times The Odyssey of Maurice Barrymore by James Kotsilibas Davis Doubleday 1977 References Edit a b James Kotsilibas Davis ca 1977 Great Times Good Times The Odyssey of Maurice Barrymore The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Brooklyn New York Mar 25 1905 Saturday a b Said that Maurice had died in Amityville New York pp 21 22 41 The Blyth Family personal reminiscence of Margarita Alice Caroline Blyth 1878 1952 niece of Herbert Blyth Maurice Barrymore Wayback Machine American and British Theatrical Biography page 74 c 1979 by J P Wearing Retrieved 12 August 2015 ISBN 0 8108 1201 0 American History From About permanent dead link at americanhistory about com C Haddon Chambers 1888 Captain Swift at Hathi Trust Digital Library a b DeArment Robert K 30 March 2012 Deadly Dozen Forgotten Gunfighters of the Old West Vol 2 University of Oklahoma Press pp 37 46 ISBN 9780806138633 Brock Eric J 31 January 2001 Eric Brock s Shreveport ISBN 9781455603862 Literary gossip The Week A Canadian Journal of Politics Literature Science and Arts 1 10 158 7 February 1884 Retrieved 25 April 2013 Famous Actors and Actresses On the American Stage Documents of the American Theater History Vol 1 A J by William C Young c 1975 Maurice Barrymore entry pages75 81 with splendid photo as Rawdon Crawley Barrymore in an Asylum Chicago Daily Tribune 30 March 1901 p1 St Louis Post Dispatch Saturday March 30 1901 Lionel Barrymore writing in We Barrymores c 1951 Maurice Barrymore 1849 1905 www greenroomchatter blogspot com 10 August 2009 Retrieved 19 January 2022 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Saturday March 25 1905 page22 Tribute to Maurice Barrymore by actor friend Henry Miller Wayback version External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maurice Barrymore Maurice Barrymore at the Internet Broadway Database photo galleries of Maurice Barrymore throughout his Broadway amp Vaudeville career Maurice Barrymore and Georgiana Drew 1870s or 1880s Maurice Barrymore as Marquis de Montauran in The Chouans whose world premiere occurred 1886 11 10 at the Union Square Theatre in New York Source Brown Thomas Allston 1903 A History of the New York Stage Vol 3 New York Dodd Mead and Company p 178 Maurice Barrymore North American Theater Online biography and photo Maurice Barrymore in Prussian style costume with Iron Cross circa 1870s still from The Heart of Maryland 1895 Maurice Barrymore Broadway Photographs Univ of South Carolina In the play Alabama 1891 Gallery of Players from the Illustrated American Volume 1 Issues 1 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maurice Barrymore amp oldid 1136362117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.