I’d like to see America but I’m afraid to risk it. As soon as I got over Mr. Frohman might request me to sit in a box at the performance of one of my plays.
Sir Arthur Wing Pinero
Daniel Frohman |
Lyceum lobby. Photo by EP |
Lyceum auditorium. Photo by EP |
There are various original furnishings in Frohman’s converted eyrie: his desk which you can just glimpse below (and at which Kathleen and I sat to do our research); a marble plant stand with a faint view of New York skyscrapers behind it; and two original Tiffany panels, imported from the Belasco Theatre, which lend a rather splendid period air.
Photos by EP |
There is also a little cubbyhole built into the wainscott, which, when opened, affords a view right down from the top of the gods onto the stage. Legend has it that, when his actress wife, Margaret Illington, was in a show, Frohman had a habit of waving a white handkerchief from the cubbyhole to signal that she was overacting. But it was a singular view of West Hampstead we had really gone to see.
In a programme for the play, which the Archive holds, we spotted an extraordinary advertisement for summer furs. I can tell you that the heat and humidity of the current Manhattan summer would certainly not induce me to wear an elegant seasonal fur or even a light vest under my shirt. When one thinks of all the corsets and heavy underclothes people endured in the early years of the last century! They must have been tough as old boots those New Yorkers before the age of air-conditioning and more forgiving undergarments.
Tomorrow’s matinee is our last in New York but I leave you for now with three very contemporary views of this wonderful town.
Photos by EP |
Thank you so much for your extraordinary performance, and for the creation of the piece with Paul Hunter and Kathleen Hunter. I don't remember when anything moved me so much -- in equal measure of tears and barely suppressible laughter throughout! I particularly loved all the movement, something I have come to associate with you as an actor -- the learning to walk scene, the chair that would not stay put, the quick sketches that became performers in the drama, and the amazing interweaving of your view of life and that of .shakespeare as he sees it through the eyes of Lear. I shall be thinking of your show, and you and Mr. Hunter's quicksilver partnership, for a long time.
ReplyDeleteBest,
Nancy Nichols