Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, edited by James
Grant Wilson, John Fiske and Stanley L. Klos. Six volumes, New York: D. Appleton
and Company, 1887-1889 and 1999. Virtualology.com warns that these 19th Century
biographies contain errors and bias. We rely on volunteers to edit the historic
biographies on a continual basis. If you would like to edit this biographyplease
submit a rewritten biography in text form.
If acceptable, the new biography will be published above the 19th Century
Appleton's Cyclopedia Biography citing the volunteer editor
Virtual American Biographies
Over 30,000 personalities
with thousands of 19th Century illustrations, signatures, and exceptional life
stories. Virtualology.com
welcomes editing and additions to the
biographies. To become this site's editor or a contributor
Click Here
or e-mail Virtualology here.
BOOTH, Junius Brutus, actor, born in
London, 1 May 1796 ; died 3 November 1852. His father, Richard Booth, the son of
a silversmith of Bloomsbury, after studying law, having become imbued with
republican ideas, embarked with a cousin to volunteer in the cause of American
independence, but was taken prisoner and carried back to England. He practiced
his profession with success, lived in affluence in Bloomsbury, and was known as
a scholar, but unpopular on account of his republicanism. It was one of his
eccentricities to insist upon his friends paying reverence to a portrait of
Washington in his drawing-room. Junius Brutus, the eldest son, received a
classical education, essayed painting, sculpture, and poetry, was induced for a
trine to work in his father's office with a view of becoming a solicitor, and
then, evincing a preference for naval life, was commissioned as a midshipman to
Captain Blythe's brig" Boxer" ; but, when that vessel was ordered to Nova
Scotia, the father, unwilling that his son should serve against the United
States, dissuaded him from joining the ship. After appearing as an amateur in a
small London theatre, he announced his intention of becoming an actor, and,
against his father's wishes, made an engagement, and played subordinate parts,
in Peckham, Deptford, and in 1814 made a professional tour through Holland and
Belgium. A few critics and influential friends, who recognized his talents,
seconded his efforts to secure a London engagement; but he was forced to accept
an offer to play in the Worthing and Brighton theatres for the season of 1815.
He left there in October haying finally secured a contract with the management
of Covent Garden theatre. But, as he was announced for inferior parts instead of
for Richard III., he returned to Worthing, and gained a triumph as a substitute
for Edmund Kean in the character of Sir Giles Overreach, captivating an audience
that was at first indignant at the young actor's presumption. He continued to
play at Worthing, and found influential admirers, who prevailed upon the
manager, Harris, to give him a trial as Richard III. at Covent Garden, where he
appeared in that character on 17 February 1817, and delighted the metropolitan
audience. Before the third performance, after a quarrel with the manager, he was
induced by Kean, of the Drury lane company, to enter into an engagement with the
rival theatre, where he was announced to play Iago to Kean's Othello; but he
soon learned with chagrin that in entrapping him into signing the articles Kean
designed only to prevent rivalry by robbing the new favorite of the Opportunity
to appear in leading parts. Booth, when made aware of this, signed an agreement
with the proprietors of Covent Garden theatre, who apprised him of legal flaws
in the Drury lane contract. The town was divided into Boothites and Keanites,
and Booth's reappearance at Covent Garden as Richard was the occasion of a
riotous tumult, which was renewed on subsequent evenings. He played Richard and
Sir Giles Overreach alternately, and then Post-humus in "Cymbeline," appeared as
Othello at Woolwich, afterward as Sir Edward Mortimer in "The Iron Chest" at
Covent Garden, acted with applause, in July 1818, at Glasgow and Edinburgh,
strolled through the provinces, gave Shylock in the Jewish dialect at Covent
Garden during the succeeding autumn, and in the winter entered into an
engagement with the Coburg theatre, where he acted Richard, Horatius, and
Brutus. In April 1820, he appeared again at Covent Garden as Lear, which was
recognized as one of his finest parts. In August 1820, he performed with Kean at
Drury lane, playing Iago, Edgar in "King Lear," and Pierre. In the winter, while
Kean was in the United States, he acted Lear, Cassius, and the part of an Indian
chief at Drury lane theatre. On 18 January 1821, Mr. Booth married Mary Anne
Holmes, and after a wedding tour they sailed for the West Indies, but stopped at
Madeira, and took passage thence for the United States, landing at Norfolk,
Virginia, 30 June 1821. On 6 July Booth appeared in Richmond. His freedom from
vanity and calculating self-interest was evinced in his sudden arrival
unheralded in the United States. After a triumphant appearance in New York and
in southern cities he seriously entertained the idea of retiring from the stage
and spending his days in quiet as a light-house keeper. His first appearance in
New York was at the Park theatre on 5 October 1821. In the summer of 1822 he
purchased, in Harford County, Maryland, twenty-five miles from Baltimore, a
retreat in the midst of woods, to which he always afterward retired when not
occupied on the stage, and where he carried on amateur farming with the help of
a few slaves. Thither his father, the constant admirer of America, came the same
year to pass his remaining days. In 1825 he again visited London with his
family, and when the Royalty theatre was burned lost his entire wardrobe. After
he returned to the United States he began an engagement at the Park theatre, New
York, on 24 March 1827, in which he acted Selim in the "Bride of Abydos " at his
benefit. In June he appeared in the part of Pescara in "The Apostate," a
character written for him by Shiel. In 1828 he undertook the management of the
Camp street theatre in New Orleans, and, while playing Richard III. to packed
houses, studied French parts, and afterward personated characters in several
French dramas, astonishing the audience with the purity of his accent and his
familiarity with the peculiarities of French acting. The manager of the Theatre
d'Orleans persuaded him to take the part of Orestes in Racine's "Andromaque," in
which he greatly pleased the French-speaking public. In September 1831, in New
York, he played Pierre in "Venice Preserved," and Othello to Forrest's Jaffier
and Iago. The same year he took the lease of the Adelphi theatre in Baltimore.
While his theatre was undergoing repairs he took the Holiday street theatre.
During the season he appeared in several new characters, such as Roderick u,
Selim, Richard II., Penruddock, Falkland in "The Rivals," and Luke in "Riches."
In January 1832, he appeared in the Chestnut street theatre, Philadelphia, in "Sertorius,"
a new play, by the Philadelphia lawyer, David Paul Brown. The death of two of
his children robbed him for a time of his reason, and after his recovery an
engagement, made with the actor Hamblin, for Richmond, was renewed for the
Bowery theatre, New York. He next played in New Orleans and Mobile, and on a
tour through the west, during which, and from that time forth, his mental
disorder, slight attacks of which had occurred in earlier years, returned with
increasing frequency and severity. As he grew older his partial insanity was
aggravated by intemperance. After playing Shylock for eight nights to crowded
houses at the National theatre, New York, and visiting Baltimore and
Philadelphia, he sailed, in October 1836, for Europe with his family, played
Richard and Iago at Drury lane theatre, and in Birmingham, where he was
prostrated with the news of the death of his favorite son, Henry Byron, in
London, from small-pox. He immediately returned to the United States, and in the
autumn of 1837 performed at the Olympic in New York, afterward sailed for the
south on a professional tour, and during the voyage attempted suicide in a
moment of aberration. On the same trip his nose was broken, impairing the beauty
of his face and his rich tones of voice; but in the course of two years he
regained the strength and scope of his vocal organs. During the last ten years
of his life he spent much of his time with his family, residing in Baltimore,
and only visiting his farm in the heat of summer. He played when and where he
pleased, often in small, out-of-the-way theatres, but made annual visits to New
Orleans and Boston, where he was an established favorite. In 1850 and the
succeeding season he played at the National theatre, New York, and made his last
appearance in that city on 19 September 1851. In 1851 he performed several parts
at the Chestnut street theatre, Philadelphia, and in the spring of 1852, with
his son Edwin (Junius Brutus had previously gone thither), he went to
California, playing to crowded houses in San Francisco with Edwin in companion
characters. Leaving his sons, he returned to the east with the intention of
retiring completely from the stage. Arriving at New Orleans in November he
performed six nights with his usual ability, but contracted a cold, and during
his passage up the Mississippi River remained in his state-room, suffering from
fever and dysentery, and died for lack of medical care. See Asia Booth Clarke's
"The Elder and the Younger Booth " in the American Actor Series (Boston, 1882);
Genest's "History of the Stage" ; and "Booth Memorials," by his daughter Asia
(New York, 1866).
*His son, Edwin Booth, actor,
born in Bel Air, Maryland, 13 November 1833, was named Edwin Thomas, in
compliment to his father's friends, Edwin Forrest and Thomas Flynn. When a boy
he received instruction from different teachers in the immediate neighborhood of
his home ; but this tuition was neither continuous nor thorough. He was
thoughtful and studious, and made much of his limited opportunities. He was
reticent and singular, profound and sensitive, and the eccentric genius of the
elder Booth found in him an object of peculiar sympathy. The father and son were
fondly attached to each other from the first, and while Edwin was yet very young
his father made a companion of him in professional journeys. It was in the
course of one of these tours that Edwin Booth made his first regular appearance
upon the stage, at the Boston Museum, on 10 September 1849. The play was
Cibber's version of Shakespeare's "Richard III.," and the youth came forward in
the little part of Tressil. At first the elder Booth opposed his son's choice of
the stage, but ultimately he relinquished his opposition. The boy persevered,
and presently, still acting in his father's train, he appeared at Providence,
Rhode Island, at Philadelphia, and at other places, as Cassio in " Othello," and
as Wilford in "The Iron Chest "*the latter impersonation being deemed
particularly good. Edwin Booth continued to act with his father for more than
two years after the advent at the Boston Museum. His first appearance on the New
York stage was on 27 September 1850, at the National theatre, Chatham street, as
Wilford. At the same theatre, in 1851, his father being ill, he suddenly and
promptly took the place of the elder tragedian, and for the first time in his
life enacted Richard III. This effort, remarkably successful for a comparative
novice, was hailed as the indication of great talent and as the augury of a
brilliant future. In the summer of 1852 he accompanied his father to San
Francisco, where his elder brother, J. born Booth, Jr., had already established
himself as an actor and a theatrical manager, and where the three now acted in
company. Other cities were visited by them, and the elder Booth remained in
California for about three months. One night, at Sacramento, seeing Edwin
dressed for Jaffier in "Venice Preserved," he said to him : "You look like
Hamlet ; why don't you play it ?" a remark that the younger Booth has had good
reason to remember, for no actor has ever played Hamlet so often or over so wide
a range of territory. Just as the name of Junius Brutus Booth is inseparably
associated with Richard III., so the name of Edwin Booth is inseparably
associated with Hamlet. In October 1852, the father and son parted for the last
time. The California period of Edwin Booth's professional career lasted from the
summer of 1852 till the autumn of 1856, and included a trip to Australia. The
young actor at first played parts of all kinds, and he had a severe experience
of poverty and hardship. Soon, however, he began to display uncommon merit, and
thereupon to attract uncommon admiration. One of his earliest and best successes
was obtained as Sir Edward Mortimer in "The Iron Chest." For a time, indeed, he
traveled in California, conveying his wardrobe for this piece in a trunk
fashioned and painted to resemble a chest made of iron. His trip to Australia,
in 1854, was made with a dramatic company that included the popular actress Miss
Laura Keene as leading woman. Previous to this he had, in his brother's theatre
at San Francisco, acted Richard III., Shylock, Macbeth, and Hamlet, had made an
extraordinary impression, and acquired abundant local popularity. At this time
his acting began to receive thoughtful attention from learned and critical
authorities. He stopped and acted at the Sandwich islands on his return voyage
from Australia to San Francisco, and reappeared there at the Metropolitan
theatre, then (1855) managed by Miss Catherine Sinclair (Mrs. Edwin Forrest, who
had left her husband and obtained a divorce from him), and he was then and there
the original representative in America of Raphael in "The Marble Heart." In 1856
he took leave of California, being cheered on his way by several farewell
testimonial benefits, organized and conducted by one of his earliest and best
friends, Mr. M. P. Butler, of Sacramento, and his steps were now turned toward
the cities of the east. He first appeared at the Front street theatre,
Baltimore, and then made a rapid tour of all the large cities of the south,
being everywhere well received. In April 1857, he appeared at the Boston theatre
as Sir Giles Overreach in "A New Way to Pay Old Debts," and his great success on
this occasion, always regarded by him as the turning-point in his career,
determined him to persist in the resolute endeavor to win the first place as a
tragic actor. His career since then has been marked by many vicissitudes of
personal experience and by fluctuations of fortune, but it has been one of lofty
endeavor and of continuous advancement. On 14 May 1857, he came forward in New
York, at Button's Metropolitan theatre, as Richard III., and in the following
August he was again seen there in a round of great characters, all of which he
acted with brilliant ability and greatly to the public satisfaction. On 7 July
1860, he married Miss Mary Devlin, of Troy, New York, an actress, whom he had
met three years before at Richmond, Virginia, with whom he shortly afterward
made a visit to England. Their only child, a daughter, Edwina, was born in
Fulham, 9 December 1861. After their return to America, Mrs. Booth, sinking
under a sudden illness, died at Dorchester, Massachusetts, on 21 February 1863.
While in England, Booth appeared at the London Haymarket theatre, under the
management of J. born Buckstone, enacting Shylock, Sir Giles, and Richelieu. The
latter part, with which, almost as much as with Hamlet, his name is identified,
he had first assumed at Sacramento, California, in July 1856. His performance of
it was much admired in London, and also at Liverpool and Manchester, where he
afterward acted. On returning to America, Booth soon became manager of the
Winter Garden theatre, New York, which had been Burton's Metropolitan, but which
Dion Boucicault had leased, refitted, and renamed. Here Booth appeared on 29
December 1862, and with this house he was associated until 23 March 1867, when
it was destroyed by fire. A particular record of his proceedings at this theatre
would make a volume. Here he effected magnificent productions of "Hamlet,"
"Othello," "The Merchant of Venice," "Richelieu," and other plays, and here he
accomplished the remarkable achievement of running "Hamlet" for one hundred
consecutive nights, an exploit that was commemorated by the public presentation
to him, on 22 January 1867, of a gold medal, suitably inscribed, and offered in
behalf of leading citizens of New York. In recent days such an artistic feat
would not be so difficult of accomplishment; at that time it was an
extraordinary exploit. Booth's brother-in-law, the celebrated comedian John S.
Clarke, was his partner in the management of the Winter Garden theatre, and they
associated with themselves an old journalist and theatrical agent, William
Stuart (real name, Edmund O'Flaherty), formerly of Galway, Ireland, but then an
exile. Clarke & Booth were also associated in the management of the Walnut
street theatre, Philadelphia, from the summer of 1863 till March 1870, when the
interest of the latter was purchased by the former. The hundred-night run of
"Hamlet" extended from 21 November 1864, till 24 March 1865. On 23 April 1864,
for the benefit of the fund for erecting a Shakespeare monument in Central park,
Booth produced "Romeo and Juliet," and enacted Romeo. In April 1865, an
appalling tragedy compelled Edwin Booth to leave the stage, and it was then his
wish and purpose never to return to it" but business obligations constrained
him, and he appeared at the Winter Garden on 3 January 1866, as Hamlet, and was
received with acclamation by a great audience. "Richelieu" was revived that
year, on 1 February with much splendor of scenic attire. An equally fine revival
was made, on 28 January 1867, of "The Merchant of Venice." On 23 March the
theatre was burned down. On 8 April 1868, the corner-stone was laid of Booth's
theatre, at the south-east corner of 23d street and 6th avenue, New York, and on
3 February 1869, Booth opened the new house with "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo being
played by himself and Juliet by Miss Mary McVicker. This lady was the daughter
of Mrs. Runnion, who became the wife of James H. McVicker, of Chicago, a
prominent actor and manager, and the child's name was changed from Rmlnion to
McVicker. Booth married her on 7 June 1869, and she died in New York, in 1881,
leaving no children. Booth's theatre had a career of thirteen years, and its
stage was adorned with some of the grandest pageants and graced by the presence
of some of the most renowned actors that have been seen in this century. Its
story, however, ended in May 1882, when it was finally closed, its career ending
with a performance of Juliet by Madame Modjeska. After this it was torn down,
and a block of stores has been built upon its site. Booth's theatre was managed
by Edwin Booth until the spring of 1874, when it passed out of his possession.
During his reign therein as manager he accomplished sumptuous and noble revivals
of "Romeo and Juliet," "Othello," "Hamlet," "Richelieu," "The Winter's Tale,"
"Julius Caesar," "Macbeth," "Much Ado About Nothing," "The Merchant of Venice,"
"Brutus," and other plays, and he presented on his stage a series of
miscellaneous attractions of an equally reputable order. His stock company at
one time included Lawrence Barrett, Edwin L. Davenport, J. W. Wallack, Jr., Mark
Smith, Edwin Adams, A. W. Fenno, District of Columbia Anderson, died W. Waller,
Robert Pateman, Mrs. Emma Waller, Bella Pateman, and others*one of the ablest
dramatic organizations ever formed in America. Among the stars that acted at his
theatre were Joseph Jefferson, Kate Bateman, James H. Hackett, Charlotte
Cushman, John S. Clarke, John E. Owens, and James H. McVicker. Booth's theatre
was almost invariably a prosperous house" but it was not economically managed,
and for this reason, and this alone, it eventually carried its owner into
bankruptcy. Edwin Booth then began his career over again, and in course of time
paid his debts and earned another fortune. In 1876 he made a tour of the south,
which was in fact a triumphal progress. Thousands of spectators flocked to see
him in every city that he visited. In San Francisco, where he acted for eight
weeks, he drew upward of $96,000, a total of receipts till then unprecedented on
the dramatic stage. In 1880, and again in 1882, he visited Great Britain, and he
acted with brilliant success in London and other cities. He went into Germany in
the autumn of 1882, and was there received with extraordinary enthusiasm. In
1883 he returned home and resumed his starring tours of America. Booth has acted
many parts in his day, but of late years his repertory has been limited to
Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear, Othello, Iago, Wolsey, Richard III., Shylock,
Richard II., Benedick, Petruchio, Richelieu, Payne's Brutus, Bertuccio (in "The
Fool's Revenge," by Tom Taylor), Ruy Blas, and Don Caesar de Bazan. He has
published an edition of these plays, in fifteen volumes, the text cut and
adapted by himself for stage use, with introductions and notes by William Winter
(Boston, 1877-'8).
Unauthorized Site:
This site and its contents are not affiliated, connected,
associated with or authorized by the individual, family,
friends, or trademarked entities utilizing any part or
the subject's entire name. Any official or affiliated
sites that are related to this subject will be hyper
linked below upon submission
and Evisum, Inc. review.
Please join us in our mission to incorporate The Congressional Evolution of the United States of America discovery-based curriculum into the classroom of every primary and secondary school in the United States of America by July 2, 2026, the nation’s 250th birthday. , the United States of America: We The
People. Click Here