Difference between revisions of "Wilson Collection: Charlotte Cushman"
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=[[Rich Wilson: Aspects of Queer Existence in 19th-Century America]]= | =[[Rich Wilson: Aspects of Queer Existence in 19th-Century America]]= |
Revision as of 14:11, 15 November 2012
(Photograph of Charlotte Cushman, circa 1870, and print, circa 1845, of Charlotte as Romeo and her sister, Susan, as Juliet)
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Charlotte Cushman
Acclaimed actor Charlotte Cushman specialized in “breeches parts.”[1] She played over thirty male roles. As Romeo she had a “convincing masculine stride…and...showed to advantage in a doublet.”[2]
Off-stage, she companioned with women. Poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning understood that Cushman and writer Matilda Hays “made vows of celibacy and of eternal attachment to each other—they live together, dress alike…it is a female marriage.”[3] But Emma Stebbins, sculptor of Central Park’s angelic Bethesda Fountain, replaced Hays as Cushman’s “wife.”[4]
References
<references /ref>
Rich Wilson: Aspects of Queer Existence in 19th-Century America
- ↑ Carolyn Gage, “Charlotte Cushman (1816-1876),” in Gay and Lesbian Almanac, ed. Neil Schlager (Detroit: St. James Press, 1998), 470.
- ↑ The History Project, compiler, Improper Bostonians (Boston: Beacon Press, 1998), 57.
- ↑ Michael Bronski, A Queer History of the United States (Boston: Beacon Press, 2011), 71-72.
- ↑ Gage, 470.