James A. Herne

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James A. Herne
JamesHerne01.JPG
Born
James Ahearn

(1839-02-01)February 1, 1839
DiedJune 2, 1901(1901-06-02) (aged 62)
Manhattan, New York City
OccupationActor, playwright
Spouse(s)Katherine Corcoran
Children
Signature
Signature of James A. Herne (1839–1901).png

James A. Herne (born James Ahearn; February 1, 1839 – June 2, 1901) was an American playwright and actor.[1] He is considered by some critics to be the "American Ibsen", and his controversial play Margaret Fleming is often credited with having begun modern drama in America. Herne was a Georgist and wrote Shore Acres to promote the political economy of Henry George.[2]

Biography[]

Stage actor[]

James A. Herne was born February 1, 1839, in Cohoes, New York.[1] His parents were poor Irish immigrants who removed him from school at age thirteen to work in a brush factory. Herne decided to become an actor the next year but was twenty before he could join a traveling troupe. He made his debut in 1859 as George in a production of Uncle Tom's Cabin in Troy, New York. He enjoyed modest success as a young actor, appearing in Baltimore and Washington, D.C. with the John Thompson Ford company in the early 1860s. He was the leading man for the Lucille Western Touring Company from 1865 to 1867. He was briefly married, in the early 1860s, to Lucille's sister Helen Western, an actress who later became romantically involved with John Wilkes Booth. Herne managed the Grand Opera House at 23rd and 8th Avenue in New York City for a season.

Herne and his wife Katherine Corcoran

He then moved to San Francisco in 1870 to manage several other theaters. In San Francisco, he met David Belasco, with whom he collaborated on at least three of his plays. He also met and married his second wife, actress Katherine Corcoran. The couple had five children, one son, John, and four daughters, Alma, Dorothy, Julie and Katherine Chrystal who usually went by the name Chrystal Herne. Dorothy and Julie were also actresses.

Playwright[]

Herne was the first American playwright to incorporate dramatic realism. He ventured away from nineteenth century dramatic romance and melodrama. Much of Herne's work faded into obscurity in the twentieth century. However, he exerted a profound influence, directing American dramatic literature toward the depiction of complex socially realities. This was illustrated in his controversial play Margaret Fleming (1890). The work singled him out as an influential figure in 19th-century drama.

Herne's first successful play, Hearts of Oak, was written and produced with Belasco in 1879. After this, Herne focused mostly on writing. Of his later plays, only a handful saw financial success in his lifetime. He continued to act, often in his own works, but also in the plays of others. In 1897 Herne played Nathaniel Berry in Shore Acres at the Harlem Opera House. It was the sixth consecutive season that he portrayed this character.

Death[]

James A. Herne died at his home, 79 Convent Avenue, in Manhattan, New York City on June 2, 1901, at 5:00 pm of pneumonia. He initially fell ill two months earlier in Chicago, where he was appearing in his production Sag Harbor.[1][3]

Works[]

  • Within an Inch of his Life with David Belasco 1879
  • Marriage by Moonlight with David Belasco 1879
  • Hearts of Oak with David Belasco 1879 from "The Mariner's Compass" by Henry Leslie
  • The Minute Men 1886
  • Drifting Apart 1888
  • Margaret Fleming 1890
  • 1893
  • Art for Truth's Sake (essay) 1897
  • The Reverend Griffith Davenport 1899
  • Sag Harbor 1900

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Death Of James A. Herne. Actor and Playwright Succumbs to Attack of Pneumonia. Had Occupied First Place as an Interpreter of Homely Folk-Life. On the Stage 35 Years". New York Times. June 3, 1901.
  2. ^ Aller, Pat. "The Georgist Philosophy in Culture and History". Retrieved October 2, 2014.
  3. ^ "Funeral Of James A. Herne. The Obsequies Were Simple in Deference to the Wish of the Dead Actor". New York Times. June 5, 1901.

Further reading[]

  • Arthur Hobson Quinn, The Early Plays of James A. Herne. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1940.
  • "James Ahearn Herne," Literature Resource Center.
  • "Theaters," New York Times, October 10, 1897, pg. 5.

External links[]

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