Florence Kahn (actress) explained

Florence Kahn, Lady Beerbohm (March 3, 1878, Memphis, Tennessee – January 13, 1951, Rapallo, Italy) was an American actress and the first wife of caricaturist and parodist Sir Max Beerbohm.

Acting career

Her father Louis Kahn was a German-Jewish immigrant from Baden who married Pauline Freiberg, a member of a prominent Cincinnati family.[1] He founded the dry goods firm of Kahn & Freiberg in Memphis in 1860 and was also an amateur Shakespeare scholar. Florence's brother Samuel Kahn became an editor of The Commercial Appeal in Memphis. She attended the Clara Conway Institute, a private school in Memphis, and had dancing lessons before going to a finishing school, which she left in June 1894. In 1895 she studied drama at Miss Grace Llewellyn's studio in Memphis. She also attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York.[2] [3]

Florence Kahn appeared in the first American performance of Maeterlink's Intérieur in February 1896. On graduating in April 1897 she joined a touring company as the female lead in The Girl I Left Behind Me. In spring 1898 she played Lady de Winter in The Musketeers with Paul Gilmore in New York, and later on tour.[4]

Kahn appeared in New York in El Gran Galeoto by José Echegaray at the Carnegie Lyceum New York City in 1899,[5] and went on to become a well known Broadway actress noted for her roles in the plays of Ibsen.[6] [7] She played Hilda in the first performance of When We Dead Awaken in America which took place at the Carnegie Lyceum on January 16, 1900.[8] She also appeared in The Master Builder (1900) as Hilda Wangel.

Of her performance in the latter The New York Times wrote:

Kahn also appeared with the actor Richard Mansfield, as Chorus in Shakespeare's Henry V in 1900.[9] She appeared in Don Caesar's Return by Victor Mapes at Wallack's Theatre in New York in 1901.[5] In March 1904 Kahn appeared as Rebecca West in Ibsen's Rosmersholm, but the production was not a success and closed quickly, with Kahn receiving much of the blame:

She "acted" always, not for a moment was she a live woman, least of all an Ibsen heroine. She waved across the stage and coiled upon the furniture, and when the crisis of passion ran highest she looked foolish and bleated.[10]

After the failure of Rosmersholm in New York, in 1904 she travelled to Great Britain with a letter of introduction to Max Beerbohm. Beerbohm became infatuated with Kahn and called on her regularly, taking her to meet his family. On her return to America in 1907 Kahn appeared in Ibsen's Hedda Gabler and Rosmersholm in New York City's Lyric Theatre.[5] [11]

In February 1908 Kahn returned to Britain where she appeared as Rebecca West in Ibsen's Rosmersholm, opening at Terry's Theatre.[12] [13] She then toured Britain presenting a series of readings, on one occasion appearing before King Edward VII.[14] It was during this tour that she was courted by Beerbohm and they became engaged in 1908.

Marriage

It has been estimated that during their six-year courtship Beerbohm wrote over 1,000 letters to Kahn. When they were apart he wrote every day, sometimes more than once a day.[15] After their marriage on May 4, 1910, at Paddington Register Office[16] [17] the couple moved to the Villino Chiaro in Rapallo in Italy where they remained for the rest of their lives apart from when they returned to the United Kingdom during World War I and World War II. From the start of the marriage, Beerbohm's friends did not like Kahn, thinking the couple ill-matched. They thought Kahn to be "nervous, shy, timid, retiring, humourless, moralizing, idealizing, prudish, frequently sad and depressed and anti-social", in fact the very opposite of Beerbohm.[18]

In 1931 the Beerbohms returned to Britain so that Kahn could act in Luigi Pirandello's play La Vita che ti Diedi (The Life I Gave You) with a small repertory company in Huddersfield. She returned again in 1935 to play Ase in Peer Gynt at the Old Vic, and in February 1936 she played the Duchess of Gloucester in the Oxford Union Dramatic Society's production of Richard II, directed by John Gielgud.[19] In 1936 Kahn appeared with Gielgud as Mrs Caypor in Alfred Hitchcock's film Secret Agent. At that time not only had she never made a film before but she had never seen one either.

She became Lady Beerbohm when her husband was knighted in 1939.

Florence Kahn died at Rapallo in Italy in 1951 aged 72. She was cremated in Genoa and her ashes scattered from a boat in the Bay of Tigullio.[20] In 1956 her widower Max Beerbohm married his companion and secretary Elisabeth Jungmann on his death bed.

Filmography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Mix, Katherine Lyon (1974). Max and the Americans. The Stephen Greene Press, Vermont, 67 pg.
  2. Mix, op. cit pg 70
  3. Hall, N. John (2002). Max Beerbohm: A Kind of a Life. Yale University Press. pg 111.
  4. Mix, op. cit. pg 70
  5. http://www.ibdb.com/person.php?id=47411 Kahn
  6. Rintoul, M. C. (1993). Dictionary of Real People and Places in Fiction. Routledge. pg 187.
  7. Wilmeth, Don B. & Miller, Tice L. (eds.) (1996). Cambridge Guide to American Theatre. Cambridge University Press. pg 202.
  8. http://www.classicreader.com/book/2107/1/ Kahn on Classic Reader website
  9. https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9C02E1DA173FE433A25757C0A9669D946197D6CF "Richard Mansfield Triumphs as Warlike Harry. Good Acting and Splendid Pageantry in 'Henry V
  10. The New York Times. 29 March 1906.
  11. https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9E01E4DD153EE733A25752C3A9649D946697D6CF "Mrs. Fiske as Rebecca West; Appears at the Lyric Theatre in Ibsen's Play of 'Rosmersholm
  12. https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9F00E4D8173EE233A25752C1A9649C946997D6CF "Florence Kahn Makes A Hit in London"
  13. Hall, pg 119
  14. https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9A0DE4DD1530E233A25751C0A9639C946196D6CF "Florence Kahn to Wed?; Report That Actress Will Become Bride of Max Beerbohm"
  15. Hall, pg 111
  16. Hall, pg 125
  17. https://web.archive.org/web/20101123152157/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,888940,00.html "Milestones, Jan. 22, 1951"
  18. Hall, pg 110
  19. Hall, pg 130
  20. Hall, pg 239