Globe Theatre (Boston, 1871) Explained
The Globe Theatre (est.1871) was a playhouse in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 19th century. It was located at 598 Washington Street,[1] near the corner of Essex Street.[2] Arthur Cheney oversaw the Globe until 1876.[3] From 1871 to 1873 it occupied the former theatre of John H. Selwyn. After a fire in May 1873, the Globe re-opened on the same site in December 1874.[4] Architect Benjamin F. Dwight designed the new building.[5] From 1877 to 1893 John Stetson served as proprietor;[6] [7] some regarded him as "a theatrical producer with a reputation for illiteracy in his day such as Samuel Goldwyn has achieved" in the 1960s.[8] The theatre burned down in January 1894.[9]
Horatio J. Homer, Boston's first African-American police officer, worked as a janitor at the Globe Theatre before being hired by the Boston Police Department.
Performances
1870s
- H.A. Rendle's Chesney Wold, with Madame Janauschek[10]
- Fox's Humpty Dumpty[11]
- Augustin Daly's Pique, with Miss Jeffries-Lewis[12]
- E.A. Sothern as Lord Dundreary[12]
- "Sea of Ice" with Miss Maud Granger as Ocarita and Mr. George Boniface as Carlos, Monday, January 28, 1878 [13]
- Eliza Weathersby's Froliques[14]
- The Scouts of the Prairie, with Buffalo Bill Cody, Texas Jack Omohundro, Ned Buntline, and Giuseppina Morlacchi, week of March 5, 1873.[15]
- Miss Kate Claxton in Two Orphans
1880s
1890s
External links
42.3529°N -71.0626°W
Notes and References
- News: The Bay State Banner . Neal . Anthony W. . February 4, 2016 . Sergeant Horatio J. Homer: Boston's first black police officer . 1 . November 4, 2017.
- The Globe occupied the site on Washington Street opposite the Park Theatre, on the block between Essex Street and Hayward Place: no.364 Washington Street, 1871-ca.1876 (Boston Almanac. 1871, 1875) later re-numbered as no.598 Washington Street, ca.1877-ca.1894 (Boston Almanac. 1877, 1881, 1887, 1891, 1894)
- Boston Daily Globe, July 17, 1872; Boston Evening Transcript, Sept. 9, 1876
- "Chronicle of events." Boston Almanac. 1875
- Benjamin Franklin Dwight (d.1893). American Architect and Building News, Oct. 14, 1893
- Boston Daily Globe, May 26, 1878; 22 Sept., 1880; Boston Evening Transcript, March 2, 1883; Dec. 3, 1887. Boston Globe, January 22, 1893
- John Stetson (d.1896). New York Times, April 19, 1896
- Doris M. Alexander. "Oedipus in Victorian New York." American Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 3 (Autumn, 1960)
- Boston Daily Globe, January 3, 1894
- Boston Daily Globe, March 7, 1873
- Boston Daily Globe, July 17, 1873
- Boston Evening Transcript, Sept. 9, 1876
- Globe Theatre Programme
- Boston Daily Globe, May 26, 1878
- Boston Globe, May 5, 1873
- Boston Daily Globe, 22 Sept., 1880
- Boston Daily Globe, January 9, 1881
- http://www.oscarwildeinamerica.org/lectures-1882/june/0602-boston.html Oscar Wilde In America
- Boston Evening Transcript, March 2, 1883
- Boston Daily Globe, May 17, 1885
- Boston Daily Globe, May 22, 1887
- Boston Daily Globe, Dec. 3, 1887
- [Donald Pizer]
- (21 December 1889). Massachusetts, New York Clipper (it played a month in Boston)
- Boston Globe, January 22, 1893
- Boston Globe, March 5, 1893
- Boston Globe, April 4, 1893
- Boston Globe, Sept. 21 1893
- Boston Daily Globe, December 29, 1893
- https://books.google.com/books?id=YvbGHAAACAAJ Lillian Russell Opera Comique Co. in La Cigale: An Original Opera Comique