Hazel Kirke Explained

Hazel Kirke
Place:Madison Square Theatre, New York City
Orig Lang:English

Hazel Kirke is a play in four acts written by American actor and dramatist Steele MacKaye.

Overview

The play was written between 1878 and 1879 in the town of Dublin, New Hampshire.[1] MacKaye meant it to be expressly for New York City's Madison Square Theatre, which MacKaye had recently renovated and completely remodeled. Originally titled An Iron Will, the play toured Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington until renovations on the Madison Square Theatre were complete. It premiered there on February 4, 1880, and the original production became immensely successful; it starred actress Effie Ellsler in the title role and ran for 486 consecutive performances, the record of its time.[2] before closing May 31, 1881.

Because MacKaye revolutionized the concept of multiple companies performing the same production simultaneously, by 1883 the play had been performed more than two thousand times.

Legacy

By the mid-1910s the play had been produced in England, Australia, Japan, and elsewhere.[1] In 1916 it was adapted into a film starring Pearl White and produced at the Whartons Studio in Ithaca, New York.[3]

In 1987, a revamped version of Hazel Kirke by Mark Houston which added a musical score debuted at the Lake George Opera Festival. The New York Times called the result "like watching a B movie; its kitschy charm wears thin after a short while."[4]

Original cast

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Quinn, p. 497
  2. Murphy, p. 5
  3. "Hazel Kirke (1916)". IMDb. Retrieved on August 29, 2008.
  4. Kimmelman, Michael (14 August 1987). Opera: 'Hazel Kirke', The New York Times
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=mbxEAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA1 Hazel Kirke: A Domestic Comedy Drama in Four Acts