Mena Cleary Explained

Wilhelmina Cleary Masury (1867 — June 27, 1929), known professionally as Mena Cleary, was a Canadian-born American actress and singer, a member of the original cast of Victor Herbert's Prince Ananias in 1894.

Early life

Mena Cleary was the daughter of Martin Cleary and Maria Coghlan Cleary. She attended a convent school in Ottawa, Canada, then moved to Boston, where she studied music. She also studied voice in Paris with Giovanni Sbriglia.[1]

Career

Mena Cleary was a soprano,[2] her voice "by no means powerful but...very sweet," and "managed with rare skill". Cleary was a member of The Bostonians, a performing troupe.[3] She appeared as "Mirabel" in the original cast of the comic opera Prince Ananias by Victor Herbert, when it debuted in 1894.[4] She also appeared in Girofle-Girofla in 1884[5] Fra Diavolo and The Poachers in 1888,[6] and in Robin Hood, Fatinitza and The Maid of Plymouth in 1894, with the Bostonians.[7]

In 1886, while performing in Fra Diavolo in New Haven, Connecticut, her hair caught fire from a lighted candle on stage. Her co-star Tom Karl quickly extinguished the flames, but his hands were badly burned instead.[8] Members of the audience fainted and shrieked, but Cleary resumed her part "with difficulty" after the fire was out.[9] Her 1888 turn as "Ginetta" in The Poachers drew admiration from a critic in Minnesota, who assured readers that "she is a very clever actress, with such winning ways, and a smiling pretty face, and a voice, while it is not a very great volume, is sweet in tone and as clear as the sound of a bell."

Personal life

Mena Cleary married "millionaire physician, yachtsman, and globe trotter" John Miller Masury in 1897; they divorced in 1909.[10] [11] Mena Cleary Masury died in 1929, aged 62 years, in Brookline, Massachusetts.[12]

Her sister Louise Cleary married a popular singer, Eugene Cowles, whom she met through Mena Cleary's work (Cowles was also in the original cast of Prince Ananias). Their sister Eleanor Cleary married Gerrit Fort.[13] Another sister, Phillinda A. Cleary, married Harley Ellsworth Cummings.

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=XCs_AQAAMAAJ&dq=Mena+Cleary&pg=RA1-PA36 "Mena Cleary"
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=2R5LAQAAMAAJ&dq=Lottie+Cruikshank&pg=PA270 "Notes"
  3. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1887/09/11/100933121.pdf "Notes of the Week"
  4. Stanley Green, ed., The World of Musical Comedy (Da Capo Press 1984): 379.
  5. http://search.proquest.com/news/docview/144592090/7EC1D3C809F442F0PQ/32 "Some Memorable Casts"
  6. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/11148786/the_theatres_1888/ "The Theaters"
  7. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/11148729/broad_street_theatre_1894/ "Broad Street Theatre"
  8. http://search.proquest.com/news/docview/94446902/7EC1D3C809F442F0PQ/3 "Her Hair Caught Fire"
  9. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/11148978/mena_clearys_stage_accident_1886/ "An Actress Loses Part of her Hair by Fire"
  10. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/11160459/mena_cleary_masury_1909/ "Divorce for Mrs. Masury"
  11. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/11160824/mena_cleary_returning_to_the_stage/ "Will Again Heed Footlights' Call"
  12. http://search.proquest.com/news/docview/757582038/7EC1D3C809F442F0PQ/1 "Mena Cleary Masury"
  13. Mellificia, "Society Bee Hive" Omaha Daily Bee (November 12, 1912): 8. via Newspapers.com