Thursday, July 31, 2014

People You Never Think About


Junius Brutus Booth



Junius Brutus Booth (1 May 1796 – 30 November 1852) was an English stage actor. He was the father of John Wiles Booth, an actor and the assassin of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln Edwin Booth, the foremost  tragedianof the mid-to-late 19th century, and  Juiius Brutus Booth, Jr. an actor and theatre manager. Booth was named after Marcus Junius Brutus, one of the lead assassins in Shakespeare's tragedy Julius Caesar

Early life

Booth was born in St. Pancras, London, England, the son of Richard Booth, a  lawyer and avid supporter of the American cause, and Jane Elizabeth Game. His paternal grandfather was John Booth, a silversmith, and his paternal grandmother, Elizabeth Wilkes, was a relative of the English radical and politician John Wilkes. While he was growing up, Booth's father tried to settle his son in a lengthy succession of professions. Booth recalls of his childhood, "I was destined by my Controllers first for the Printing office, then to be an architect, then to be a sculptor and modeler, then a lawyer, then a sailor, of all of these I preferred those of sculptor and modeler."[
In August 1814, Junius met Marie Christine Adelaide Delannoy while boarding at her mother's home in  Brussles. She followed him to London where they eventually married on 17 May 1815, soon after his 19th birthday. Their first child, Amelia, was born 5 October of the same year, but died in infancy. The only child to survive infancy, Richard Junius Booth, was born 21 January 1819.

Career

Booth’s interests in theatre came after he attended a production of Othello at the Covent Garden Theatre. The prospects of fame, fortune and freedom were very appealing to young Booth. He displayed a talent for acting from an early age, deciding on a career in the theatre by the age of seventeen. He performed roles in several small theatres throughout England, and joined a tour of the Low Countries in 1814, returning the following year to make his London debut.
Booth gained national renown in England with his performance in the title role of Richard III in 1817 at the Covent Garden Theatre. Critics compared his performances favorably with those of Edmund Kean, who was at the time the foremost tragedian in Britain. Partisans of the two actors, called Boothites and Keanites, would occasionally start rows at venues where the two were playing together. This did not stop the two from performing in the same plays; Kean and Booth acted in several Shakespearean productions at the  Drury Lane Theatre from 1817 to 1821. Kean then saw Booth as a threat and orchestrated a way for the two of them to perform those roles yet again, planning to out-perform his opponent. Kean’s long-standing presence contributed to Booth’s never ending comparisons to his rival.

Move to the United States

In 1821, Booth emigrated to the United States with Mary Ann Holmes, a flower girl, abandoning his wife and their young son. Booth and Holmes claimed to be married that year and settled in 1822 near Belair, Maryland. For years they lived in a log cabin Booth bought, moved to his 150 acres, and whitewashed. Just before his death he began building a much grander house which he named " Tudor Hall." It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.

 
L-to-r: Booth's sons, John, Edwin and Junius, Jr. in  Julius Caesar


In 1825–1826 and 1836–1837, Booth made tours of his native England. He took his whole family with him for the second of these. During their stay in England, one of his children, Henry Byron, succumbed to small pox. By 1831 he had become the manager of the Adelphi Theatre in Baltimore. His acclaim continued to grow throughout the rest of his life; Walt Whitman described him as "the grandest histrion [sic] of modern times." Although his relationship with Holmes, his supposed wife, was relatively happy, four of their children died, three in the same year (1833), when there were epidemics of cholera . In addition, he suffered from alcoholism , which had an effect on the entire family.
Booth’s alcoholism also caused him to become increasingly unpredictable and reckless. He would drop lines, miss scenes, and cause chaos onstage. During a performance of Hamlet, Booth suddenly left the scene he was playing with Ophelia, scurried up a ladder, and perched up in the backdrops crowing like a rooster until his manager retrieved him. He was once booked for a sold-out performance in Richmond, then disappeared from town for several days. Eventually he was found with “ragged, besotted wretches, the greatest actor on the American stage.” He soon became so unreliable that he had to be locked into his hotel rooms with a guard standing watch. Often he would still find ways of escaping to drink at a nearby tavern.

Some historians and critics have claimed that reality could become overwhelming for Booth, so he would flee into alcoholism and the roles he played. One critic said of Booth that the “personality of the actor was forgotten, and all the details seemed spontaneous workings and unconscious illustrations of the character he represented. He seemed to be possessed by the characters, losing his own identity." Such subjective judgments are perhaps too facile, as Edwin Booth's later comment about his father certainly was: “Great minds to madness closely are allied.” In any case, from February 1817 onward, Junius Booth played almost three thousand performances. Booth brought a romantic, natural acting style to America, which he pioneered in the hearts of American audiences.
In order to help him maintain a modicum of stability and also to ensure that he sent his earnings home to the family, Junius and Mary Ann chose their son Edwin to accompany him as his dresser, aid, and guardian. This was an exhausting job because Junius Brutus could go without sleep for very long periods of time and would often disappear.
In 1835, Booth wrote a letter to President Andrew Jackson , demanding he pardon two pirates. In the letter, he threatened to kill the President. Though there would also be an  actual attempt of assassination on the President early that year, the letter was believed to be a hoax, until a handwriting analysis of a letter written some days after the threat concluded that the letter was, in fact, written by Booth. Booth apologized to Jackson, though it is likely that since he and Jackson were friends, the "threat" was Booth's clumsy attempt at a joke. Decades later, Booth’s son,  John Wilkes , assassinated President Abraham Lincoln

Later years

In 1852, he was involved in a tour of California  with his sons Edwin  and Junius  Booth, Jr, performing in San Francisco  and Sacramento, where torrential rains not only closed the theatres but seriously depleted food supplies. Inflation skyrocketed, and the Booths returned to San Francisco without having made a penny. On 1 October he left San Francisco without either of his sons. (Junius, Jr. had previously established his home there, and Edwin struck out on his own, acting in various venues in northern California).
Booth told his wife that he would be touring the United States for several years but would send her money to support her and his young son, Richard. But Booth's sister and brother-in-law arrived with their children from England and demanded to be housed and supported in exchange for keeping quiet about his American family. After some years, this arrangement became financially untenable, and Booth stopped sending his wife money so regularly. This prompted Adelaide to send their son, now 25, to Baltimore. For three years, Booth somehow fooled him into believing that he lived alone, but eventually Richard discovered the truth. He sent word to his mother who arrived in Baltimore in December 1846 and confronted Booth when he returned home from touring in March. After living the requisite three years in Maryland, she was able to divorce him in February 1851.
On 10 May 1851, with the youngest of their ten children now eleven years of age, Booth finally legally married Mary Ann Holmes.

Death


Booth's grave at  Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore
While traveling by steamboat  from New Orleans to Cincinnati in 1852, Booth developed a fever, presumably from drinking impure river water.No physician was on board, and he died aboard the steamboat near Louisville, Kentucky  on 30 November 1852. Booth's widow, Mary Anne, traveled in Cincinnati alone to claim his body


Legacy

Junius Brutus Booth was posthumously inducted into the  American Theatre Hall of Fame  in 1981.

Via: Wikipedia





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