Charles Dazey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Dazey
Charles Dazey

Charles Turner Dazey was born 13 August 1855 in Lima, Illinois and died 9 February 1938 in Quincy, Illinois.

A writer and playwright, Dazey attended the state university in Lexington, Kentucky, and was graduated from Harvard in 1881. He edited The Harvard Advocate and was elected poet of his class. While at college his poems were published in The Century Magazine. His comedietta Rustication was produced at the Boston Museum while he was a sophomore.

In 1892 Dazey wrote the libretto for War-Time Wedding, music by Oscar Weil of San Francisco, produced by The Bostonians with Henry Barnabee and Alice Nielsen.

He wrote several plays for Kate Putnam, American King for James O'Neill and The Little Maverick for Maggie Mitchell.

His greatest success, In Old Kentucky, was written for Jacob Litt. For over twenty-six years it had uninterrupted production in America.

After writing for Broadway, he wrote for film including Manhattan Madness for Douglas Fairbanks, The Mysterious Client for Mrs. Vernon Castle and Shifting Sands for Gloria Swanson.

He was a member of the Lambs Club in New York. He married the actress Lucy Harding.

[edit] Broadways shows written by Charles Dazey

Dazey's 1896 Broadway melodrama The War of Wealth was inspired by the Panic of 1893.
Dazey's 1896 Broadway melodrama The War of Wealth was inspired by the Panic of 1893.

[edit] References

Carolyn Lowrey (1920). "Charles T. Dazey", The First One Hundred Noted Men and Women of the Screen (PDF), Moffat, Yard, 42–43. Retrieved on 2007-06-19. 

[edit] External links