Ethel Jackson

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Ethel Jackson (November 1, 1877November 23, 1957) was a U.S. stage actress and comic prima donna[1] of the late 19th century and early 20th century. She appeared in Broadway theatrical productions.

Contents

[edit] Family

In 1877,[2] Ethel Jackson was born on November 1 in New York and lived for an extended time abroad. She received her education in Vienna, Austria and Paris, France.[1] Her father was Hart Jackson, a dramatist.[3] Her full name was Ethel Hart Jackson.[4] Her mother was Mrs. Frances Wyatt Jackson. Frances was in the cast of The Ambassador which was staged at the St. James Theatre in London, England, in 1898. Jackson was the great-granddaughter of painter Henry Inman and Sir William Coddington, the first governor of Rhode Island.[4]

In 1957 (aged 80), Ethel Jackson died on November 23 in East Islip, Long Island, New York.[2]

[edit] Theatrical career

She first played small roles at the Savoy Theatre[5] before having her first hit there as Wanda in The Grand Duchess. Charles Frohman brought her to America[6] to play the leading lady in Little Miss Nobody at the Garden Theatre in New York City, in August 1898. She was engaged to perform the part by[5] A.H.[7] Al Canby, who represented Frohman.[5] The musical comedy was staged next at Nixon & Zimmerman's Broad Street (Philadelphia) Theatre in September. The plot deals with a young aristocrat who is trying to raise funds when he finds himself without money. He places an advertisement for boarders at the Scottish castle of his aunt who is away. His ad is answered by a man who runs a London music hall. He brings along three music hall girls and a variety artist. The five are forced to pass themselves off as members of the nobility.[8]

Following her tenure in Little Miss Nobody, Jackson joined the Augustin Daly musical company.[6] She was in the musical farce, The Hotel Topsy Turvy, which opened at the Herald Square Theatre on October 3, 1898. As Cecile, Jackson's fellow cast members included Marie Dressler, who demonstrates her versatility along with her noted talent for humor.[9] Jackson succeeded Katherine Florence in the Madison Square Stock Company.[10]

By April 1899 she was in the company of A Runaway Girl.[11] The production began with a show in Troy, New York on September 18. James T. Powers played the role of Flipper, the jockey.[12]

The Casino Theatre presented an English fairy play, Little Red Riding Hood, in January 1900. Jackson was Riding Hood, with Madge Lessing as Little Boy Blue and Kitty Mitchell as Little Jack Horner. The production was the work of Edward E. Rice.[13]

Jackson created the title role in Miss Bob White, a comic opera written by Willard Spenser. The story tells of two millionaires compelled to live for several months as tramps after losing an election bet. They come to a dairy farm close to Philadelphia and are put to work. Jackson is a New York society belle who arrives at the farm disguised as a dairy maid. She successfully woos the man she is infatuated with.[14]

In February 1905 she was in a production of the The Brixton Burglary at the Carnegie Lyceum in Manhattan (New York). Written by Frederick W. Sidney, the presentation could not be staged in Brooklyn, New York, because of the burning of the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Several hundred members and friends of the Amaranth, Brooklyn's oldest dramatic society, attended the performance.[15]

Henry W. Savage secured Jackson to sing the role of Sonia in Die Lustige Witwe, which was presented to American audiences under the title The Merry Widow. The Viennese comic opera was written by Victor Leon, Franz Lehar, and Leo Stern.[16] The production opened first in Syracuse, New York on September 24, 1907.[17] The three-act opera played the New Amsterdam Theatre for the first time on October 21.[18] Jackson fainted twice during a Saturday matinee in March 1908. Her illness brought about her replacement by Lois Ewell.[19] She fainted again while leaving the stage at the close of the second act on March 17. After being revived by a doctor Jackson resumed her role at the beginning of the third act. The audience enthusiastically applauded her for her determination.[20] She attributed her fainting spells to a weak heart caused by grip, which she suffered from during the previous winter.[3]

In January 1914 Jackson debuted as a vaudeville performer at the Orpheum Theatre in Brooklyn, New York. The venue was run by B.F. Keith.[21] In February 1915 she appeared in A Pair of Sixes with Ralph Herz at the Belasco Theatre in Washington, D.C.. The play dealt with two pillmakers who disagreed on how to conduct their business.[22]

[edit] Marriages

Jackson married J. Fred Zimmerman Jr., business manager of the Chestnut Street Theater, in 1902 at St. James Episcopal Church in Philadelphia. She retired for a number of years from performing at this time.[1] Zimmerman was the son of the junior partner of the Nixon & Zimmerman theatrical business.[16] They spent their honeymoon in Lakewood, New Jersey.[23] The couple resided for a time on West 56th Street before moving to the Hotel Seymour,[3] West 45th Street, midtown Manhattan.[24] Jackson denied rumors of a pending divorce from Zimmerman in March 1908. [3] On August 3, 1908 Jackson obtained an interlocutory decree for a divorce without a correspondent being named.[25] According to the stipulation of the final divorce decree, issued in October, Jackson was permitted to remarry. Zimmerman could not legally marry again while his former wife was still living.[26] In October 1910 it was disclosed that Zimmerman was married again and had been for some time. His wife was Grace Rankin, a member of the Miss Innocence company of Anna Held.[27]

Newspaper reports announced the impending marriage of Jackson to Benoni Lockwood Jr., her lawyer when she was contesting a divorce from Zimmerman. Lockwood was from an old New York family and a popular member of the Racquet Club. His father married a sister of the late Ambassador Thomas F. Bayard, Sr. of Delaware, and was one of the pioneer insurance men in New York City.[28] Their wedding occurred on October 26, 1908 in Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, at the home of Henry Wharton, a brother-in-law of Lockwood. Lockwood's residence was 9 1/2 East 33rd Street, New York City.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Ethel Jackson Married, New York Times, February 4, 1902, pg. 2.
  2. ^ a b Stone, David (2001). "Ethel Jackson". Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company. The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (at Math.BoiseState.edu). Archived from the original on 2003-05-29.
  3. ^ a b c d Denial From Ethel Jackson, New York Times, March 25, 1908, pg. 9.
  4. ^ a b c The Merry Widow Is Again A Bride, New York Times, October 27, 1908, pg. 9.
  5. ^ a b c Theatrical Gossip, August 12, 1898, pg. 7.
  6. ^ a b Theatrical Gossip, New York Times, September 1, 1901, pg. 12.
  7. ^ Theatrical Gossip, New York Times, August 21, 1898, pg. 14.
  8. ^ Little Miss Nobody A Success, New York Times, September 6, 1898, pg. 7.
  9. ^ The Hotel Topsy Turvy, New York Times, October 4, 1898, pg. 9.
  10. ^ Theatrical Gossip, New York Times, November 18, 1898, pg. 7.
  11. ^ A Runaway Girl, New York Times, April 30, 1899, pg. IMS7.
  12. ^ Rights To A Play Settled, New York Times, August 18, 1899, pg. 7.
  13. ^ This Week's New Bills, New York Times, January 7, 1900, pg. 16.
  14. ^ Miss Bob White Produced, New York Times, April 16, 1901, pg. 6.
  15. ^ Brooklyn Players Here, New York Times, February 24, 1905, pg. 7.
  16. ^ a b Ethel Jackson to Sing for Savage, New York Times, August 11, 1907, pg. 7.
  17. ^ The Merry Widow Appears, New York Times, September 24, 1907, pg. 11.
  18. ^ The Week's Offerings, October 20, 1907, pg. X1.
  19. ^ Ethel Jackson Ill Again, New York Times, March 17, 1908, pg. 7.
  20. ^ Ethel Jackson Faints Again, New York Times, March 18, 1908, pg. 1.
  21. ^ Brooklyn Amusements, New York Times, January 11, 1914, pg. X6.
  22. ^ Coming to the Theaters, Washington Post, February 18, 1915, pg. 7.
  23. ^ The Season At Lakewood, New York Times, February 9, 1902, pg. 24.
  24. ^ Hotel Seymour, New York City
  25. ^ Divorce For Ethel Jackson, New York Times, pg. 7.
  26. ^ Ethel Jackson divorced, New York Times, October 23, 1908, pg. 9.
  27. ^ J. Fred Zimmerman Married Again, New York Times, October 1, 1910, pg. 13.
  28. ^ Ethel Jackson To Marry Shortly, New York Times, September 26, 1908, pg. 7.

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