Steele MacKaye
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Steele MacKaye | |
---|---|
Born | James Morrison 1842 Buffalo, New York |
Died | 1894 |
Occupation | Stage actor |
Steele MacKaye (1842 - 1894), was a U.S. actor, dramatist, producer, and theater manager.
He was born in Buffalo as James Morrison. He studied painting at the Ecole des Beaux Arts under Couture. He studied dramatic expression in Paris under François Delsarte and on his return lectured in New York and Boston.
He founded the Lyceum Theater, and was father to James MacKaye, Percy MacKaye and Benton MacKaye
[edit] Works
He wrote the plays Monaldi and Marriage. Other works include:
- The Twins (1876)
- Won At Last (1877)
- Through the Dark (1878), later called Money Mad
- Hazel Kirke (1880)
- Anarchy (1887), originally called Paul Kauvar; or Anarchy, later shortened to Anarchy, and then again changed to Paul Kauvar.
[edit] Publications
- Percy Mackaye, Steele Mackaye: A Memoir (New York, 1911)
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.