Edward Everett Rose

Edward Everett Rose (1862 - April 2, 1939) was an American playwright. He adapted a number of popular novels into plays, including Janice Meredith, Richard Carvel, David Harum, The Battle of the Strong, Alice of Old Vincennes, and The Rosary.

Life

Rose was born in Stanstead, Quebec, and graduated from Chauncy Hall School in Boston in 1881, and studied for two years at Harvard University. He died in Fremont, Wisconsin on April 2, 1939, survived by his wife, actress Dorothy Stanton and his daughter Ruth Rose, who became an actress and screenwriter.

Works

His numerous adaptions of best-selling novels to capitalize on their success were not necessarily intended to be productions of high quality. In response to his adaption of Alice of Old Vincennes in 1901, for example, it was said that "the mills of Edward E. Rose, dramatizer, are not like those of the famous proverb, for they grind rapidly and not exceeding fine."[1] Ethel Voynich was so unimpressed with his version of her novel The Gadfly that she tried to take out an injuction against the "illiterate melodrama" as she called it.[2]

Legacy

As his New York Times obituary pointed out, he should not be confused with British playwright Edward Rose (1849–1904), who dramatized The Prisoner of Zenda.[3] Edward Everett typically marketed himself under the name "Edward E. Rose", unlike the British writer.

The Rue Edward Rose or Rose Street in Sherbrooke, Quebec is named for him.[4]

References

External links