New York Dramatic Mirror
Type | Weekly |
---|---|
Founded | January 1879 |
Ceased publication | April 1922 |
Headquarters | Manhattan |
The New York Dramatic Mirror (1879-1922) was a prominent theatrical trade newspaper.
History
The paper was founded in January 1879 by Ernest Harvier as the New York Mirror. In stating its purpose to cover the theater, it proclaimed that coverage of the dramatic profession had been "degraded by having its affairs treated in the professedly theatrical papers side by side with prize fights, cocking matches, baseball, and other sports." This referred to competitors such as the New York Clipper.[1]
The word "Dramatic" was inserted in the title by 1889, and the "New York" dropped in 1917. Harrison Grey Fiske started contributing in 1879, and eventually obtained ownership of the paper.[2][1] Fiske's involvement ended in 1911. Frederick Franklin Schrader and Lymon O. Fiske then took over.
The paper published until April 1922, after changing from a weekly publication to a monthly at its very end.[3][4]
Contributors
Frank Luther Mott, a historian of American magazines, called the Mirror the "matchless chronicler of the New York stage," though it also included reports from other cites including London and Chicago. Contributors over its history included William Winter ("Dramatic Diary" column), Nym Crinkle ("Feuilleton"), Frank E. Woods ("Spectator" column), Burns Mantle, Mary H. Fiske ("The Giddy Gusher"), and Charles Carroll.[1]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Mott, Frank Luther. A History of American Magazines, 1865-1885, p. 198 (1938)
- ↑ The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge, Volume 11, p. 296 (1919)
- ↑ Dramatic Mirror - Oxford Reference, Retrieved 13 December 2013
- ↑ The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater, Retrieved 13 December 2013
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York Dramatic Mirror. |
- Archives of paper at fultonhistory.com
- The New York Dramatic Mirror Vol. 62 (July–September 1909)
- Dramatic Mirror Vol. 95 No. 2249 (April 1922)