bruce potter – Shakespeare and the Players at Emory University Thu, 03 Sep 2015 17:58:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 124205043 Cora Brown Potter /cora-brown-potter/ Thu, 03 Sep 2015 17:58:32 +0000 http://scholarblogs.emory.edu/shakespeare/?p=2387 Read more]]> (1857-1936)

The career of Cora Urquhart Brown-Potter, born in New Orleans, is fascinating. She married a New York City socialite, James Brown-Potter in 1877 and immediately became one of the most popular and active members of the New York “set.” She often was invited to parties because she was accomplished at recitation and would entertain after dinner with her declamations. She decided that perhaps her real vocation was on the stage, but that was certainly not a profession for a woman of her social status and wealth. The stage still had something of the stigma of “looseness” about it.

Cora left her husband and children, all of them disapproving of her decision to enter acting, and moved to London in 1886; her husband divorced her in 1903. Meanwhile, she embarked on her career and was no less social and popular than she was in New York. She associated with a crowd that included the Prince of Wales, and she dedicated a book of her poetry, My Recitations, to her friend Robert Browning. The Brown-Potters were instrumental in naming and accidentally creating the fashion we now know as the American tuxedo. In 1898, she joined the company of Herbert Beerbohm Tree where she was given a number of important roles. Her two best received parts in Shakespeare were as Juliet and as Cleopatra. Oscar Wilde, impressed with her talent, offered her the leading role in his 1894 play Salome, but she turned it down; she said she had little sympathy for the character. For a brief time, she went into theatre management at The Savoy in London in 1904, but the venture left her bankrupt a year later.

She retired from the stage in 1912, and gave one last charity performance in 1919. The final assessment of her career and her ability as an actress was that she was certainly competent at her craft and willing to sacrifice everything for it, but was never truly outstanding on the stage.

Mrs. Brown Potter ]]>
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Hilda Bruce-Potter /hilda-bruce-potter/ Wed, 05 Aug 2015 16:48:56 +0000 http://scholarblogs.emory.edu/shakespeare/?p=1824 Read more]]> (1888-?)

Her first stage appearance was in 1907 and she soon joined the English Drama Society that same year and first played Shakespeare. The next year, 1907, she joined Miss Annie Horniman’s company at the Midland Theatre, Manchester, where she stayed until 1911. Among the many parts she undertook were Hero in Much Ado About Nothing. She also played Celia in As You Like It at the Queen’s Theatre, Manchester, in 1908. She rejoined Miss Horniman’s company at the Gaiety Theatre, Manchester, in 1913; she played Maria in Twelfth Night.

In 1922-3 she toured with Henry Baynton, a noted Shakespearean actor, where she played the major parts in Shakespeare; among them was Emilia in Othello.

She took time from her long career on the stage to act in one film (1916) and several television productions in the 1950s.

Hilda Bruce Potter as Celia in "As You Like It" ]]>
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