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词条 Phoebe Davies
释义

  1. Early life

  2. San Francisco

  3. New York

  4. References

{{Infobox person
| name = Phoebe Davies
| image = Phoebe Davies 01.JPG
| caption = Photograph from the New York Star, February, 1909
| birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth date |1864|2|7|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Cardigan, Wales, U.K.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1912|12|4|1864|2|7|mf=y}}
| death_place = Larchmont, New York, USA
| other_names = Phoebe Davies Grismer
| occupation = Stage Actress
| spouse = Joseph R. Grismer
}}

Phoebe Davies (February 7, 1864 – December 4, 1912) was a Welsh-born American stage actress who starred in over 4,000 performances of the Lottie Blair Parker play, Way Down East.

Early life

Phoebe Davies was born in Cardigan, Wales, the daughter of David and Annie (née Griffiths) Davies. Her father, who was originally drawn to California by the Gold Rush of 1849, returned with his family in the early 1870s to work for the Pacific Mail Steamship Company. Her father later joined the Lighthouse Service where he would rise to captain the lighthouse tender Madroño.

[1][2]

While still in school Davies won an audition with David Belasco, then stage manager of the Baldwin Theatre Stock Company in San Francisco, that led to an offer to play a part in their next production. An illness prevented her from taking the role that only postponed her professional stage début a short while later as a member of the Oakland California Stock Company.[3]

San Francisco

She first appeared in a play by a local California playwright (Cipricio or Ciprico) entitled Adolph Chalet in which her performance as Marie, a minor role, went largely unnoticed in a cast that included Jeffreys Lewis, Osmond Tearle and Gerard Eyre. Later in the season she won praise for her depiction of Nadia in a dramatization of the Jules Verne novel Michael Strogoff.[3]

Around 1882 Davies joined the Baldwin Theatre Stock Company where she was given the opportunity to support the great Italian actor Ernesto Rossi as Regan and the Player Queen in productions of Shakespeare’s King Lear and Hamlet and in the role Lady Angela in Charles Francis Coghlan's The Royal Box, his adaption of the Alexandre Dumas play Kean. That same season William Edward Sheridan, a well known actor of the day, cast her as Prince Arthur to his Baldwin in King John, Lady Ann in Richard III and the title role in Romeo and Juliet opposite his Mercutio. During the period she also appeared with the seventy-one-year-old veteran actor Charles R. Thorne as Maritana in an adaption of the Jules Massenet Opéra comique, Don César de Bazan and as Hortense to Jennie Lee’s Little Jo in Dickens’s Bleak House.[3]

On June 7, 1882 Davies married in San Francisco Joseph R. Grismer, then a lead actor at the Baldwin Theatre.[4][5] In September, 1883 the two joined a company of actors from the Baldwin in a tour that was timed to correspond with various county fairs throughout California. Under the direction of Sam O. Mott the troup performed a series of plays including Chispa by the California playwright, Clay M. Greene. Davies portrayal of the title role garnered her an offer by one theatrical producer to make her a star on the New York stage, an opportunity the not yet twenty-year-old actress felt not prepared to accept.[6][7]

Later that year the couple formed the Grismer-Davies Organization and began playing theaters throughout California and eventually on tours that encompassed the Western States and Provinces of North America.[3]

During this time Davies played Mercedes in Monte Cristo from the Alexandre Dumas story The Count of Monte Cristo and Pauline in Called Back from the book by Hugh Conway, both plays written for the stage by Grismer.[8] Other plays performed by the Grismer-Davies Organization would include Editha’s Burglar by Frances Hodgson Burnett; The Midnight Bell, a play by Charles Hale Hoyt that would later help launch the career of Maude Adams; the Bartley Campbell play Fairfax;[9] Lights and Shadows by Henry Leslie; the Frank Harvey, Sr. play, The World Against Her;[10][11] The Tigress by Ramsey Morris;[12] The Long Strike by Dion Boucicault;[13] Lester Wallack’s Rosedale; another Boucicault play, The Streets of New York,[14] with Grismer and Davies playing the principal roles, Tom Badger and Alida Bloodgood; Enoch Arden, from the poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson;[15] The Wages of Sin, a morality story by Frank Harvey, Sr.;[16] and The Calthorpe Case, a melodrama by Arthur Goodrich.[17]

On Sunday, September 12, 1892, their son Conrad Valentine Grismer became the first baby to be baptized in the baptismal font writer Clay M. Greene had donated to St. John's Episcopal Church (15th and Julian Avenue) in San Francisco.[18]

New York

In 1893 Grismer and Davies began what would turn out to be a long tour of the major cities of the Eastern United States as Captain Harry Ford and Georgia Gwynne in his original play The New South, a melodrama written with Clay M. Greene about the American South a generation after the close of the Civil War.[19][20] The New South was adapted for film in 1916 with Carlyle Blackwell and Ethel Clayton taking the roles of Ford and Gwynne.[21] The couple next appeared together in the Sutton Vane, Sr. play, Humanity, as Lt. Bevis Cranbourne and Alma Dunbar, which opened in New York at the Fourteenth Street Theatre on February 4, 1895.[3][22]

Soon afterwards her husband along with actor William A. Brady, a former member of their company in California, purchased the rights to Lottie Blair Parker’s Way Down East, a pastoral play about country life in New England. With Grismer’s elaborations and Davies in the lead role as Anna Moore opposite Howard Kyle as David Bartlett, Way Down East debuted on September 3, 1897 at Providence Rhode Island and the following month made its New York premier at the Manhattan Theatre. Way Down East, at first received a lukewarm reception, but slowly began to gain momentum as it was performed in cities across the country. Over a run the lasted nearly ten seasons with some 4,000 performances, it was estimated that the play netted around a million dollars, with her husband’s share placed in the neighborhood of three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Way Down East, which remained popular with the public for many years, was on four occasions between 1908 and 1935 produced as a motion picture.[23][24] Davies continued to tour with the Way Down East into 1909 and had planned later in the year to appear opposite Arnold Daly in Algernon Boyesen's adaptation of Paul Hervieu's's four-act play Know Thyself, before falling seriously ill.[25]

Phoebe Davies died after an extended illness on December 4, 1912, aged 48, at her residence in Larchmont, New York. She was survived by her husband and son.[26]

References

1. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=mwYNAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA608 Harte, Bret - The Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine; vol. 22 pg. 608] accessed July 8, 2012
2. ^Phoebe Davies-California, Biographical Index Cards-Ancestry.com
3. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=dEs1AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA103 Strang, Lewis Clinton - Famous Actresses of the day in America; 1902 pp. 102-119] accessed August 24, 2012
4. ^Joseph Rhode Grismer, California, Biographical Index Cards, 1781-1990; Ancestry.com
5. ^Note: Who’s Who on the Stage and Famous Actresses of the Day in America place the marriage occurring after the 1883 California tour
6. ^Amusements Daily Evening Bulletin, (San Francisco, CA) Thursday, September 06, 1883; pg. 2; Issue 129; col C.
7. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=1BpAAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA209 Browne, Walter, Koch E. De Roy - Grismer, Joseph R. - Who's who on the Stage; pg. 209, 1908] accessed August 24, 2012
8. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=ocpXAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA242 Adams, William Davenport - A Dictionary of the Drama; 1904; pg. 242] accessed July 2, 2012
9. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=s-URAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA348 Welch, Deshier - The Theatre; vo; 1; March 20, 1886; pg. 348] accessed July 4, 2012
10. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=j_k5AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA166 The Theater: a Monthly Review and Magazine; September 1, 1887; pg. 166] accessed July 4, 2012
11. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=oKA5AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA444 The Athenaeum; April 4, 1903; pg. 444; col. 2] accessed July 4, 2012
12. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=4Pc5AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA54 The Theater: a Monthly Review and Magazine; July 1, 1889; pg. 54] accessed July 4, 2012
13. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=xGoNAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA596 The New international Encyclopaedia, Volume 3 edited by Frank Moore Colby, Talcott Williams; pg. 596] accessed July 4, 2012
14. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=3Ew_AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA438 The Moving Picture World; July-September, 1913; pg. 438] accessed July 4, 2012
15. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=1UM5AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA463 Adams, William Davenport; A Dictionary of the Drama; 1904; pg. 463] accessed July 4, 2012
16. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=0V8xAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA180 Klapka, Jerome Jerome, & Pain, Barry - To-Day, Volume 3; 1894; pg. 180] accessed July 4, 2012
17. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=kmRIAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA835 The Athenaeum, Part 2; December 17, 1887; pg. 835] accessed July 4, 2012
18. ^The Font Consecrated -The Morning Call - San Francisco; September 12, 1892; pg. 8
19. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=VSMgAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA589 The Illustrated American, Volume 13; January 7, 1893; pg. 589] accessed July 4, 2012
20. ^[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1893/01/03/106858988.pdf The New South in Drama - The New York Times; January 3, 1893] accessed July 4, 2012
21. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0139086/ The New South (1916) Internet Movie Database] accessed July 5, 2012
22. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=mDALAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=new+york+stage+history&hl=en&sa=X&ei=vwb1T-uuPIH_qAGr-I3JAw&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22Phoebe%20Davies&f=false Brown, Thomas Alston - A History of the New York Stage; 1903; pg. 509]
23. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=mnAuAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA87 Dunlap Society - Publications of the Dunlap Society, Issue 9; pp. 85-88] accessed July 2, 2012
24. ^[https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0342604/ Joseph R. Grismer- Internet Movie Database] accessed July 5, 2012
25. ^Washington Post (Washington, District Of Columbia); Sunday, November 07, 1909; pg. 36
26. ^Phoebe Davies Dies - New York Times; December 5, 1912; pg. 11
{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Davies, Phoebe}}

7 : 1864 births|1912 deaths|British emigrants to the United States|Actresses from San Francisco|19th-century American actresses|American stage actresses|20th-century American actresses

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