first edition 12mo., embossed black cloth; gilt-worked spine; 489 pages, with errata page
1845 · Philadelphia
by BARNES, Charlotte M.S.
Philadelphia: E.H. Butler & Co., 1845. Rare First Edition. No first edition copies were in the marketplace when this item was catalogued. A collection of works by one of America’s first female dramatists. Charlotte Mary Sanford Barnes [circa 1818–1863] was an American actress and playwright, perhaps best known for her play Octavia Bragaldi, or, The Confession (1837). Aside from Anna Cora Mowatt Ritchie, she is considered the most successful female dramatist of early American theatre. Barnes is the daughter of actors John Barnes [1761–1841], a popular comedian, and Mary Greenhill Barnes [180?-1864], a distinguished tragic actress. At age sixteen, in the role of Angela in The Castle Spectre, Barnes made both her official debut, at the Tremont Theatre, Boston, and later her New York stage debut, on March 29, 1834..[Her career as an actress received some acclaim, but some unfavorable comparisons with her distinguished mother. Barnes was much more successful as a playwright than as an actress. Her first play was a stage adaptation of the novel The Last Days of Pompeii by Edward Bulwer-Lytton. It was well received at the prestigious Camp Theatre in New Orleans, Louisiana, where she had been performing with her parents. She also adapted the Joseph Holt Ingraham novel Lafitte, The Pirate of the Gulf, about the French Gulf of Mexico pirate Jean Lafitte who helped win the Battle of New Orleans. It premiered at the Camp in the spring of 1837 and proved to be quite popular, especially in the south, and was being performed as late as 1850. Barnes' first original play was the blank verse drama Octavia Bragaldi, or, The Confession, which took the Beauchamp–Sharp Tragedy (the 1825 murder of Kentucky legislator Solomon P. Sharp by Jereboam O. Beauchamp) and set it in 15th century Milan, a popular trope of the day.. It premiered at the National Theatre in New York City on November 9, 1837 with Barnes in the title role. It was a success in both the United States and England, and Barnes and her husband performed in it many times, as late as 1854. In 1841, Barnes and her mother, who was now retired from the stage, went to England, where Barnes acted in a number of productions, including Octavia Bragaldi. In 1846, she married the actor Edmon S. Connor. They appeared on stage together at the Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia, which they later managed. Barnes' next original drama was The Forest Princess; or, Two Centuries Ago, about Pocahontas, which premiered at the Arch on February 16, 1848. Other Barnes works include an adaptation of the French monodrama A Night of Expectations, Charlotte Corday, based on the play by M.M. Dumanoir and Alphonse de Lamartine's work Histoire des Girondins, and an adaptation of the short play A Captive by Matthew Lewis. Barnes continued writing and performing until 1863, when at age 45 she died after a sudden unidentified illness. Barnes' original works are collected in Plays, Prose and Poetry (1848), but her adaptations and translations do not survive. A rare title!. 12mo., embossed black cloth; gilt-worked spine; 489 pages, with errata page. With Preface.. Very Good (minor wear; some foxing text).
(Inventory #: 58464)