Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review"
Starring Women: Celebrity, Patriarchy, and American Theater, 1790-1850 engagingly straddles celebrity theory and theater history research." --
Journal of American Culture"As Sara A. Lampert ably shows, the most prominent female actors often outmatched their male peers in fame, reputation, and--most importantly--income. . . .
Starring Women takes a deeply researched look at the lives and careers of the major actresses of the first half of the nineteenth century, most forgotten, even by theater historians. . . . This is a fascinating book." --
Journal of American History"Highly recommended." --
Choice"Sara E. Lampert offers a valuable new study of women performers on the early American stage that brings the concerns of women's history to bear on histories of theater and drama in the early United States. . . . The insights of this fine work of scholarship open exciting new avenues in nineteenth-century theater history." --
American Nineteenth Century History "
Starring Women builds on much-needed expansion of the role women played in the development of North American theatre. These works all call for further examination of women and their role in early American theatre." --
Theatre Survey
"An excellent intervention in women's history and theater history, with significant new insights into the precarious gender politics that accompanied star female actors' appearance and the ways the economic underpinnings of the business of theater colored those politics. This is an important book."--Carolyn Eastman, author of
A Nation of Speechifiers: Making an American Public after the Revolution"
Starring Women illuminates how female celebrity culture bloomed within the newly forming middle-class structures of patriarchal America. With vivid prose and a keen sense of theory, Lampert establishes how early female stars employed 'public intimacy' to assert domestic femininity in the midst of what was an undeniably male world of entertainment. Lampert's book should be required reading for anyone interested in gender, early American history, celebrity, and the nineteenth-century stage."--Renée M. Sentilles, author of
American Tomboys, 1850–1915Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. Between Stock and Star: Theater and Touring in the United States, 1790-1830
Chapter 2. Dis/Obedient Daughters and Devoted Wives: The Family Politics of Stock and Star
Chapter 3. The Promise and Limits of Female Stage Celebrity: Fanny Kemble in America, 1832-1835
Chapter 4. Bringing Female Spectacle to the “Western Country,” 1835-1840
Chapter 5. Danger, Desire, and the Celebrity “Mania”: Fanny Elssler in America, 1840-1842
Chapter 6. The American Actress’ Starring Playbook, 1831-1857
Conclusion
Notes
Index