Jump to content

Caroline Placide Waring Blake

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Caroline Placide)
Caroline Placide Waring Blake
BornApril 1798 Edit this on Wikidata
Charleston Edit this on Wikidata
DiedMay 21, 1881 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 82–83)
Long Branch Edit this on Wikidata
OccupationActor, dancer Edit this on Wikidata
Spouse(s)William Rufus Blake Edit this on Wikidata
ChildrenAnne Sefton Edit this on Wikidata
Parent(s)
RelativesJane Placide (sister)

Caroline Placide Waring Blake (April 1798 – May 21, 1881) was an American stage actress.

Caroline Placide was born in April 1798 in Charleston, South Carolina, the eldest of five children of actors Alexandre Placide and Charlotte Wrighten Placide.[1][2][3]

French-born Alexander Placide managed the Charleston Theatre. Caroline Placide made her stage debut there at the age of three, playing one of the title characters' children in the pantomime Medea and Jason, and appeared in many other roles in Charleston and New York City throughout her childhood.[2] Noah Ludlow later wrote "she was almost cradled on the stage."[4]

In 1814, at the age of sixteen, she married the comic actor Leigh Waring. He died in 1816. They had one child, the actress Anne Duff Waring Sefton Wallack.[3]

In 1824, she played a leading role in the premiere of the ballad opera The Saw-Mill; or a Yankee Trick by Micah Hawkins at the Chatham Garden Theatre. The Saw-Mill is often cited as the first American opera. Also appearing in the opera was a Canadian actor seven years her junior, William Rufus Blake.[5][6] In 1826, she and Blake married. Over the next four decades they performed together and managed theatres in the US and Canada.[3] Notable leading roles they played together include Sir Peter Teazle and Lady Teazle in The School for Scandal.[7]

Her last stage appearance was at the Winter Garden Theatre in 1862. She retired after her husband died the next year.[3]

Caroline Placide died on 21 May 1881 in Long Branch, New Jersey.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dunlap, William (1832). A History of the American Theatre from Its Origins to 1832. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-03030-7.
  2. ^ a b Sodders, Richard Phillip (1983). The Theatre Management of Alexandre Placide in Charleston, 1794-1812 (PhD thesis). The Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College.
  3. ^ a b c d Warren, Robin O. (2016-10-21). Women on Southern Stages, 1800-1865: Performance, Gender and Identity in a Golden Age of American Theater. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-2648-2.
  4. ^ Ludlow, Noah Miller (1880). Dramatic life as I found it: a record of personal experience ; with an account of the rise and progress of the drama in the West and South, with anecdotes and biographical sketches of the principal actors and actresses who have at times appeared upon the stage in the Mississippi Valley. St. Louis: G.I. Jones and Co.
  5. ^ James, Bessie Rowland (1972). Anne Royall's U.S.A. Internet Archive. New Brunswick, N.J., Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-0732-3.
  6. ^ Wegelin, Oscar (1917). Micah Hawkins and The saw-mill; a sketch of the first successful American opera and its author. New York: Priv. print.
  7. ^ Franklin Graham (1902). Histrionic Montreal.
  8. ^ Winter, William (1889). "Mrs. W. R. Blake". Brief Chronicles. The Society. pp. 18–19.