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Sidney Howard and Clare Eames: American Theater's Perfect Couple of the 1920s
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Sidney Howard and Clare Eames: American Theater's Perfect Couple of the 1920s
Current price: $49.95
Barnes and Noble
Sidney Howard and Clare Eames: American Theater's Perfect Couple of the 1920s
Current price: $49.95
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In the 1920s, the playwright Sidney Howard and his wife, actress Clare Eames, were at the heart of the movement to change the American theater from a commercial enterprise to one with art at its center. Sidney gained fame writing
They Knew What They Wanted
(which won the Pulitzer Prize) in 1924. A dramatist for the Theatre Guild, he wrote
Ned McCobb's Daughter
and
The Silver Cord
and became the voice of American theater's fight against censorship. Energetic and ambitious Clare played some of the greatest dramatic roles for women, including Queen Elizabeth, Lady MacBeth, and Hedda Gabler. For a time, Sidney and Clare were an ideal couple, collaborating on dramas and drawing admirers in both England and America.
This dual biography illuminates the growth of the American art theater, gives intimate details into the work of the couple, and reveals a glamorous doomed romance. The letters interspersed throughout the text detail the couple's thoughts on the artistic process, acting, writing, and the social and theatrical circles in which they moved. Including many letters and reviews from the era, this study describes Sidney and Clare's relationships, careers, and the dramatic disintegration of their marriage, set against the background of one of the most artistically fertile periods of American drama.
They Knew What They Wanted
(which won the Pulitzer Prize) in 1924. A dramatist for the Theatre Guild, he wrote
Ned McCobb's Daughter
and
The Silver Cord
and became the voice of American theater's fight against censorship. Energetic and ambitious Clare played some of the greatest dramatic roles for women, including Queen Elizabeth, Lady MacBeth, and Hedda Gabler. For a time, Sidney and Clare were an ideal couple, collaborating on dramas and drawing admirers in both England and America.
This dual biography illuminates the growth of the American art theater, gives intimate details into the work of the couple, and reveals a glamorous doomed romance. The letters interspersed throughout the text detail the couple's thoughts on the artistic process, acting, writing, and the social and theatrical circles in which they moved. Including many letters and reviews from the era, this study describes Sidney and Clare's relationships, careers, and the dramatic disintegration of their marriage, set against the background of one of the most artistically fertile periods of American drama.