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The First Actresses:1660-1930s

May 23 - May 24, 2014
12:00AM - 12:00AM
Thompson Library and Drake Performance and Event Center

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2014-05-23 00:00:00 2014-05-24 00:00:00 The First Actresses:1660-1930s The First Actresses:1660-1930sFriday, May 23 andSaturday, May 24, 2014Finally, women. Reflect on the wholehistory of women: do they not have to befirst of all and above all else actresses?Friedrich Nietzsche. The Gay Science, 1881Elsie Janis image courtesy of the Lawrence and Lee Theatre Research InstituteSymposium ScheduleArriving centuries late to the theatre profession, women have met with hostility, censorship, bans, and working conditions often well below those available to their male counterparts, not least of which was economic security much lower than that of actors. This symposium focuses on the actress with a view to promoting, identifying and encouraging research and scholarly directions on the work and lives of actresses from the 17th through the early 20th centuries.In addition to keynote speaker Sharon Marcus (The Orlando Harriman Professor at Columbia University), the symposium will present two performances and an exhibition. Addressing the centuries long prohibition on women acting, The First Actress by Christopher St. John (Christabel Marshall) features one of the women purported to be the ‘first actress’ to take the role of Desdemona in Othello in 1661. This short play from 1911 Britain is a touchstone for the symposium as it addresses a range of issues: the prejudice against the women performing, their ‘natural’ inadequacies as artists in the public realm, and women’s agency in demanding access to both the public stage and the right to vote. The second performance, a premiere of a solo work, looks at the life of the celebrated Columbus, Ohio artist with an international reputation Elsie Janis (1889-1956). This piece is commissioned for this symposium and will be created by Victoria Matsos, from the Theatre Research Institute’s Elsie Janis Collection. Finally we will mount an exhibition on the actress drawn from multiple collections of the Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research Institute.The symposium with presentations, exhibition, and performances will provide a forum for scholarship to be shared, work by practitioner/researchers to be experienced, and for future directions on the study of the actress to emerge.Sponsored by The Ohio State University’s Department of Theatreand University Libraries’ Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research InstituteWith support from Arts and Humanities Research Grant, and the Women’s Place. Thompson Library and Drake Performance and Event Center Department of Theatre, Film, and Media Arts theatreandfilm@osu.edu America/New_York public

The First Actresses:1660-1930s
Friday, May 23 and
Saturday, May 24, 2014

Finally, women. Reflect on the whole
history of women: do they not have to be
first of all and above all else actresses?
Friedrich Nietzsche. The Gay Science, 1881

Elsie Janis image courtesy of the Lawrence and Lee Theatre Research Institute

Symposium Schedule

Arriving centuries late to the theatre profession, women have met with hostility, censorship, bans, and working conditions often well below those available to their male counterparts, not least of which was economic security much lower than that of actors. This symposium focuses on the actress with a view to promoting, identifying and encouraging research and scholarly directions on the work and lives of actresses from the 17th through the early 20th centuries.

In addition to keynote speaker Sharon Marcus (The Orlando Harriman Professor at Columbia University), the symposium will present two performances and an exhibition. Addressing the centuries long prohibition on women acting, The First Actress by Christopher St. John (Christabel Marshall) features one of the women purported to be the ‘first actress’ to take the role of Desdemona in Othello in 1661. This short play from 1911 Britain is a touchstone for the symposium as it addresses a range of issues: the prejudice against the women performing, their ‘natural’ inadequacies as artists in the public realm, and women’s agency in demanding access to both the public stage and the right to vote. The second performance, a premiere of a solo work, looks at the life of the celebrated Columbus, Ohio artist with an international reputation Elsie Janis (1889-1956). This piece is commissioned for this symposium and will be created by Victoria Matsos, from the Theatre Research Institute’s Elsie Janis Collection. Finally we will mount an exhibition on the actress drawn from multiple collections of the Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research Institute.

The symposium with presentations, exhibition, and performances will provide a forum for scholarship to be shared, work by practitioner/researchers to be experienced, and for future directions on the study of the actress to emerge.

Sponsored by The Ohio State University’s Department of Theatre
and University Libraries’ Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research Institute
With support from Arts and Humanities Research Grant, and the Women’s Place.