August 24, 1852—Theater producers, in the 19th
century, as much as now, knew a good property when they saw one, and by the
summer of 1852 there may few as hot as Uncle Tom’s Cabin. With Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel about
slavery causing a firestorm of controversy, interest would soar if the audience
could see a play based on it.
And so, Charles Taylor, an English-born actor who
had made a specialty of adapting famous novels to the stage, set to work. It was,
he later admitted, a pretty hasty job—so much so that two of the novel’s
best-loved characters, Topsy and Eva, never made it to the stage at all. Almost as bad, the bloodhounds pursuing Eliza across the ice were not depicted through real canines but, according to 20th century critic George Jean Nathan, "through the howling larnyx of one Joe Mitchell, a stagehand."
It
didn’t matter. The reach of the abolitionist novel was broadened when it was
adapted for Purdy’s National Theatre in Chatham Street in New York. It was on
its way to becoming the most popular stage play of its era.
Part of the reason the novel was so successful was that
everybody took a crack at it--sort of similar to the situation that obtains today around Christmastime, when, it seems, every theater company in the nation stages A Christmas Carol, only in Stowe's case it was all year round.. Not one of these productions was authorized by
Mrs. Stowe herself. Indeed, for producers and directors of the time, the
thought of authorization or copyright was a joke. The likes of Charles Dickens (himself almost
unsurpassed as a theater buff) may have howled about writers’ royalties, but
novelists such as himself and Mrs. Stowe could do little about it—at least,
until the United States finally got around to passing a copyright act in 1891.
Taylor became something of an old hand at adapting
Stowe, as he would, four years later, adapt another work of hers, Dred: A Tale of the Dismal Swamp. But he
would soon be competing with other, more audience-appealing versions
of Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
The one that won the most acclaim was a six-act
version by George L. Aiken that began as a 100-performance run in Troy, N.Y.,
before coming to Purdy’s, where it made an even bigger splash, with 325 performances.
The impetus for the Aiken play was the desire for a
vehicle for a child actress. Four-year-old Cordelia Howard had been stealing
the show right from under her parents, Caroline and George C. Howard, in their production
of a temperance drama, The Drunkard.
Rather than displaying jealousy of their child, the Howard parents decided to
milk her box-office appeal for all it was worth, and prevailed upon their
cousin Aiken to adapt to the stage a novel in which a child also figured prominently:
Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
The spotlighting of a child was crucial to the
reception of the play. In his excellent novel of New York’s 1863 Draft Riots, Banished Children of Eve, Peter Quinn, through the consciousness of "Eliza," an actress
in one of the later shows, demonstrates that, though Stowe’s understanding of
African-Americans was extremely limited, she had hit upon a plot element with
universal appeal: the death of a child:
“It wasn’t something she learned about through reading
or conversation. Here was the central event of the play, the mystical chord
that resounded through the audience. Slavery and the black man remained an
abstraction for most, a white man in burnt cock serving as a summation. But the
dead child was everywhere, in the past, the present, the future, cholera,
scarlet fever, typhoid, a continual slaughter of the innocents.”
The Howards would go on to tour with Aiken’s play for
35 years. But it was the New York production that made the biggest impact in
how dramas were presented. Before its premiere, no stage property was
considered complete without another bit of theatrical entertainment, such as an
“afterpiece” or a ballet. But the length of Uncle
Tom’s Cabin was such, the Howards insisted, that any other property tacked
onto it would only overstrain the audience.
The management of Purdy’s protested, but to no
avail. The show’s nearly year-long engagement at the theater proved the Howards
were correct. Thus was the concept of one-play entertainment in the United
States born.
In the essay “Everybody’s Protest Novel” in his 1955
collection Notes of a Native Son, James Baldwin noted Stowe’s distinct
lack of gifts as a fiction writer: “She was not so much a novelist as an
impassioned pamphleteer; her book was not intended to do anything more than
prove that slavery was wrong; was, in fact, perfectly horrible. This makes material
for a pamphlet but it is hardly enough for a novel.”
But Stowe’s one-dimensional, over-the-top
denunciation of slavery made her novel ideal as melodrama, the predominant
American theatrical mode up to the 1920s. The presentation of good and evil in
vivid colors, and the inevitable triumph of good, reassured audiences, despite
a rapidly changing world, that the values with which they grew up endured, all
appearances to the contrary.
The sheer theatricality of the show helped, too. Aiken and the Howards fixed that problem of the bloodhounds very well indeed in their version. Eventually, six real bloodhounds pursued Eliza across the icy floes in their production.
As I wrote, the one person who didn’t make money off the many theatrical versions of Uncle Tom’s Cabin was Stowe herself. She
could have used it. Her husband Calvin was a respected minister who, for all
his gifts as a scholar, didn’t make much to support the family. Harriet’s
novels helped gain the money to raise their seven children.
(The accompanying photo
from a 1901 stage production of Uncle Tom’s Cabin features Uncle Tom at the
whipping post.)
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