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For more information on James William Wallack, visit Britannica.com.
| American Theater Guide: James William Wallack |
Wallack, James William (1794–1864), actor and manager. The younger brother of Henry Wallack, he was slated for the navy but chose to continue his family's acting tradition. He had played opposite Edmund Kean and other leading figures before making his American debut at the Park Theatre in 1818 as Macbeth, followed by his Rolla, Coriolanus, Romeo, Hamlet, and Richard III. For the next thirty‐three years he shuttled between America and England, often appearing at Philadelphia's Arch Street Theatre and New York's National Theatre, which he managed for a time. It was at the latter that he offered the premiere of Tortesa, the Usurer (1839). George Odell has written that during these seasons, “Wallack really first showed New York what was meant by perfect stage‐management, with an eye to every detail, however slight.” He settled permanently in New York in 1851 and the following year opened his theatre and organized the company that was a leading American ensemble for the next thirty‐five years, first under him, then under his son Lester Wallack. Although his repertory covered a full range of classic and modern, tragic and comic, his forte was comedy. With rare exceptions, he ignored native works, preferring the safety of English and Continental writing. Wallack retired from acting in 1859 but continued to operate his theatre (including a new one built in 1861) until shortly before his death. His contemporary, James H. Hackett, described him thus: “His figure and bearing . . . were very distingué; his eye was sparkling; his hair dark, curly, and luxuriant; his facial features finely chiselled; and, together with the natural conformation of his head, throat, and chest, Mr. Wallack presented a remarkable specimen of manly beauty.” Biography: A Sketch of the Life of James William Wallack, Anonymous, 1865.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: James William Wallack |
Bibliography
See his Memoirs of Fifty Years (1889).
| Wikipedia: James William Wallack |
James William Wallack (c. 1794–1864) was an Anglo-American actor and manager, born in London.
Wallack's parents were comedians, who performed at the London minor playhouses and in the British provinces. His first appearance on the stage was as a child at the Surrey Theatre in London. Soon afterward he performed in juvenile characters at Drury Lane, and at the age of eighteen entered on a permanent career at the same house as Laertes in Hamlet. He also acted in the British provinces and in Ireland, gradually winning his way to popularity as a useful representative of drama and comedy. In 1824 Wallack became stage manager at Drury Lane, and rose to the performance of secondary roles in tragedy. Later he played at the Haymarket Theatre, and officiated as stage manager at the Princess's Theatre.[1]
On the occasion of his first visit to the United States, in 1818, he played Macbeth at the Park Theatre, New York. He also played Romeo, Shylock, Coriolanus, Hamlet, and Richard III, all without making any favorable impression. But in the principal roles in The Stranger, Pizarro and The Gamester he closely copied the manner of Kemble and attracted favorable consideration. From 1818 until 1845 Wallack performed at intervals in all the principal cities of the United States. Among his roles were the chief characters in The Brigand, The Rent-Day, The Wonder, Don Cassar de Bazan, Wild Oats and the refined comedy parts of Mercutio, Jaques, and Benedick. Love's Ritornello, as sung by him in The Brigand, was hummed from one end of the country to the other.[1]
In 1822 Wallack met with an accident, in which his leg was fractured by the overturning of a stagecoach between New York and Philadelphia. This mishap retired him from active life for about eighteen months, and from its effect he never entirely recovered. From 1837 until its destruction by fire, Wallack conducted the New York National Theatre. There he presented a repertory of the best plays in the English language, rendered by a company such as never before had been seen in this country.[1]
He settled permanently in New York City in 1852.[2] In that year, he assumed management of Wallack's Lyceum, renamed from an old theatre at the corner of Broome Street and Broadway.[1][2] In 1861 he built Wallack's Theatre at 13th Street and Broadway.[1][2] His son opened the third and last Wallack's Theatre in 1882.[2]
Wallack was an actor of the old school. Thackeray praised his performance as Shylock, and Joseph Jefferson his Don Caesar de Bazan.[2] As a performer he was endowed with a fine personality; his voice was highly melodious, set off by flexibility and careful elocution, and his knowledge of stage-effect was unexcelled. In refined and eccentric comedy Wallack had few superiors. Some of his roles in the romantic dramas of his own creation were entirely unequalled, and have passed away with him.[1]
He married the daughter of John Henry Johnstone (1749-1828), a popular tenor and stage Irishman; she died in 1851. Their son, John Lester Wallack was also a famous actor.[2]
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