QueerTheory.com
Books Used Books Book Series News Music Film Travel Shopping
Go Home!
Go Back! Search! Talk to Us!
Books!
 
Hi!
Histories Index
Paul Cadmus
John Cage
Pat Califia
Michael Callen
Peter Cameron
M. Cammermeyer
Jonathan Capehart
Truman Capote
Capucine
Gia Carangi
Caravaggio
Claudia Card
Edward Carpenter
Rachel Carson
Warren Casey
Kevin Cathcart
Willa Cather
Constantine Cavafy
Luis Cernuda
Jane Chambers
Debra Chasnoff
Bruce Chatwin
George Chauncey
John Cheever
Mary Cheney
Russell Cheney
Chrystos
Craig Claiborne
Karen Clark
Cheryl Clarke
Michelle Cliff
Montgomery Clift
Kate Clinton
James Coco
Jean Cocteau
Roy Cohn
Claudette Colbert
Jack Cole
Sidonie G. Colette
Katherine Coman
Bill Condon
Blanche W. Cook
Dennis Cooper
Mario Cooper
Aaron Copland
Marie Corelli
John Corigliano
Tee A. Corinne
Alan Cumming
Katharine Cornell
Donald Webster Cory
Noel Coward
Wally Cox
Art Crane
Quentin Crisp
Mart Crowley
Ines de la Cruz
Wilson Cruz
George Cukor
Countee Cullen
Merce Cunningham
Michael Cunningham
John Curry
Catie Curtis
Charlotte Cushman
Hi!
Archives
Libraries
Legacy of Names
The Holocaust
Beat Generation
Stonewall
Notable Bisexuals
History Books
History Films
Coming Soon
Suggest a Name
Authors Index
Hi!
Names Index
Subjects Index
Authors Index
Site Index

Hi!
Histories Index
Academics
Arts
Bodies
Cultures
Futures
Identities
News
Places
Politics
Relations
Theories
Things
Find A Name
Find A Subject
Hi!

Films about Queer History

 

Charlotte Cushman  (1816 - 1876)

Online Resources
Texts:  Charlotte Cushman
Texts:  Queer Histories
Texts:  Authors Index
Films:  Queer History
Used Books:  LGBT Studies
Add a Resource
Suggest a Name
      

      

Free Newsletter

Disorderly Conduct : Visions of Gender in Victorian America

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

When Romeo Was a Woman : Charlotte Cushman and Her Circle of Female Spectators (Triangulations: Lesbian/Gay/Queer Theater/Drama/Performance)When Romeo Was a Woman : Charlotte Cushman and Her Circle of Female Spectators by Lisa Merrill

At the height of her career, Charlotte Cushman (1816-76) was considered America's greatest actress and one of the most famous women in the English-speaking world. Cushman challenged Victorian notions of gender in her stage portrayals of male characters and of strong, androgynous female characters. Offstage she was a powerful, independent businesswoman whose income supported her family, women lovers, and friends. Lisa Merrill sheds new light on the actress's romantic and erotic relationships and, in turn, on our understandings of the nature of nineteenth-century women's "romantic friendships." She demonstrates how Cushman's androgynous presence served as a symbol to many of her contemporaries and revealed the period's multiple and often contradictory attitudes toward female performers, independent women, and the unspeakable possibilities of same-sex desire. When Romeo Was a Woman will find an appreciative audience among general readers as well as specialists in gay/lesbian history, women's history, theater and performance, popular culture, Victorian Studies, and American Studies.

  Click here for more info  

Charlotte Cushman

Excerpt:

In 1836, Charlotte Cushman made her stage debut as Lady Macbeth in New Orleans. That year she also played Romeo, beginning a career-long tradition of playing both male and female roles. Cushman appeared in London in 1845 opposite Edwin Forrest and was immediately hailed as the greatest actress of her time. She continued to play conventional tragic heroines, as well as Hamlet, and Romeo to her sister Susan's Juliet. Having settled permanently in Europe, Cushman returned in 1857, 1860, and again in 1874, to bid farewell to her American fans...

  

Charlotte Cushman

From Funkandwagnalls.com

Excerpt:

American actor, born in Boston. She began her professional career in 1835 as an opera singer and later that year played her first dramatic role as Lady Macbeth. In 1844 she accompanied the English actor William Charles Macready on his American tour...

  

Queer History from the Days When Romeo was a Woman

Tim Miller Interviews Lisa Merrill, author of When Romeo Was a Woman

From Oasis Magazine

Excerpt:

She was as famous as Madonna, as talented as Sir Laurence Olivier and as much a Sapphic heartthrob as Jodie Foster! I am talking about none other than Charlotte Cushman, the renowned 19th Century lesbian actress who wowed the world with her brilliant performances of male roles in Shakespeare. Lisa Merrill recounts this extraordinary story in When Romeo Was a Woman (University of Michigan Press, 1999), her engaging and consistently enjoyable biography of Cushman and the pivotal role she played in the development of lesbian cultural identity...

  

The Last Reading of Charlotte Cushman

Carolyn Gage is a lesbian-feminist playwright, performer, director, and activist, currently teaching theatre and women's studies courses at the University of Southern Maine. In the fall, she will be teaching directing at Bates College.

The Last Reading of Charlotte Cushman was national winner of the generous Arch and Bruce Brown Foundation Grant for best play about a lesbian historical figure. Gage has directed a production of this work that was featured at the National Women's Music Festival and at Queerfest in Los Angeles...

  

Click here for Resource Query Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies

Names Index:
A
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

up

 

Click Here for Queer History Books

| Home | Bookshop | CFP | Add URLEmporium |

Associate PartnershipTLA Video Affiliate
In Association with the Philosophy Research Base at  erraticimpact.com
Web Design Copyright © 2000 by queertheory.com