Anishinaabe actress outside tipi
Full length portrait of unidentified Anishinaabe actress associated with Hiawatha Pageant posing in forest outside of decorated tipi wearing costume including shell and bead necklaces, bead embroidered hide dress, and headband. Animal hides and antlers present at tipi entrance. Subject likely dresse...
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Format: | Still Image |
Language: | unknown |
Published: |
William L. Clements Library
1905
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Online Access: | http://name.umdl.umich.edu/IC-POHRT-X-860%5DGCH020_001 https://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/i/image/api/thumb/pohrt/860/GCH020_001/!250,250 https://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/i/image/api/manifest/pohrt:860:GCH020_001 |
Summary: | Full length portrait of unidentified Anishinaabe actress associated with Hiawatha Pageant posing in forest outside of decorated tipi wearing costume including shell and bead necklaces, bead embroidered hide dress, and headband. Animal hides and antlers present at tipi entrance. Subject likely dressed for role of Minnehaha. Lacking mount.; Louis Oliver Armstrong recruited actors from Garden River First Nation Ojibwa in Ontario as well as from local Waganakising Ottawa communities in Northern Michigan to take part in his theatrical production "Hiawatha, or, Nanabozho: An Ojibway Indian Play" inspired by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's epic poem "Song of Hiawatha." Armstrong had the show's location moved to Round Lake (also known as Wa-ya-ga-mug) near Petoskey, Michigan, in 1905.; Title devised by cataloger.; "Garden River First Nation" variant names: Gitigaan-ziibi Anishinaabe, Ketegaunseebee.; "Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, Michigan" variant names: Waganakising Odawa, Waganakising Ottawa.; "Ojibwa Indians" variant names: Anishinaabe, Chippewa Indians, Ojibwe Indians.; "Ottawa Indians" variant names: Anishinaabe, Odawa Indians, Outaouak Indians, Tawa Indians. |
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