An “Unmanly and Insidious Attack”: Child Actress Jean Davenport and the Performance of Masculinity in 1840s Jamaica and Newfoundland

This essay examines how and in what way the movement of child performers along global theatrical circuits in the mid-nineteenth century served British imperial interests and aroused debate about colonial identity. It analyzes two politically charged controversies that surrounded child actress Jean D...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schweitzer, Marlis
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Centre for Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies, University of Toronto 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/21938
Description
Summary:This essay examines how and in what way the movement of child performers along global theatrical circuits in the mid-nineteenth century served British imperial interests and aroused debate about colonial identity. It analyzes two politically charged controversies that surrounded child actress Jean Davenport: the first erupted in the island colony of Jamaica in September 1840, the second in the island colony of Newfoundland in August 1841. In both locations, colonial theatres and newspapers became the staging ground for heated debates about the actress’s proclaimed virtuosity, notably her portrayal of male characters and her supposed resemblance to Edmund Kean. These debates quickly extended beyond a consideration of Davenport’s acting abilities, however, to include discussions about the responsibilities of theatre audiences and critics, definitions of gentlemanly behaviour, and the relationship between colonial-settlers and strangers from the metropole. Central to the analysis of the controversy surrounding Jean Davenport’s appearances in Jamaica and Newfoundland, then, is a consideration of how theatrical representations of masculinity—in this case, male characters played by a young girl—provoked discussion of, and gave rise to, other perform- ances of masculinity in two very different colonial settings. Dans cet article, Schweitzer s’intéresse aux jeunes artistes de la scène dans les circuits de tournées théâtrales servant des intérêts impériaux britanniques au milieu du dix-neuvième siècle et aux débats sur l’identité coloniale qu’ils ont provoqués. Schweitzer se penche sur deux controverses lourdes d’implications politiques et émotives autour de la jeune comédienne Jean Davenport. La première a eu lieu dans la colonie insulaire de Jamaïque en septembre 1840, et la deuxième, dans la colonie insulaire de Terre-Neuve en août 1841. Dans les deux cas, des théâtres et des journaux coloniaux sont devenus le lieu d’un débat enflammé sur la virtuosité de la comédienne, notamment pour sa représentation de ...