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1833 SPRUCE STREET
PHILADELPHIA.1
My dear Mr. Whitman
I am asking some friends to take a cup of tea tomorrow (Tuesday afternoon) between
four and six o'clock, with Miss Gale,2 the bright young actress who is supporting
Booth3 and Barrett4 at the Chestnut St. Opera house5 this week.
Would it be possible for you to come. I know she would
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enjoy so much the meeting you and seeing you.
If you cannot come as I fear you cannot, she would prize very much a few words of
regret from your own hand. If you will send it to her here, I will
see that she gets it.
Miss Gale is one of our most, if not our most promising young actress—
Wishing we might have the pleasure of seeing you.
Very sincerely
Sophia Wells Royce Williams
Nov. 24/90
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see notes Nov. 25 1890
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Correspondent:
Sophia Wells Royce Williams
(1850–1928) was a writer and frequent visitor (with her husband Talcott
Williams) to Whitman's Camden, New Jersey, home.
Notes
- 1. This letter is addressed:
Mr. Walt Whitman | 321 Mickle St. | Camden | New Jersey. It is postmarked:
Philad(?) | Nov 24 | 11PM | 90; Camden, (?) | Nov | 25 | 9AM | 1890 |
Rec'd. [back]
- 2. Minna Gale (1869–1944)
was an American actress known for Shakespearean roles early in her career. She
later appeared in silent films. [back]
- 3. Edwin Thomas Booth
(1833–1893) was an American actor, famous for performing Shakespeare in
the U.S. and Europe, the son of actor Junius Brutus Booth (1796–1852), and
the brother of Abraham Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth (1838–1865),
also an actor. He was the owner of Booth's Theatre in New York. [back]
- 4. Lawrence Barrett
(1838–1891) was an American stage actor who acted in the repertory company
of the Boston Museum and later on the London stage. He played numerous parts
during his career, including taking on a number of Shakespearean roles,
sometimes acting alongside the well-known stage actor Edwin Booth. [back]
- 5. The Chestnut Street Opera
House in Philadelphia opened in 1877. In late November 1890, Booth and Barrett,
as part of their acclaimed 1889–1890 tour, performed in several plays
there; the plays included Francesca da Rimini, George Henry Boker's 1855 tragedy
based on Dante, as well as Edward Bulwer-Lytton's 1839 historical play
Richelieu, along with Shakespeare's Hamlet, Othello, The Merchant of Venice,
Much Ado About Nothing, and Macbeth. Minna Gale joined Booth and Barrett in a number of these
productions; she replaced the renowned Polish actress Helena Modjeska
(1840–1909), who had to leave the tour because of an injured ankle. [back]