- Emma Waller
Emma Waller (1819 –
February 28 1899 ) was an English actress who achieved fame in America.Waller made her first appearance at Drury Lane in 1856 as Pauline in "The Lady of Lyons". Earlier, she had acted in provincial theatres, and there is a record of her appearance at
Melbourne , in 1855, withGustavus Vaughan Brooke , in "Macbeth ". OnOctober 19 ,1857 she appeared in Philadelphia, playing Ophelia, and onApril 5 ,1858 , she debuted on the New York Stage, acting with her husband, at the old Broadway Theatre, as the Duchess inJohn Webster 's "The Duchess of Malfi " — a version of that play having been made for her use by her friend Richard Hengist Horne. After that time, during several seasons, she made starring tours of the country, and she was received with general favor. During several seasons Mrs, Waller was absent from New York, but onDecember 27 ,1869 , she made a brilliant reentrance, appearing atBooth's Theatre as Meg Merrilies, in a revival of "Guy Mannering " Her later years were, in part, devoted to starring tours, in part to theatrical management (she leased the Troy Opera House in 1871), and in part to teaching.Mrs. Waller's characteristic, best, and most admirable performances were those of Lady Macbeth, Meg Merrilies, and the Duchess of Malfi, but she also played male characters, and her impersonations of
Hamlet andIago are remembered as expert. She was a woman of stately presence; her countenance was expressive; she possessed dark, piercing eyes, a pallid complexion, and a voice of unusual depth and compass; her temperament was, in the highest degree, emotional; and, whether in repose or movement, her demeanor was impressively indicative of a self-centred mind, deep feeling perfectly controlled, and great physical power. She died in New York onFebruary 28 ,1899 , at the age of eighty.References
* Winter, "
The Wallet of Time " (New York, 1913)
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