- Clayton Hamilton
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Clayton (Meeker) Hamilton (1881–1927) was an American drama critic. Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., he graduated from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn in 1900 and from Columbia University (M. A.) in 1901. He was extension lecturer on the drama at Columbia University after 1903, and lectured in other connections. He served as dramatic critic and associate editor of the Forum in 1907-09, and as dramatic editor of the Bookman after 1910, of Everybody's Magazine after 1911, and of Vogue after 1912. He was elected a member of The National Institute of Arts and Letters. He edited Stevenson's Treasure Island for "Longman's English Classics" in 1910; contributed to the New International Encyclopedia and is author of Love That Blinds (1906), with Grace Isabel Colbron; Materials and Methods of Fiction (1908); The Theory of the Theatre (1910); The Stranger at the Inn (1913); Studies in Stagecraft (1914); and, with A. E. Thomas, a play, The Big Idea (1914).
Public Domain Works Available
- Problems of the actor. With an introd. by Clayton Hamilton (1918)
- A thousand years ago; a romance of the Orient, with an introd. by Clayton Hamilton (1914)
- The Theory of the Theatre
- Problems of the Playwright (1917)
- Studies in stagecraft (1914)
- Materials and methods of fiction (1908)
- Seen on the stage (1920)
External links
- Works by or about Clayton Hamilton in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Works by Clayton Hamilton at Project Gutenberg
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.
Categories: 1881 births | American theater critics | Columbia University alumni | Members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters | People from Brooklyn | Polytechnic University of New York alumni | 1927 deaths | American writer stubs
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