Posted on 05/30/2017 4:47:00 PM PDT by Tax-chick
In February of 1901, Walter Berry, a lawyer and member of élite society in New York, expressed a regret in a letter written to his close friend Edith Wharton. How I do wish I could run on to see the first rehearsal of the Shadow, he wrote.
At the time, Wharton, who was thirty-nine years old, was not yet a novelist, having only published shorter fiction and poetry, as well as co-authoring, with Ogden Codman, The Decoration of Houses, an 1897 book about interior design. But she was a budding playwright, and, as two scholars have just deduced in an important bit of detective work, Berrys glancing reference was to one of her works: The Shadow of a Doubt, a three-act play that was in production in 1901. It was to star Elsie de Wolfe as Whartons heroine, Kate Derwent, a former nurse married to John Derwent, a gentleman above her social station. Kates role in assisting the suicide of her husbands former wife, Agnes, whom she tended to after an injury, is revealed in the course of the drama.
The production was cancelled, however, and the work slipped into obscurity. It is not mentioned by any of Whartons biographers, nor does Wharton mention it in her own memoir, A Backward Glance, in which, perhaps understandably, she skates over her brief and not especially successful career as a writer for the stage. (In the first years of the century, she had written a handful of plays, but The Shadow of a Doubt would have been her first professional production, had it materialized. Later, she collaborated on an adaptation of The House of Mirth, which proved less successful than hoped.)
It has now come to light thanks to the sleuthing of two scholars, Laura Rattray, who is a reader in American literature at the University of Glasgow, and Mary Chinery, a professor of English at Georgian Court University, in New Jersey. They are publishing their findings in the new issue of the Edith Wharton Review, and hope that the plays discovery will shed new light on the period of Whartons life before her ascent to literary fame, as well as illuminating her better known works in previously unimagined ways. They also hope that it will be enjoyed by Wharton aficionados, and beyond. Im not going to claim that it is a lost masterpiece of the American stage, Rattray told me. But it has a really interesting female character at the core, and there are lots of witty one-liners.
I think one would have to convoke a panel of hairdressers in order to sort out the fine distinctions between a Women’s Studies Professor hairdo and a Nun-Cut.
My hairdresser is a non-observant Jew, so she’s be no use ;-).
From left to right: the "Bint" cut; the "Coif Khadijah"; the "Kafir Chop-Chop"
That’s one way to avoid sunburn.
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