Mary Shaw (actress)
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Mary G. Shaw (January 25, 1854 – May 18, 1929) was an American actress, playwright,
suffragist Suffrage, political franchise, or simply franchise, is the right to vote in public, political elections and referendums (although the term is sometimes used for any right to vote). In some languages, and occasionally in English, the right to v ...
, and early feminist. Shaw was involved in the
women's movement The feminist movement (also known as the women's movement, or feminism) refers to a series of social movements and political campaigns for radical and liberal reforms on women's issues created by the inequality between men and women. Such is ...
since the early 1890s, and in 1892 she became a member of the Professional Women's League. She played many controversial roles in her career as an actress, and was involved in some of the most controversial plays of her time such as Henrik Ibsen's '' Ghosts'' and ''
Hedda Gabler ''Hedda Gabler'' () is a play written by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. The world premiere was staged on 31 January 1891 at the Residenztheater in Munich. Ibsen himself was in attendance, although he remained back-stage. The play has been ca ...
'',
George Bernard Shaw George Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856 – 2 November 1950), known at his insistence simply as Bernard Shaw, was an Irish playwright, critic, polemicist and political activist. His influence on Western theatre, culture and politics extended from ...
's (no relation) ''
Mrs. Warren's Profession ''Mrs. Warren's Profession'' is a play written by George Bernard Shaw in 1893, and first performed in London in 1902. The play is about a former prostitute, now a madam (brothel proprietor), who attempts to come to terms with her disapproving ...
'' and many female suffrage plays. Shaw, along with actress
Jessie Bonstelle Jessie Bonstelle (born Laura Justine Bonesteel; November 18, 1871 – October 14, 1932) was an American theater director, actress, and drama company manager. Encouraged by her mother, she sang and performed in the theater from a young age; she w ...
, designed the Woman's National Theatre in the early twentieth century. Shaw suffered and would die from heart disease. ''The Cradle Song'' was her last appearance on stage as a result of the illness.


Actress


Professional Women's League

One of the major factors of Shaw's success as a speaker and suffragist was due to her association with clubs that were used to gain wider cultural and social acceptance of different professions. Actresses formed clubs to develop organizational and speaking skills, which later helped Shaw in her work for the women's suffrage movement. The most important actresses’ club was the Professional Women's League, which was founded by actresses and wives of theatrical managers. The charter designated women to join that "engaged in dramatic, musical, and literary pursuits with the purpose of rendering them helpful to each other." The League descended from a larger club, Sorosis, which did not support this new and growing club. There was much disagreement and blackballing of actresses as a result of this split. A main component of the League were the lessons given to young actresses that taught them how to create their own costumes in dressmaking classes. Although Shaw was a member of the club and a suffragist herself, the League was not only for women's suffrage because there were also others who were against the movement. Shaw strongly believed that suffrage was the only logical opinion to have. She said "the woman who will not think for herself… does harm to her own nature." Shaw decided, after the disapproval of the suffragist movement, to run for president of the League in 1913. She lost by three votes, and many women vowed to never set foot in the club again. In less than a month the Professional Women's League had split in half. Shaw and many of her supporters left to form the Gamut Club, which had a more relaxed atmosphere and welcomed women of all different kinds of professions.


On the Stage

An early edition of ''The Theatre Magazine'' claimed that "to see Mary Shaw act...is inevitably to feel an interest in the woman behind the actress." Shaw was onstage consistently throughout her life. She was particularly drawn to the work of popular playwrights Henrik Ibsen and George Bernard Shaw, but she did not limit herself to their work. Though she starred in shows with varying production values, Shaw was picky when it came to the moral implications of her art. She often chose her roles with a feminist mindset as most plays at the time were created by men and did not portray women correctly. When offered a part in ''Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch'', she turned it down claiming that "it teaches contentment with and resignation to poverty." Her dedication to acting was inspiring. Even when her mother suddenly passed away on the eve of an opening show, she insisted on performing. Unfortunately, the reviews for the show were less than glowing as she was appropriately distracted. Shaw was often criticized for acting in a very explicit way, namely for wearing excessive makeup as in her more risqué roles. Fortunately, other shows had more success. She originated the title character of G.B. Shaw's ''Mrs. Warren's Profession'' and revived the role several times in her life, each time to complimentary reviews. Shaw's role in Mrs. Warren's Profession was very controversial for the undesirable way she acted in a specific scene in the play. It was said by various critics that her character spoke in too much of a low-class tone than what was deemed socially acceptable in performance at that time. The extremely controversial ''Ghosts'' was another career mark role for Shaw, with its first English performances occurring in 1894. The play, which Shaw took on an American tour, received mostly outrage and critical backlash. Despite this response, Shaw successfully produced various plays following the tour.


Playwright

In her lifetime, Shaw wrote and directed several satirical pieces including ''The Parrot Cage''. The play is set within a parrot cage where several archetypal female parrots live. There is the free-souled parrot who wants to be free of the cage and the Philistine, the idealist, the rationalist, the reasoning, and the theological parrots who oppose the desires of the free-souled parrot. A man's voice designates the master who occasionally comes in to tell the parrots how pretty they are and reminds them that "Polly's place is in the cage." By the end of the show, the free parrot escapes and instructs the other parrots to "Follow me!" Through this clever satire, Shaw urges women to be free of their domestic cages.


Suffragist

Shaw believed that each gender needed to understand the other and "she wished to see more women successfully entering the professional arena in direct competition with men" to create platonic relationships. Shaw advocated for nonsexual relationships between men and women, and in this, equality would be born. Before men could get on board with suffrage, Shaw needed women to see this "new sense of responsibility, for there were many women to whom the concept of political equality was, in itself, ‘an enlightenment’".


The Gamut Club

In 1917, Shaw revived ''Ghosts'' "in order to raise money for one of her non-theatrical projects, The Gamut Club". The Gamut Club was for women from every walk of life to get together and live and talk and experience the world with one another. Shaw created The Gamut Club with ambition "to provide professional women from diverse fields with the equivalent in comfortable surroundings to those which professional men had enjoyed for decades". She was inspired while on tour in 1908, when she was extended honorary membership to a men's club in Los Angeles called the Gamut Club. Shaw aimed to keep membership dues in her own club low enough to accommodate professional women of modest means. She was elected President of the club and continued to be re-elected annually until her death. Though originally housed in a temporary space, her dreamed of building a facility like the men's club: a residential clubhouse with a stage, reading rooms, and even a pool would come true. The club made many efforts during the war such as offering services as a canteen and performing small acts for servicemen. It was the first of women's clubs to do so. There was a great deal of protesting done as a result of the oncoming World War I. One example is the thousands of activists whom Shaw assembled for a silent "Peace Parade" that took place in New York City protesting the war.


Family

Shaw married Henry Leach in 1879 and he died two and a half years later. With him she was the mother of Broadway actor Arthur Shaw (1881–1946). She secondly married French actor M. de Brissac in 1885.


References


External links

*
New York Times
ACTRESSES TO HAVE A CLUB.;They Are Displeased, It Is Said, with the P.W.L. Management ...(Thursday May 15, 1913)
Mary Shaw
portrait Univ. of Washington Sayre Collection *Mary Shaw's play,
The Parrot Cage
' {{DEFAULTSORT:Shaw, Mary 1854 births 1929 deaths American feminists Actresses from Boston