Biography
Ellis was born in Coldwater,Career
Director
Ellis began her work as a director with the help of her husband, theatre manager Frank Baker. Ellis and husband secured and managed the Park Theatre in Brooklyn from 1901 to 1902. Ellis was the primary stage director there and her husband managed the administrative end until the theatre burned down at the end of the 1902 season. Ellis and Baker then leased the Criterion Theatre, also in Brooklyn, where Ellis continued to direct plays. While there, Ellis formed the Baker Stock Company. According to Ellis, this is when she did the "hardest work of erlife, playing the leading roles in a new play every week, directing rehearsals, rewriting plays, planning scenery and properties and fairly living in the theatre.” They later moved to the Berkeley Lyceum inPlaywright
Her first writing attempt was out of necessity, when she and her brother, Edward, were stranded on the road by the unexpected disbanding of their theatrical company. The play was successful enough to pay their way home. Ellis' plots typically followed one of three trajectories. All three centered around women's issues. * The unhappy life of a married woman (''Mary Jane's Pa'', 1910) * Women in the workforce (''The Point of View'', 1903) * Women above the age of forty (''The White Villa'', 1921) Ellis had difficulty in getting some of her plays produced, as in the case of ''The White Villa. The White Villa'' is a play about a woman in an unfulfilled marriage who decides to leave her husband. The play ends with the leading woman now living her life alone while her ex-husband has remarried a younger woman. One male producer liked ''The White Villa'' but wouldn’t produce it. Another male reader (who was married to an actress) said that he enjoyed reading the play, but would never let his wife star in it. A third producer claimed that he would produce the play, except that women in the audience would hate the play’s truthful narrative, saying “Women won’t stand for the truth.” Edith Ellis eventually produced the play herself and would self-produce a majority of her works. In 1936, Ellis began transcribing works about life after death. She said this idea came from aFeminism in theatre
Directing theory
Ellis developed a feminist directing theory. In her words: “My methods differ somewhat from those of the men directors. The men like first to put the company through the rough outline of the play, the mechanics as we say, leaving the characterizations to be developed later along with details and business. I prefer to stay ‘living’ the play from the first and working out the detail as we go slowly along. In this way the sense of reality is created, and the play is already properly colored.” According to Ellis, women biologically made better directors because women had an ability to impart their knowledge to the cast, whereas male directors did not have the inborn emotional inclination or intuition of women. The only advantage that men had as directors, according to Ellis, was their ability to obtain directing positions. To some scholars, this part of her theory is problematic because Ellis attributes differences in gender to biological causes. A major element of Ellis’ directing theory was maintaining an actor’s agency regarding character interpretations. According to Ellis, it was crucial that directors not eliminate the intelligence of the actor. As a former actress, Ellis was very familiar with the lowly treatment of actors by their directors. Actresses (female actors) were treated especially poorly by directors, so Ellis made a point to grant actresses agency in her rehearsal and performance space.Works
*''A Batch of Blunders,'' 1897 *''Mrs. B. O'Shaughnessy (Wash Lady)'', 1900 *''Because I Love You'', 1903 *''The Point of View'', 1904 *''Mary and John'', 1905 *''The Wrong Man'', 1905 *''Contrary Mary'', 1905 *''Ben of Broken Bow'', 1905 *''The Swallow'', 1906 *''Mary Jane's Pa'', 1906 *''My Man'' (with F. Halsey), 1910 *''He Fell In Love With His Wife'', 1910 *''Seven Sisters'', 1912 *''Partners'', 1912 *''The Love Wager'', 1912 *''Verspers'', 1912 *''Fields of Flax'', 1912 *''The Man Higher Up, 1912'' *''The Amethyst Ring'', 1913 *''Cupid's Ladder'', 1915 *''Make Believe'', 1915 *''Man with the Black Gloves'', 1915, *''The Devil's Garden'', 1915 *''Making Dick Over'', 1916 *''Mrs. Clancey's Car Ride'', with Edward Ells, 1918 *''Whose Little Bride Are You'', 1919 *''Bravo, Claudia'', 1919 *''Mrs. Jimmie Thompson'' (with Norman S. Rose), 1920 *''The White Villa'', 1921 *''Betty's Last Bet'', 1921 *''The Judsons Entertain'', 1922 *''The Illustrious Tartarin'', 1922 *''White Collars'', 1924 *''The Moon and Sixpence'', 1924 *''The Last Chapter'' (with Edward Ellis), 1930 *''The Lady of La Paz'', 1926References
Further reading
*External links
* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Ellis, Edith 1866 births 1960 deaths American women dramatists and playwrights American stage actresses 19th-century American actresses 20th-century American actresses 19th-century American dramatists and playwrights 19th-century American women writers 20th-century American dramatists and playwrights 20th-century American women writers People from Coldwater, Michigan Actresses from Michigan Writers from Michigan