Julia Dean (Hollywood Stage actress, born 1830)
====================================================================================
Friday 01, Aug 2025, 20:50.
Oil portrait by Joseph Oriel Eaton
Julia Dean-Born July 22, 1830, Pleasant Valley, New York, US
Died March 6, 1868 (aged 37), New York City, US
Resting place Laurel Grove Cemetery, Port Jervis, New York
Other names Julia Dean Hayne
Julia Dean Cooper
Occupation Stage Actress
Years active 1846–1867
Spouses - 1. Arthur P. Hayne,
2. James G. Cooper
=====================================================================================
Introduction:
Julia Dean (July 22, 1830 – March 6, 1868) was an American actress who made her New York debut at 16 in a starring role with the James Sheridan Knowles comedy, The Hunchback. Her performance was met with such praise that she continued to star in productions of The Hunchback over much of her twenty-year career. Although she began and ended her career on the East coast, Dean's greatest popularity was achieved in tours of the American South and the Far West. Dean was married twice; she was the mother of four children, but died in childbirth with a stillborn son at the age of 37.
==========================================================================================
Early life:
For several years Dean did chores at a family-owned boarding-house before going on the stage in 1844, as a $6 a-week bit player with Ludlow and Smith of Mobile, Alabama. She shared the stage with Joseph Jefferson, another bit player in the formative years of his career. With Ludlow and Smith, the young actress became a popular attraction prompting her father to bring her to New York City at the close of the 1844–45 season.
================================================================================================
Career:
Her first stage appearance was at age 12 in a minor role in Last Days of Pompeii, presented in the theater managed by her father in Rochester, New York in the early 1840s.
On May 18, 1846, she made her New York debut at the Bowery Theatre in the principal role of Julia, in Knowles’ comedy The Hunchback, and on October 26, 1846, she reprised the role at Boston's National Theater. Dean subsequently played Julia in a successful Southern tour of The Hunchback. In the March 7, 1868, edition of The New York Times, the paper said of her debut performance:
This wasa part that she almost monopolized on the American stage, for the immediately succeeding years. Speaking of this debut and of Julia Dean's early years, Ireland in his History of the New York Stage wrote: "Youthful, graceful, delicately pretty, with a slight Hibernian cast of features, she at once awakened the public interest, and her intelligence and graceful study lent a charm to her performance which soon carried her to a point of popularity rarely exceeded".
Leading roles which Dean played over her career would include Camille, Lady Macbeth, Lea in Leah the Forsaken, Parthenia in Ingomar the Barbarian, Lucretia Borgia, Medea, Marco in Charles Selby's The Marble Heart, Lady Teazle, Peg Woffington, Bianca in Fazio and Pauline in The Lady of Lyons. Dean was the original Norma in Epes Sargent's Priestess, and the first to play Leonor in George Henry Boker's tragedy about Eleanor de Guzmán.
Dean lived in the West for a number of years, primarily in San Francisco and Salt Lake City. There she became a popular attraction throughout the Western United States and British Columbia. She eventually returned east not long after the close of the American Civil War in tours that at times would find success elusive. Her final noteworthy roles were Ann Catherick and Laura Fairlie, in a dramatization of Wilkie Collins' novel The Woman in White. Of her forte, Appletons' Cyclopaedia of American Biography said in 1898, She excelled in juvenile tragedy and high comedy parts.
====================================================================================================
Marriage:
Dr. Arthur P. Hayne
She married Dr. Arthur P. Hayne, a son of South Carolina Senator Robert Y. Hayne, on January 20, 1855, at Galveston, Texas. Two daughters and two sons were born to this union of which only Arthur lived to see adulthood, dying in 1883 at about the age of 27. Her marriage was widely reported as troubled. She eventually secured a divorce in the mid-1860s, and not long afterwards married, at Salt Lake City, James G. Cooper, a native of New York who served with the federal administration of the Utah Territory.
===================================================================================================
Death:
Over the last several years of her life, Dean began to struggle with health issues involving her throat and a possible nervous disorder. She died at her in-laws’ house in New York City on March 6, 1868, following the stillbirth of her fifth child. Dean's funeral services were held at Christ Church on the corner of 5th Avenue and 35th Street; her remains were laid to rest at Laurel Grove Cemetery, Port Jervis, New York. Some years later Dean's namesake niece found her unmarked gravestone and had it replaced with a more substantial marker.
End.
===================================================================================================

.jpg)

_Kemble_as_Julia_in__The_Hunchback__-_DPLA_-_1bbaf41d13fa8723123df71cbbc47ec2.jpg)


.jpg)



Comments
Post a Comment