Maude Granger (1849-August 17, 1928) was a popular American stage actress of the latter part of the 19th century, and early 20th century.

Maude Granger
Granger in 1880s
Born
Anna Brainard

1849
DiedAugust 17, 1928
OccupationActress
Years active1870s-1920s

Biography

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Granger was born Anna Brainard in Middletown, Connecticut. She made her Broadway debut in A Woman's Heart at the Union Square Theatre.[1] She took over the lead part in Led Astray when Rose Eytinge became ill. She also appeared in The Two Orphans, Two Nights in Rome, The Planter's Wife, Broken Hearts, and My Partner. Later she took on more Shakespearean roles, and also appeared in more Broadway hits such as The First Year (1920) and Pigs (1924). While playing in Pigs in Chicago she fell ill, and had to retire after failing to fully recover from surgery. She retired after a 55-year stage career.[2]

Historian David S. Shields has written that Granger competed with Clara Morris for "the title of the most gripping actress of the American stage during the third quarter of the 19th century." Her talent led many New York theatre managers to vie for her, with associations with Augustin Daly, Lester Wallack, and the Union Square company. She also "had a particular interest in elevating the anguish of contemporary women to the status of classical tragedy".[3]

In 1885, the book New National Theater, Washington DC: A record of Fifty Years by Alexander Hunter said of Granger: " The statuesque Maude made by far the most beautiful Mlle. Gautier that the audience had ever seen, for she had a figure that Rubens would have loved to paint — a Byron describe — large, full, sensuous. On a pose in a tableau Miss Granger was a success, but as an actress in such a character as “Camille" she was an insolvent in the dramatic bank, and more people went to see her out of curiosity than with a desire to be entertained."[4]

Personal

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Though late 19th century newspapers report other marriages, her obituaries simply noted that Granger married Alfred Calmer of Chicago in 1888, and that he soon after died and she never remarried.[2][5]

References

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  1. ^ (14 September 1890) Maude Granger's Career, San Francisco Call
  2. ^ a b (18 August 1928). Maude Granger, Noted Actress, Dies at 77, The New York Times
  3. ^ Maude Granger, Broadway Photographs (broadway.cas.sc.edu), Retrieved 21 December 2021
  4. ^ New National Theater, Washington DC: A record of Fifty Years (1885) (quoted in 2018 blog posting with various sources about Granger)
  5. ^ (18 August 1928). Maude Granger Dies of Age Of 77 Years, New Britain Herald
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