The Encyclopedia Americana (1920)/Mackaye, James Steele
MACKAYE, mạ-kī', James Steele,
American playwright: b. Buffalo, N. Y., 1844; d.
Timpas, Colo., 25 Feb. 1894. In 1868 he went
to Paris to study painting; but having there
met Delsarte (q.v.) became interested in the
latter's theories, and studied dramatic expression.
In 1870-71 he gave in New York and
Boston lectures on the art of expression. He
opened the Saint James Theatre at New York
in 1872, and appeared there in ‘Monaldi,’
adapted by himself from the French. In 1873-75
he was studying the drama in Paris and
England, and at the Crystal Palace, London, he
played the title-rôle in ‘Hamlet.’ His adaptation
of Blum's ‘Rose Michel’ in 1872 ran for
122 nights at the Union Square Theatre, New
York. He established in New York the Lyceum
School of Acting, which later became the American
Academy of Dratmatic Arts. For several
years he was manager of the Madison Square
Theatre, and in 1885 built the Lyceum. Among
his further plays were ‘Won at Last’;
‘Through the Dark’; ‘Hazel Kirke’; ‘A Fool's
Errand’; ‘In Spite of All’; ‘Paul Kauvar.’
Consult Mackaye, Percy, ‘Steele Mackaye: A
Memoir’ (New York 1911).