Friday, December 11, 2015

Thomas Abthorpe Cooper Artifacts


Front Cover
#1


This is one of the many biographies about me. The title being: Thomas Abthorpe Cooper:  Father of The American Stage, 1775-1849 by F. Arant Maginnes. It mentions how I'm the chief transitional figure between the Britain and American stage and how I have contributed greatly to the development of American theatre. This book focuses a lot on my acting career, of course. Actually this book, to simplify it, just like how it is a biography, covers my whole life starting at when I was born outside of London. I have traveled a lot during my life time for the different roles I've played. 
Letters that I wrote, to my mentor.   

   Website(s)used in artifact #1: 

(1)
https://books.google.com/books?id=vNB7BwAAQBAJ&dq=thomas+abthorpe+cooper+grave
                                 
                                 
                                                            #2  Front Cover
This is actually another biography about me. The title being: Thomas Abthorpe Cooper: America's Premier Tragedian by Goddeth Smith. It is all about my life, career, and my achievements. This book is the second biography that Goddeth wrote of an American Actor. This book explaining how hard i worked for my title of being one of the most distinguished actors.


Website(s): 

(1)
https://books.google.com/books?id=HbwhEExtGUAC&dq=thomas%20abthorpe%20cooper%20grave&source=gbs_similarbooks

(2)
https://books.google.com/books?id=HbwhEExtGUAC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false


                                                               #3  


 This is a picture of me in Shakespeare's Pericles. Pericles is a play, of course, 
the genre being comedy and romance. 
The characters are Pericles, The Prince of Tyre, Antiochus, The King of Antioch, Simonides, 
The King of Pentapolis, Thaisa, Simonides' daughter, Cleon, The Governor of Tarsus, Dionyza, 
Cleon's wife, Marina, Pericles and Thaisa's daughter, Lychorida, Marinas nurse, 
Marina, Daughter to Pericles and Thaisa, Helicanus and Escanes, 
two Lords of Tyre, Lysimachus, Governor of Mitylene, Thaliard,
 a Lord of Antioch, Marshal, A Pandar, Boult, a servant, Antiochus' daughter, 
A Bowd, Cerimon, a Lord of Epheses, Leonine, a Servant of Dionyza, 
and Philemon, a servant to Cerimon.

Websites used in artifact #3:

(1)
http://johndurang.yorkheritage.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/thomasCooper-Burnim1.jpg

(2)
http://johndurang.yorkheritage.org/the-chestnut-street-theatre/

(3)
http://www.nosweatshakespeare.com/play-summary/pericles/

(4)
http://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare/pericles/summary.html

(5)
http://www.nosweatshakespeare.com/characters/pericles/



                                                #4 


This is an oil painting of me done by John Wesley Jarvis. There are many paintings of me actually. 
This painting must be a romantic painting because of the brush strokes being extremely soft, the brush strokes seeming light. I speak on this because, at the moment, romanticism is extremely popular. 
Artists painting pictures of their ancestors for inspiration, I think it is amazing. 

Website(s) used: 

(1)
http://www.artclon.com/images/201007/goods_img/6771_G_1280432880132.jpg

(2)
http://www.artclon.com/paintings/thomas-abthorpe-cooper_6771.html

(3) 
http://homepages.wmich.edu/~fzf0003/Art%20History%20Paper.pdf




                                                           #5 Link to artifact 
http://www.worldcat.org/title/letters-from-thomas-abthorpe-cooper-to-his-daughter-mary-raoul-1840-january-20-1843-june-9/oclc/910951547&referer=brief_results

This is about a letter sent to my daughter, Mary Roule, at Mount Meigs, Montgomery County. The date on the letter being January twentieth, 1840. I was talking about how cold the weather is up north and the money I'm owed. When I say cold weather I mean the weather was terribly cold, it was freezing the river and bays. It is a simple little personal letter. 


Website(s) used: 

(1)
http://www.worldcat.org/title/letters-from-thomas-abthorpe-cooper-to-his-daughter-mary-raoul-1840-january-20-1843-june-9/oclc/910951547&referer=brief_results




                                                       #6 Link to artifact
http://www.worldcat.org/title/letters-from-thomas-abthorpe-cooper-to-his-daughter-mary-raoul-1840-january-20-1843-june-9/oclc/910951547&referer=brief_results

This is another letter to my daughter, Mary Roule. I was talking about a visit with Mary's sister Priscilla and her family. Also, I told Mary, through the letter, about Priscilla's role in the dedication monument at bunker hill. Bunker Hill Monument was erected to commemorate the Battle of Bunker Hill. 
This letter a personal letter as well.
  

Website(s) used: 

(1)

http://www.worldcat.org/title/letters-from-thomas-abthorpe-cooper-to-his-daughter-mary-raoul-1840-january-20-1843-june-9/oclc/910951547&referer=brief_results

(2)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunker_Hill_Monument 




                                                  #7Thomas Holcroft

  
This is a painting of Thomas Holcroft. I was adopted by him and William Godwin when my father passed and when my mother left. Thomas was a dramatists, novelists, journalist, and lastly an actor like me! He was the son of a peddler. He made his living as a writer eventually. Before making his living as a writer, he worked as a stable boy, cobbler, and a teacher. 


Website(s) used:

(1)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/paintings/thomas-holcroft-157388

(2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Apthorpe_Cooper



                                                #8William Godwin by Henry William Pickersgill.jpg


This is a painting of William Godwin, the other man I was adopted by. I call him "the father of my mind." He was a novelist, political philosopher, and an English journalist. He was born in Wisbech in Cambridgeshire. His parents, John and Anne Godwin. He and Thomas Holcroft were the ones who helped me get my first big step on acting. 






Website(s) used: 

(1) 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Godwin



                                             
                                                      #9

This is a visual of my daughter. She is known as "Priscilla" Cooper or "Elizabeth" Cooper. Her brother's, my son, name is James Fairlie Cooper. Priscilla, or, Elizabeth, was born June 14, 1816. She's an Official White House Hostess and First Lady of U.S, she is an Actress, Acting First Lady for President John Tyler, and a Homemaker. 




Website(s) used:

(1)
http://www.geni.com/people/Priscilla-Cooper/6000000000442679050


           
                                                #10John Philip Kemble Hamlet 1802.jpg

This is visual of John Philip Kemble. My acting was of the school of John, which is the visual next to the visual of John. We just had a bit of rivalry. He managed Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, the second one. He helped to pay for rebuilding it when it burned down around 1808.





Website(s) used: 

(1)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Philip_Kemble

(2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Opera_House#The_first_theatre























Saturday, December 5, 2015

Thomas Abthorpe Cooper Interview

Thomas Abthorpe Cooper Interview   





Interviewer: First question Sir. Could you tell me about the time place that you lived?   
 
Thomas: Yes. I was born December the sixteenth, the year 1775. The location in which I was born, Harrow-on-the-Hill, Middlesex, England. Harrow-on-the-hill is an affluent area of north west London, England, it's part of the London Borough of Harrow. I went and lived with philosopher William Godwin at the age of eleven, on the death of my father and my mother going elsewhere to work, in London.   

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Apthorpe_Cooper

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harrow_on_the_Hill

 William Godwin, my mother's cousin, began taking care of me. At the age sixteen I was getting ready to leave Godwin and be on my own, after being taken under his wing for about five years. I was planning on going to France to join the Republican Army. My plan was completely changed when Godwin and Thomas Holcroft quickly arranged for me apprenticeship in theatre, for the next three years, instead.    

  
Interviewer: Second question Sir. What events in your early life gave you an interest in acting?

Thomas:  Well my father passed when I was eleven years old. We, my family, had a bad financial crisis ruin because of the loss of papers documenting my fathers property. My mother had to leave me and my siblings behind with friends and relatives in England to become a housekeeper in Holland. I was placed with my mother's cousin, William Godwin, in London. William Godwin was an English journalist, political philosopher, and novelist.     

 Godwin trained me for the writing profession and he exposed me to the theatre through his friendship he had with playwright Thomas Holcroft. I grew intense desire, feelings, and interest for fame. These feelings of such desire and interest for fame were because of the heady world of Godwin's circle. His circle including the very fascinating poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and the actress-playwright, Elizabeth Inchbald.



Interviewer: Third question Sir. What role did mentors partake in helping you develop the interests and talents you have an artist?

Thomas:  I'm going to use Godwin, "the father of my mind," as my example for this answer. Godwin, like I said before, exposed me to theatre. Godwin and Holcroft sparked an ardor in me for the ideals of liberty and equality.  The excitement that I had helped motivate me for the many opportunities in the New World. My youthful passion filled my mind with heroic dreams that inspired me.

 In 1800 I didn't even realize that I was Americas first rising star, I was busy with acting at different places, later agreeing with a few contracts. I took a lot of parts in the theatre, and you know, the more experiencing you have with things the better you get at them. I performed in major cities and toured to every state in the union. all of these things I established simply because of the sparks I got from Godwin and Holcroft's involvement in radical politics and them getting me apprenticeship in theatre.

Interviewer: Fourth question Sir. Could you explain to me what the world of art was like in your particular art field when you entered it?

Thomas:  Well one thing about what the world of art was like, in my particular art field, when I entered is that Shakespeare plays were, and still are, very popular. I performed as a lot of Shakespeare's characters. Shakespeare wrote 154 sonnets, 38 plays, and two narrative poems.
Shakespeare could summarize human emotions in simple yet very forceful verses.

 Shakespeare is known for being able to speak for you. Him being able to speak for you was one of the reasons he was so popular as I came into acting. Also because his plays were very, very entertaining. His very creative work went beyond the range of time and culture.

Interviewer: Fifth question sir. Can you tell me how the major cultural, economic and political situations of your time impact your work?

Thomas: One big money related problem, for me, really spiraled into something big for me. That money problem was the time when my father passed. The time my father passed we lost papers that documented my fathers property. I previously told you already about how I was sent to my mother's cousins, William Godwin, place in London. This was big for me, because of Godwin, "the father of my mind," I am a successful actor. What he was involved in and what he taught me led to me becoming an actor.

 A political situation? Well I played the role of Pierre before. Pierre is the leader of the conspiracy. He was motivated by a heroic code of honor just as much as by political intention. The play is called 'Venice Preserved'. This play is the most significant tragedy of the English stage.

 And lastly, you asked for something cultural. William Wood, an actor and manager of Chestnut Street Theatre, mentioned me in his diary that was published. Wood said, "No actor in our country ever had so long and so admired a career... . The simple length of his service gives him a place and prominence which distinguishes him from other actors." Also people say I am the "Father of the American stage" And being given a title as so isn't exactly the easiest thing to earn.

Interviewer: Sixth question Sir. What were your major accomplishments and what were some methods you used in your acting?

Thomas:  My first appearance on the stage was with Stephen Kemble's company in Edinburgh.  Later I acted at Covent Garden, London, with great success as Hamlet and Macbeth. I made my first appearance December, 1796,  in Philadelphia as Macbeth at the Chestnut Street Theatre and in August of the forthcoming year I played in the Greenwich Street Theatre, New York, as Pierre in Venice Preserved. I went back to England in 1802, for several years holding foremost rank on the English stage. In 1804 I returned to New York and soon afterward, for a while, I became lessee of the Park Theatre.

 A method I use is my heroic dreams. I use the passion that sparked in me due to the father of my mind. All of my intense desires, feelings, and dream of having fame were my method. I also relied on my natural gifts and the power of my personal magnetism. Those things led to me taking as many opportunities that I could take by giving me the mindset that I could do it.


Interviewer: Seventh question Sir. Could you name some key opportunities you had that led you to turning points in your in your life and acting?

Thomas: Bringing up my fathers death once more. When he died and my mother left I was able to learn from the father of my mind. He taught me writing, exposed me to theatre, and arranged apprenticeship at a theatre for me. Exposing me to theatre then was extremely important because if he wouldn't have done it, who would? After I did the three years of apprenticeship at the theatre he arranged for me I continued on with acting and began traveling and years later I gained my title as the "Father of the American stage."

 I attended the acting school of John Philip Kemble, Kemble whom I had rivalry with. My success as Hamlet and Macbeth led to more fame, more supporters. Successfully performed as many more characters created by William Shakespeare. Every time I performed successfully I gained supporters that helped keep me going.

Interviewer: Eighth question Sir. What obstacles did you have to get through in order to act?

Thomas: I'm gonna say some of them as a list. I had turned to the United States when I failed to receive the recognition I felt I deserved in London. Wignell filed and won a lawsuit against me. I met and surmounted all of the hardships that attend pioneer life in Alabama.

 These are my obstacles because many give up at times like these. But I didn't give up, I took as many opportunities as possible. A lot of people favored my acting over many other actors so I had to keep going. I had to work hard to keep my title as the "Father of the American stage."


Interviewer: Ninth question Sir. What personal stories best illustrate how you became successful in the arts?

Thomas: You have the letters I sent out to Godwin, the "Father of my mind." Titles of some biographies on me are titled  'A Memoir of the Professional Life of Thomas Abthorpe Cooper' by Joseph Norton Ireland, 'Thomas Abthorpe Cooper: Father of the American Stage, 1775-1849' by F. Arant Maginnes, and many more. They are all simply explaining the details of my life from when I was a kid all the way through my many accomplishments and obstacles. These all give accurate info on my life for those in need of information about me.

 The book 'Thomas Abthorpe Cooper: America's Premier Tragedian' by Greddeth Smith has letters, like the other books I said to you before, that I sent to Godwin. All of these books pretty much talking about how I reached fame, where I traveled, who I portrayed the part of in which ever play, and etc.
They include my early life, who, and what got me into acting as well. All of these show how I progressed over the many years of me being an actor.

Interviewer: Question number ten, last question Sir. How did your work impact the world of art?

Thomas: Well, I performed as many characters successfully. I have toured in all states in the union. I earned the title as the "Father of the American stage." William Wood even said that I have worked for a long time, longer than many.

I was the big transitional figure between the American and Britain stage and I also contributed greatly to the development of American theater. I am the first american star. I had many who favored me and my acting skills. Many enjoyed Shakespeares when I performed it.

Interviewer: Thank you so much for your time Sir.

Thomas: You're welcome!





Biblography and Sites :)