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Recovering Virginie Gireaudeau: Race, Language, and Representation on the American Stage
- J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 12, Number 1, Spring 2024
- pp. 565-586
- 10.1353/jnc.2024.a939672
- Article
- Additional Information
Abstract:
This article recovers the life and career of Virginie Gireaudeau, one of the first African American actresses to appear in a major North American theater. Performing in New Orleans in 1826, she played the female lead in two tragedies, supported by a group of white professional actors and actresses from France. But despite Gireaudeau’s obvious significance for American theater historiography, her story has not yet found its way into theater criticism or history. The article suggests that Gireaudeau’s marginalization is symptomatic of an American “national” theater historiography that is largely focused on the anglophone stage. Drawing on a multilingual approach and the careful analysis of a range of newspaper accounts and notarial records, the article argues for the inclusion of non-English-language voices and materials. It demonstrates how broadening our perspective in this way can provide new insights into the life and work of underrepresented performers while enhancing our understanding of the complexity of early American theater as a whole.