Disappearing Mermaids: Staging White Women's Mobility through Aquatic Performance at the New York Hippodrome

The New York Hippodrome theatre brought together many different types of performance on its massive stage. Its opening production in 1905, for instance, included circus acts, a ballet, and a fictionalized Civil War battle (Fig. 1). Many of the acts focused on a key feature in the theatrical environm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theatre survey 2023-01, Vol.64 (1), p.3-23
1. Verfasser: Stalter-Pace, Sunny
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The New York Hippodrome theatre brought together many different types of performance on its massive stage. Its opening production in 1905, for instance, included circus acts, a ballet, and a fictionalized Civil War battle (Fig. 1). Many of the acts focused on a key feature in the theatrical environment, a water tank beneath the apron of the stage that could be filled to a fourteen-foot depth. High divers plunged into the tank; in shows with an “ice ballet,” its water was frozen into a skating rink; for a production of HMS Pinafore, a replica ship floated in its water with Brooklyn Navy Yard sailors in the rigging. Yet one tank act repeated and was recalled more than any of the others: a phalanx of women in martial costumes who marched solemnly, row after row, into the water and disappeared.
ISSN:0040-5574
1475-4533
DOI:10.1017/S0040557422000527