Your personal choice of "most tragic" character in the assassination story
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07-26-2012, 12:42 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-26-2012 12:43 PM by BettyO.)
Post: #37
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RE: Your personal choice of "most tragic" character in the assassination story
(07-25-2012 09:04 PM)Tom Bogar Wrote: She did play Florence Trenchard again, quite soon: in Cincinnati, after her release from custody at Harrisburg (albeit without her Act III dress, which was kind of bloody). Ran into a little trouble with the role, too, in Alabama, for being a Yankee. As for the rest of her life (cut tragically short after a precipitous decline), along with that of the other 45 backstage people, I hope you'll read my book when it comes out, hopefully sometime next year: Walking Shadows: the Forgotten Actors, Managers and Stagehands of Ford's Theatre the Night of the Lincoln Assassination. (And the late Ben Graff Henneke's bio of her is pretty good, and much more thorough for being only about her.) Although none of them went off their rocker or shot up any former lovers, their lives and careers proceeded in some cases to be pretty darn tragic and/or pathetic. Tom, your book sounds WONDERFUL! I've always had an interest in "Red Laura" anyway....it sounds facinating and I love the title! I'm sorry, but when is your book due to hit the bookstores again? Thanks! (07-25-2012 09:04 PM)Tom Bogar Wrote: She did play Florence Trenchard again, quite soon: in Cincinnati, after her release from custody at Harrisburg (albeit without her Act III dress, which was kind of bloody). Ran into a little trouble with the role, too, in Alabama, for being a Yankee. As for the rest of her life (cut tragically short after a precipitous decline), along with that of the other 45 backstage people, I hope you'll read my book when it comes out, hopefully sometime next year: Walking Shadows: the Forgotten Actors, Managers and Stagehands of Ford's Theatre the Night of the Lincoln Assassination. (And the late Ben Graff Henneke's bio of her is pretty good, and much more thorough for being only about her.) Although none of them went off their rocker or shot up any former lovers, their lives and careers proceeded in some cases to be pretty darn tragic and/or pathetic. "The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley |
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