Helen Potter

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Potter's portrait in the 1891 book, Helen Potter's Impersonations

Helen Potter was a performer, platform reader, and

John B. Gough, and Abraham Lincoln
.

Potter was noted for her talent of being able to accurately impersonate both men and women, and for the theatrical nature of her impersonations when compared to the less flavorful performances which generally permeated the Lyceum and the Chautauqua circuits.

Career

Potter impersonating Susan B. Anthony
Potter impersonating John Bartholomew Gough

Potter began her platform career as a reader, until, under the advisement of James Redpath, she began to do impersonations. In 1873, Potter studied at the Normal Art Training School in Boston. While there, Redpath called on her to recite for him. Years later, an account of the conversation was published in Talent after Potter had become famous.

"'No one wants readings or recitations,' [said Redpath] "but if some one could give what I call 'ten lectures in one,'--that is, take a ten-minute extract from the text of ten of our best lectures and give it one evening-- it would make a hit. I have proposed it to several readers, but none of them seem to be able to 'catch on.'"

"Nothing further was said on the subject, but Miss Potter "caught on" immediately. The suggestion opened up great possibilities to her. ... It was presently borne in upon her that to give accurate imitations in costume of the people whose text she used would give added force to its presentation."[3]

Although Potter was noted for her theatricality, critics made a clear distinction between Potter's performances and the impersonations of vaudeville.[4] Potter impersonated men as well as women, including Oscar Wilde, whom she described as "having brought some good ideas to this country."[5] Her performance of noted temperance orator John Bartholomew Gough was crafted to avoid offense:

In response to one of the most hearty encores of the evening the speaker stepped to the front of the platform to acknowledge the applause. The mystery was solved, there, bowing to the right and left, stood what appeared to be John B. Gough. There was the coat, vest, grey hair and beard, while from the waist down was the figure of a woman in plain black skirt, which the reading desk and a cleverly contrived curtain extended from the desk to the side of the platform concealed, until the close of the personation. By this means Miss Potter avoids the indelicacy of wearing the entire male costume without marring the effect.[5]

References

  1. ^ Gentile, John S. (1989). Cast of One. Champaign-Urbana: University of Illinois Press. pp. 42–44, 81.
  2. ^ Wright, A. Augustus (1906). Who's Who in the Lyceum. Philadelphia: Pearson. p. 150.
  3. ^ Smith, Paul, G. (1906). "Helen Potter". Talent.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Lenig, Stuart (1991). "Cast of One. By John S. Gentile. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1989". Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. 5 (2). Retrieved December 25, 2023. Overt theatricality wasn't allowed (the residual influence of Victorianism) but the "restrained readings of literature" focused attention on individual performers who enlivened the prose with their own special forms of acting...For example, Helen Potter was an important entertainer who did impressions of actors and lecturers.
  5. ^ a b "Miss Helen Potter, America's greatest reader and impersonator". Library of Congress. Lyceum Monthly. March 3, 1885. Retrieved December 25, 2023. Her selections comprised imitations of pulpit oratory, the three styles taken being the negro, Darwinian and the frontier; recitation of T. B. Read's poem "Drifting," in which she displayed a rare ability to modulate her voice; specimens of the reading by a country school class; two scenes from Henry VIII; Queen Katharine of Arragon's plea in court, and her speech when near death; remarkable portraits of Charlotte Cushman; an impersonation of Oscar Wilde, whom, by the way, she commended for having brought some good ideas to this country; an imitation of a Yankee spinster giving her ideas upon training boys; and an address "newspapers" a la T. De Witt Talmage.

External links