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Clyde Fitch typescripts and letters, circa 1890-1925.
Finding aid Available online
View onlineKislak Center for Special Collections - Manuscripts Ms. Coll. 1332
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- Format:
- Other
- Author/Creator:
- Fitch, Clyde, 1865-1909.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Authors.
- Authors, American--19th century.
- Authors, American.
- Authors, American--20th century.
- Male homosexuality.
- Performing arts.
- Playwriting.
- Theater--United States.
- Theater.
- Genre:
- Manuscripts, American -- 19th century.
- Manuscripts, American -- 20th century.
- Correspondence.
- Plays (performed works)
- Typescripts.
- Penn Provenance:
- The material in the collection was acquired between 1925 and 1926 through a series of purchases via the Morris L. Clothier Fund, the Benjamin Franklin Library Fund, the 1894 College Memorial Fund, and the Society of Alumni (College) Fund. An additional typescript was donated in 1929.
- Physical Description:
- 2 boxes (1 linear foot)
- Arrangement:
- Organized into 2 series: I. Typescripts of play and II. Letters from Clyde Fitch.
- Place of Publication:
- circa 1890-1925.
- Biography/History:
- "W. Clyde Fitch was a prolific and highly successful American playwright best known for plays of social satire and character study. Notable for having four of his plays running concurrently on Broadway, he went on to write and produce, in a twenty-year period, thirty-six original plays, twenty-one adaptations, and five dramatizations of novels. His name alone was enough to draw large audiences, and his works were produced throughout the United States and in Europe as well. He was the first American dramatist to be regularly produced abroad. The critic and scholar William Lyon Phelps wrote in 1921, "when [Fitch] began to write, American drama scarcely existed; when he died it was reality.... He did more for American drama than any other man in our history. William Clyde Fitch was born in Elmira, New York on May 2, 1865. He spent part of his childhood in Schenectady, New York, and attended the Holderness School, Plymouth, New Hampshire, before attending Amherst College. At Amherst he was known among his classmates as "Billy" (after his given name William, which he later dropped) and was active in dramatic productions; his literary publications in college were mainly verse, including his Grove Oration speech in 1886. His first successful play, Beau Brummel (1890), was written especially for the actor Richard Mansfield. Subsequent plays of that period were largely melodramas and historical works that were less successful than his comedies of the early 1900s, including The climbers (1901), Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines (1901), The girl with the green eyes (1902), The truth (1907) and The city (1909). However, the popularity of his works on the stage barely exceeded his own lifetime. Fitch was an avid collector of books, antiques and art, with which he filled his home at 113 East 40th St., New York City (a residence that, for a time, was one of New York's most famous salons), as well as at his other homes at Katonah, New York; and Greenwich, Connecticut. The "Clyde Fitch Memorial Room" in Converse Hall at Amherst College was a gift to the College from Fitch's mother. It contained many of the furnishings and most of the books that were in his study in New York City. Clyde Fitch died on September 4, 1909, one week after an operation for appendicitis in Châlons-sur-Marne, France, at age 44." The information above was excerpted from the finding aid of the W. Clyde Fitch collection, 1867-1986 (bulk: 1883-1909), held by the Amherst College and Special Collections. As a homosexual playwright, Fitch has known a rediscovery since the 1990s, especially within the growing field of gender studies. Fitch's brief relationship with Oscar Wilde in the late 1880s and early 90s has been extensively discussed, as well as the influence of Fitch's sexual identity on his own work. In 2014, the Queer Resource Center and the Archives and Special Collections at Amherst College organized an event dedicated to Fitch, titled "Clyde pride: queering the Amherst Archives." A new Fitch biography (Clyde Fitch and the American theatre: an olive in the cocktail, Lanham, MD: Farleigh Dickinson University Press) was authored by Kevin Lane Dearinger and published in 2016.
- Summary:
- This collection consists of ten unpublished typescript plays and four autograph letters written by Clyde Fitch. The material has been divided in two series. Series I includes the typescripts of ten plays written by Fitch. Although they were never published, all of the plays were produced between 1890 and 1908. This material is arranged in alphabetical order by title of the play. The typescripts themselves are undated, although they were probably created between the production date of the respective play and Fitch's death in 1909.The plays are all bound, with the exception of one copy of "The toast of the town" (first produced in 1905) which is unbound. The typescripts in the collection are in most cases unique copies, although different manuscript versions of the same plays are also available at other research centers such as the Amherst College Library and the New York Public Library. Because of this, the materials in this series offer researchers a privileged perspective on the genesis of a large portion of Fitch's output as a playwright. Series II consists of four autograph letters written by Fitch. The first three (respectively written in 1891, 1895, and 1897) are arranged in chronological order. A fourth undated letter was pasted onto a leaflet also including two portraits of Clyde Fitch excerpted from contemporary publications.
- Notes:
- Processing Information: Formerly Dewey 812.F553Bo, 812.F553F, 812.F553Gi, 812.F553Gl, 812.F553H, 812.F553Ha, 812.F553M, 812.F553Soc, 812.F553To, 812.F5531W, and f812.F553.2.
- OCLC:
- 1034693185
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