John_Durang

John Durang

John Durang

American actor


John Durang (January 6, 1768 – March 31, 1822) was the first native-born American to become known as a dancer.[1]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Said to be George Washington's favorite performer, he was famous for dancing the hornpipe, a lively, jiglike solo exhibition so called because it was originally performed to music played on a woodwind instrument known as a hornpipe.[citation needed]

Early years

John Durang was the eldest of seven children born to parents who had immigrated to the United States from the Alsace region of northeastern France, bordering Germany. His father, Jacob Durang, was from Strasbourg; his mother, Catherine (Arten) Durang, was from Wissembourg.[2] Soon after their arrival in 1767, they settled in York County, Pennsylvania, in the German-speaking region whose inhabitants are still known today as the Pennsylvania Dutch (Pennssilfaanish Deitsch).[citation needed]

John Durang was born in Lancaster, in the home of his mother's sister, but he grew up mostly in nearby York (aka Yorktown). He was educated at the Christ Lutheran Church school, where instruction was in German, supplemented by French and English. He had no formal dance training, but he was, according to his memoirs, attracted to the liveliness of the hornpipe, which "charmed his mind," while he was still a boy.[3]

As early as 1780, at age twelve, he learned "the correct style of dancing a hornpipe" from a visiting French dancer and made it his specialty. At fifteen he left home, went to Boston, and in 1785 joined Lewis Hallam's Old American Company, where he acted in "La Friçassée," a comic number, and danced the hornpipe between acts.[4]

Professional career

Hallam's company advertised its performances as "lectures," as plays and ballets were then legally banned, and specialized in presenting patriotic extravaganzas. During his first season with the company, Durang took violin lessons from a musician named Hoffmaster, who composed a tune for him that became known as "Durang's Hornpipe."[5] Hoffmaster's given name is absent from records of the time. As he was quite short, under four feet tall, he is described as a "German dwarf."[6] The tune was an immediate hit and is still popular among bluegrass fiddlers of today.[7] Durang continued to dance to it for many years, as it had become his signature piece, but he augmented his hornpipe repertory with other tunes.[citation needed]

In 1790, Durang danced a nautical-style hornpipe in The Wapping Landlady, a comic piece about an amorous landlady and a group of Jack Tars. His performance of the number solidified his reputation as an unparalleled performer of the dance. The tune for it is still thought of as "The Sailor's Hornpipe".[8]

Sheet music for Durang's Horn Pipe published by Oliver Ditson, in Washington Street, Boston 19th century

Around this time, as the federal anti-theater laws were being relaxed, many European performers began to visit the United States. From his collaboration with, among others, Alexandre Placide, he acquired skills in classical ballet, acting, fencing, acrobatics, tightrope walking (rope dancing), clowning, pantomime, choreography, and theater management.[9]

He toured with the Hallam troupe for seven years, performing as Saramouche in a harlequinade called The Touchstone, while dancing and playing other roles. In 1791, he was possibly[weasel words] the first American actor to appear on stage in blackface, as Friday in a production of Robinson Crusoe. In 1794, he appeared in Ann Julia Hatton's Tammany: The Indian Chief, whose hero, also called Tamanend, was a popular figure in local history. It was one of the first operas written in the United States with an American subject and is the earliest known drama about Native Americans.[citation needed] Soon thereafter, Durang danced with well-known ballerina Anna Gardie in La Forêt Noire, the first serious ballet given in America.[10][11]

In 1795, Durang was hired by John Bill Ricketts to produce pantomimes with his Philadelphia circus. Begun as a riding school that gave equestrian exhibitions, the circus was housed in a building called the New Amphitheater, which included both a riding ring and a stage. Equestrian acts were at the heart of the circus, but the roster of performers also included clowns, comic dancers, acrobats, and a rope walker as well as actors in playlets and pantomimes. Durang's talents were tailor-made for the job. He worked as a writer, producer, and dancer with the Ricketts Circus, both in Philadelphia and New York, from 1796 until 1799. Among its patrons was George Washington, a riding enthusiast, who is known to have attended performances in 1793 and 1797, when he certainly witnessed Durang dancing his hornpipe.[12]

When Ricketts closed his shows, Durang turned to theater management and became a partner in Philadelphia's famed Southwark Theater, where President Washington was a frequent patron. From 1800 to 1819, Durang acted, produced, and directed theater in Philadelphia during the winter while touring with his own traveling troupe of performers to outlying areas during the summer. Among the works he staged was Francis Hopkinson's song-poem "The Battle of the Kegs", a pioneering attempt at introducing American themes onto American stages.[13] After almost two decades at the Southwark, he retired from the theater in 1819.[citation needed]

Family and later life

In February 1787, Durang had married Mary McEwen, also a dancer, with whom he had six children: Charles, Richard Ferdinand, Augustus Felix, Charlotte Elizabeth, Juliet Catherine ("Julia"), and Mary Ann. All were trained as dancers and actors in their youth, and all six of them accompanied their father on summer tours of towns around Philadelphia, where he presented bits of plays, ballets, acrobatics, puppet shows, equestrian feats, and the ever-popular hornpipe. Charles followed in his father's varied footsteps as an actor, ballet master, author, and stage manager. Ferdinand had a long career as an actor and dancer but is best remembered as the musician who suggested the tune for Francis Scott Key's poem that eventually became the lyrics of "The Star-Spangled Banner".

Charlotte and Julia were both successful dancers and actresses. The former had a relatively brief career, but Julia, under her married names, became quite famous. Between 1822 and 1837, Julia Durang Godey Wallace appeared on stage in New York in at least sixty-seven different productions of ballets, plays, and operas. Augustus gave up performing, became a sailor, and was lost at sea. Mary Ann, the youngest of the siblings, danced on stage in her youth but then dropped out of sight.[14]

Their mother, Mary McEwen Durang, was also a sometime dancer but was largely occupied with raising her children. After she died of tuberculosis in 1812, John Durang married again, but nothing is recorded about his second wife except her name, Elizabeth.[citation needed]

In his later years, Durang largely gave up performing, describing himself as a "dance instructor" in his memoirs. He died in 1822 at age fifty-four and, according to his expressed wishes, was buried in Saint Mary's churchyard in Philadelphia.[citation needed]


References

  1. Lillian Moore, "John Durang: The First American Dancer," Dance Index 1 (August 1942), 120-139. Reprinted in Chronicles of American Dance: From the Shakers to Martha Graham, edited by Paul David Magriel (New York: Da Capo Press, 1948), pp. 15-37.
  2. Edwin Forrest Durang, 4 April 1884, recorded in Catholic Historical Research, vol. 28, p. 77; as transcribed by Edwina Hare in The Durang Family (Harleysville, Pa.: Alcom Printing Group, 2000), p. 8.
  3. Alan S. Downer, ed., The Memoir of John Durang, American Actor, 1785-1876 (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1966).
  4. Barbara Ferreri Malinsky, "Durang, John," in International Encyclopedia of Dance, edited by Selma Jeanne Cohen and others (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998), vol. 2, p. 467.
  5. Charles Durang, The Ball-room Bijou, and Art of Dancing (Philadelphia: Turner and Fisher, 1848) -- a theatrical guide compiled by John Durang's son, containing music for "Durang's Hornpipe" and a description of his steps.
  6. Mark Knowles, Tap Roots: The Early History of Tap Dancing (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2002.
  7. David Brody, compiler, The Fiddler's Fakebook: The Ultimate Sourcebook for the Traditional Fiddler (New York: Oak Publications, 1992).
  8. Andrew Kuntz, "At the Circus: Astley, Ricketts, and Durang". Retrieved October 4, 2015.
  9. Claude Conyers, "Durang, John," in The Grove Dictionary of American Music, 2nd ed., edited by Charles Hiroshi Garrett (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013). Also available in Oxford Music Online.
  10. Arthur Todd, "Four Centuries of American Dance: Spotlight on John Durang, Mme Gadie, and the Placides", Dance Magazine (New York), April 1980, pp. 24-25.
  11. Helen Thomas, Dance, Modernity, and Culture: Explorations in the Sociology of Dance (London and New York: Routledge, 1995), pg. 34.
  12. Andrew Kuntz, "At the Circus: Astley, Ricketts, and Durang". Retrieved October 4, 2015.
  13. Conyers, "Durang, John", The Grove Dictionary of American Music, 2nd ed. (2013).
  14. John Bookless, "The Durang Family" and "Durang Family Members on the New York Stage". Retrieved 4 October 2015. Containing notes from Joseph N. Ireland, Records of the New York Stage, 1750-1860, vol. 1 (New York: Benjamin Bloom, 1866), and George C Odell, Annals of the New York Stage, vols. 3 and 4 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1928).

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