As promised, here is my powerpoint for “Lies and Misrepresentation Behind the Curtain.” This session was sponsored by the Scene Design and Technology Commission for the United States Institute for Theatre Technology’s annual conference in Seattle, Washington.
USITT PRESENTATION (March 22, 2024):
Welcome to “Lies and Misrepresentation Behind the Curtain.” I am Wendy Waszut-Barrett and this is my colleague Ruben Arana.
Before we begin…
This session is divided into two sections. For the first 20 minutes, I will provide historic context and discuss women scenic artists. There will be a 10-minute break to answer questions. Then I will turn it over to Ruben Arana for the second half.
My quest for women scenic artists began in the 1989. In the midst, of learning about theatre history and scene painting techniques, I inquired about the nineteenth-century women scenic artists and was told, “They were all boys, get over it.”
Although our profession is more about what we can do, rather than who we are; this statement made me feel like I was not part of scenic art history. So, I threw myself into learning everything I could about historic scenic art, the people and process.
Who knew that I would discover the name of a woman scenic artist while indexing the diary and scrap book of Thomas Gibbs Moses, a scenic artist whose career spanned from 1873-1934. The project was assigned to me by Lance Brockman, now Professor Emertitis at the University of Minnesota.
My main task was to print up all the pages (feeding quarter after quarter into a microfilm machine), summarize the content of each page, and then create both subject and author indexes.
One of the articles in Moses’ scrap book mentioned “Little Theresa Sparks,” a scenic artist who was employed at a Chicago studio.
You can imagine my delight when I brought this to Lance’s attention. This began the a debate about when women actually entered the field of scenic art.
I tracked down the life and career of Theresa Sparks, posting her story to my blog drypigment.net in 2020. I knew by the 1920s, there was a growing workforce of women scenic artists gaining attention in various publications.
In fact, a 1927 article in The Scenic Artist mentioned the work of twelve women scenic artists, including Lillian Gaertner, Gretl Urbahn, and Vyvyan Donner.
The article included a very subjective analysis, stating:
“For many years women felt themselves barred from taking a part in the painting of scenery, because it involved extreme physical stamina, which, excepting in rare cases, women do not possess. However, being more or less tenacious, it is a foregone conclusion that women will work out theirown salvation, and this will perhaps lie in the line of designing or art directing, rather than the actual painting of scenes.”
And thus continued the myth that women scenic artists were few and far between, having not really contributed before the 1920s.
Here are a few names women scenic artists who worked between the 1860s and 1940s. These were women who painted stage settings and were listed as such in census reports, city directories, and newspaper accounts.
I believe historians try their best to represent the world as it was. However, at some point, the contributions of generations of American theatre artists were left out of theatre history. Aesthetic shifts, new design movements, and innovative technology continue to be credited to a select few.
There is a popular image of twenty-four scenic artists who were early officers and charter members for the Protective Alliance of Scene Painters in America.
This group has been constantly referred to as “the foremost scenic artists and designers” in America at the time. That is simply not the case. There is no doubt that each was a skilled and a relatively successful scenic artist, but this group does not comprise the best that America had to offer at the time. They only represent a small number of scenic artists working in a few specific regions. The picture is very telling, especially when you start realize those nationally-renowned scenic artists missing from the picture.
For me, these men represent those who had the most to lose without establishing a protective alliance and keeping OTHER scenic artists out.
I say this having carefully tracked the lives and careers of these gentlemen, including the Thomas G. Moses.
It was not until 1918 that women were allowed to join the Union. Mabel A. Buell’s late entry makes it appear that women were just beginning to enter the scenic art field.
It’s important to understand that when Mabel joined the Union, she was not only a scenic artist, but also a scenic studio owner. Both she and her mother worked as scenic artists, as did her father and brother. In many cases, it was a family affair.
By the way, this is Mable directing her employees. At times her staff numbered twenty people.
When Mabel joined the Union, she was described as the “only girl in the profession.” Buell continued to be listed as such in the early 1920s.
By this time GENERATIONS of women had worked as scenic artists. Some were wives, some were daughters, some were sisters, and some entered the profession all on their own.
The use of “ONLY” to describe a female scenic artist in newspapers, sends an underlying message – they are not a threat. After all, there is only one.
Here are examples of three women scenic artists identified as the “Only” in America over the course of two decades; On the left is Grace Wishaar (pronounced Wee-shar), listed as the only woman theatrical scene painter by 1901. On the right is Irene Kendrick, listed as the FIRST woman scene painter in 1909. In the center is Mable Buell – pictured in the 1921.
I am going to focus on Seattle Scenic artist – Grace Norton Wishaar- she is pictures on the left.
Born in 1876, she worked at both the Cordray Theatre and the Seattle Theatre in the early 1890s. An accomplished pianist, singer, and chess player, she was the eldest of 6 children born to Emile Bernard and Marie Ida Smith. When Grace was ten years old, she sailed with her family from New York to California.
Her career as an artist began at the San José Art School, with her first drawing instructor being Lee Lash. Lash was eight years older than Grace, and moved to New York where he established a scenic studio. Ironically, when Grace moved to New York looking for work, Lash turned her down, explaining: “scene painting was no work for a woman; her sex would make her unwelcome among the workmen’ and that women were too ‘finicky’ for work that demands broad effects.”
In 1894, The Washington Standard reported, “Seattle has a young lady scene painter in Miss Grace Wishaar. A new drop curtain at Cordray’s, which is universally admired, is from her brush.”
Grace had painted scenery for almost two years by this point.
In fact, the same year that Grace entered the scenic art profession, Sosman & Landis sent Thomas G. Moses to Seattle for several months to deliver a massive stock scenery collection. The studio frequently hired local artists to help with on-site work.
In 1901 Grace described her early career in an interview with a Buffalo Express reporter. She said:
“It was like this, I left school out in Seattle and went into society. But my sister cared for music, and I cared for art, and we tired of other things and decided to study. She began training her voice for grand opera. I fitted up a studio – a beautiful room it was, 80 feet long, in the Seattle business block – I kept at portrait work. My mother writes – she lately copyrighted a play on the Philippine war – so she understood how we felt. Then one day the Seattle Theater needed a drop. My father, E. B. Wishaar, is dramatic editor of the Post-Intelligence -sir. He heard about it and mentioned it to me. I thought I could do the drop. Mr. Russell – the manager – laughed at me, but he let me try it. I painted the scene and they said it was just what they wanted. After that, I had all I could do for the Seattle and Cordray theaters and for two years I worked as a professional…”
In the midst of all of this, Grace married her first husband in 1897, celebrated the birth of a son in 1898, and continued her artistic training at the William M. Chase School of Art – moving east in 1900.
When Grace headed to New York in search of scenic work at the beginning of 1901 -it was scenic studio owner D. Frank Dodge who provided an opportunity. Soon, she was painting for him at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, Manhattan Theatre, and Herald Square Theatre.
During the next few years, Grace became Dodge’s right-hand person – meeting with newspapers and explaining both the design and painting process. She continued with Dodge until 1904 when he sent to a project in Seattle. She remained there, painting at theaters in Portland, Seattle, Tacoma, San Francisco, and Oakland. While working for Dodge she married her second husband.
When Grace returned to the West Coast, she worked with Seattle scenic artist, Sheridan L. Jenkins. Photographs of the two working together in 1905 are priceless.
Sheridan was originally from Fairbury, Nebraska. He moved to Seattle by the late 1880s and began working as a scenic artist. In 1892 when, about the time Grace entered the profession, he moved to Chicago, working with Thomas G. Moses’ former business partner, Walter Burridge.
Here is another photograph of Grace and Sheridan on the paint bridge. From a quality standpoint, these are some of the best scenic art process photographs that I have ever encountered.
Here is another of the two in Grace’s studio. We are able to see – in detail – so many of her designs and models.
All of their stage scenery was painted with distemper paint, the mixture of pigment paste with diluted hide glue. By the way, I have solely used distemper paint for the last seven shows I that designed and painted for Haymarket Opera Company (Chicago) and the Gilbert & Sullivan Very Light Opera Company (Minneapolis). It reflects light so much better than any premixed product in a can. In 1903, Grace explained “Distemper is a really beautiful medium. You can produce such fine effects with it! But it’s very tricky unless you know JUST how to handle it.”
In 1904, Harry W. Bishop hired Grace as his scenic artist for Ye Liberty Playhouse in Oakland, California. The theater’s studio measured 100 by 35 feet, and included a machine shop and three paint frames. One frame was movable, and the other two were stationary with adjustable bridges. It was a remarkable stage, with a 75-foot revolve – purportedly the first in the west. Grace was working at a state-of-the-art theater.
Her scenic art at Ye Liberty immediately made the news and was described as “one of the strong points of the theater.” Grace’s gender was looked upon as an asset. On Jan. 12, 1905, The Berkley Gazette reported, “The Liberty is particularly fortunate in this [meaning her being female], for that is the secret of the delicate touches, artistic settings and finished details always present at their performances.”
In 1907, another article about Grace announced, “Ye Liberty’s Scene Painted, the only woman in the world of the profession – does amount of work which men scene painters find impossible to do.” Remember that two decades later, the 1927 article in The Scenic Artist reported, “For many years women felt themselves barred from taking a part in the painting of scenery because it involved extreme physical stamina.”
Progress made by one generation of women, can instantaneously evaporate with the next.
Wishaar’s scenery for Barbara Freitchie at Ye Liberty Playhouse was regarded “as proof of Miss Grace Wishaar’s uniformly good scene painting.” Here is an image of her Frederick Street setting for the show.
While working for Bishop, three major disasters struck: earthquake, divorce, and fire. In 1906, an earthquake damaged Ye Liberty Playhouse. This was the same year that she married her third husband. The next year, Grace filed for divorce, citing desertion.
In 1909, Grace and her family narrowly escaped a house fire. Evidence suggested that a faulty grate was to blame, but the fire destroyed everything, including her prized collection of paintings. This was a turning point for Grace. She collapsed at work. Her doctor advised a “rest cure.” This was the medical order for “go on a world tour.”
Enter Marian Smith Oliver, former ward of multimillionaire F. M. Smith, also known as the Borax King. In 1910, Grace and Marian journeyed around the world, ending up in Paris where Grace set up a studio and Marian began performing. Scandal ensued, with Marian returning home to her husband. Their marriage did not last. In 1912 Seattle newspapers reported that Grace was in the midst of a three-years art course in Paris and “At present she is on a summer sketching tour through Spain and Italy.” She participated in several art exhibitions, and in 1914 exhibited three portraits at the Salon des Beaux Arts.
Grace had played chess since a child and used it to relax during paint breaks at the theater. In Paris, Grace began competing in chess tournaments. In 1931, she won the French Woman’s Championship, the same year that her fifth husband completed suicide in Ceylon (Sri Lanka).
Grace’s sixth and final marriage was to world-chess champion, Alexander Alekhine (1892-1946). She was playing one of the boards in his simultaneous blindfold chess game. They were in Tokyo. They married the next year. Sixteen years her junior, Alekhine was a notorious alcoholic, The two traveled, played chess, and won awards, yet she continued to paint and maintain a studio in Paris.
When Grace passed away in 1956, she was buried next to her husband. Their gravestone even includes a chess board at its base. There is much, much, more to this story that is posted to www.drypigment.net.
The chess world has recently become fascinated with Grace Wishaar. Last year, Alan McGowan, historian at Chess Scotland, contacted me about my posts concerning her early life and painting career. In January 2024, McGowan published his article, “Amazing Grace,” for the English periodical Chess.
Grace left a treasure trove of photographs, newspaper articles and other historic records, yet, she still faded from theatre history by the 1920s. There are still hundreds who remain nameless; their contributions to the development of theatre history have yet to be counted.
Over the past few years, I have identified dozens of women scenic artists while writing the 120 biographies of Soman & Landis studios, including Grace Wishaar. This research is for my upcoming book Sosman & Landis: Shaping the Landscape of American Theatre. The Sosman & Landis staff was quite diverse, including women, African-Americans, and immigrants.
Which brings me to Lara Levero. She represents the thousands who did not make headlines, appearing as a brief spark at a particular moment. In 1920, Levero was counted in the US Federal Census, living in Los Angeles and working as a scenery painter. She listed her birthplace as Mexico and Spanish for her “mother tongue.” Levero emigrated in 1918 and was currently living with fellow scenery painter Felix Garcia.
I have managed to track the scenic art career of Felix Garcia, who settled in El Paso, Texas, and was listed in city directories by 1922. At this time, I have yet to determine if the two married, or went their separate ways. It is so very difficult to trace the lives and careers of women, especially after they marry.
Today, online databases provide massive amounts of information. We are now able to identify thousands of individuals whose contributions to theatre history were either forgotten or ignored.
Although women scenic artists are not currently included in the history books, they were present and contributed to our industry.
WE can no longer solely teach theatre history from the same books that have been used for generations of students. Teachers cannot teach what they do not learn.
WE are completely in control when choosing the lens through which we depict our industry’s past, present, and future of our industry.
The United States Institute for Theatre Technology is a membership organization, established in 1960 to advance both knowledge and skills in the areas of design, technology, and production. There are several commissions within USITT that focus on specific areas of the industry, such as scene design and technology, costumes, lighting, sound design, education, engineering, and management. Each commission meets at the annual conference to propose sessions and workshops for the next year. The Scene Design and Technology Commission includes scenic art, properties, safety and health, heritage and more.
A few years back, I was appointed Vice-Commissioner of Heritage in the Scene Design Commission, replacing Arden Weaver when he stepped down from the position.
The 2024 conference is in Seattle, Washington (March 20-23). I am one of two presenters for Lies and Misrepresentation Behind the Curtain, a 60-minute session sponsored by the Scene Design and Technology Commission.
Our session is in room 608 at the Seattle Convention Center on Friday, March 22, 2024 (10:00 AM – 11:00 AM). My co-presenter is Ruben Arana of Florida A&M University. We proposed this session last year after meeting meeting for the first time; sitting next to one another at the the Commission meeting.
Our session looks at the history of underrepresented people of color and women in the 19th and early 20th century, sharing the stories of four specific individuals. If you are attending the conference this year, please consider joining us!
For more information about the United States Institute for Theatre Technology, visit www.usitt.org
In 1901, Grace Wishaar made headlines as a scenic artist. In an interview, Wishaar stated that she worked with “Sousman [sic.] and Landes [sic.]of Chicago.” This was the Sosman & Landis Scene Painting Studio. Before I delve into the fascinating career of Wishaar, I must clarify that she was not the first female scenic artist in America. Many women scenic artists paved the way for Wishaar to enjoy a warm welcome from the press at the turn of the twentieth century.
Grace Wishaar on 1901. George H. Brass, J. Willis Sayre Collection of Theatrical Photographs.
Regardless of her predecessors, 1901 newspapers announced that Wishaar was the “Only Woman who can claim the Title.” Not quite, but it likely made her presence more palatable for many men across the country. For some, it seems like less of a threat when we talk about “the only one.”
Sheridan Jenkins and Grace Wishaar in May 1902, Seattle. Jenkins was the artist at the Third Street Theatre in Seattle. From the J. Willis Sayre Collection of Theatrical Photographs (JWS24539): http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/sayre/id/13233/rec/2 University of Washington Libraries.
Here is the article about Wishaar in its entirety as it was first published in the “Buffalo Express” on April 4, 1901 (page 3):
“She is a Scenic Artist.
Only Woman Who Can Claim the Title.
Young Westerner’s Work.
Miss Grace Wishaar went from Seattle to New York with a determination to succeed. Fifty-two feet up in the flies of the Manhattan Theater stands all day long a slip of a girl painting purple parrots and green glades. Her name is Grace Wishaar; she is 22 years old and herself a picture, and she is the only woman in scenic art in the United States, says the New York World.
She is a little Western girl, fresh from her coming out party, and not many years away from her graduation gown. Her home is in Seattle. She has been in New York only since the middle of January, yet in that time she has not only established herself as a member of the staff of Frank Dodge, undertaking with five men to produce the entire scenery for ‘The Casino Girl’ and ‘The Prima Donna,’ but she has done this: She had proved what the scenic artist of the Metropolitan Opera House and the Lyceum Theater in turn laugh at her for trying. That a woman can do their work as well as a man.
She has a girlish face, with deep eyes and dark hair, to match, which ripples up to a high pompadour. She is not tall; her hands are delicate and expressive.
‘I am convinced that I am a curiosity,’ she said yesterday.
She was standing on the platform, 52 feet high, with not even a handrail between her and the dim stage, where some ne ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ people were rehearsing. A great movable frame was before her, half covered with a tropical scene from ‘The Casino Girl.’ The blazing parrots for the same scene were piled before her. She was covered with a great denim apron; a dozen huge bowls of paints stood in an old sink, called by her courtesy the ‘pailette,’ and as many brushed lay in as many mixtures on the zinc. On a narrow bridge below, five new scene painters were working on a garden drop.
‘People catch sight of my skirts,’ said Miss Wishaar, both here and at the Herald Square, where I sometimes work and they stop rehearsal and bet on what I am and call up to me to find out. I guess I am a curiosity.
“it was like this,’ she said simply, ‘I left school out in Seattle and went into society. But my sister cared for music and I cared for art, and we tired of other things and decided to study.
‘She began training her voice for grand opera. I fitted up a studio – a beautiful room it was, 80 feet long, in Seattle business block – I kept at portrait work. My mother writes – she lately copyrighted a play on the Philippine war – so she understood how we felt.
‘Then one day two years ago the Seattle Theater needed a drop. My father, E. B. Wishaar, is dramatic editor of the Post-Intelligencer, and he heard about it and mentioned it to me. I thought I could do the drop. Mr. Russell the manager laughed at me, but he let me try it.
‘I painted the scene and they said it was just what they wanted.
‘After that I had all I could do for the Seattle and Corday theaters and for two years I worked as a professional. I did the work for Katie Putnam, with Sousman and Landes of Chicago, scenic artist. Then I decided I would come East.
‘I came here a year ago last fall and studied a year and went to Chase Art School. Then I went home for the summer, and then I can back to New York in January, perfectly sure that I could do this with success.’
The story of the attempts of this shy-eyed girl to ‘make something of herself’ begins about like anybody’s, in its discouragement – only hers did not last. She went from one New York scenic painter to another, asking only to do one piece, and they were everyone amused.
‘A girl up in the flies’ they said, ‘absurd! Why she’d have to wear bloomers!’
Mis Wishaar insisted that she would not have to, and when they told her that a scenic painter was made, not born, and that he grew up out if the stage paint pots, rubbing his nose against the scenery, she simply went off and found another manage.
He was Frank Dodge, and he told her indulgently a woman could doubtless do very nice work on the tiny paper models that have to be painted first. But he let her try one drop for ‘The Prima Donna.’
That nearly settled it. She was taken for a week on trial, and hat did it. Now she is on the staff of scenic artists.
Every morning at 9 o’clock she appears with the men, either at the Manhattan or the Herald Square, and she works all day on the bridge or on her solitary high platform. What she paints looks like robin’s-egg blue leaves and magenta trunk, until the colors dry and reveal greens and browns. She works with water colors, in what is known as distemper.
Miss Wishaar has a good many curious visitors. People come panting up the steep steps that lead to her workshop mainly to ask her how she came to do it, and they stay to watch her work. Volumes of invitations from people about the theaters come to her to go to supper and to see the pieces whose scenes she is doing. But she is the despair of all such, because she accepts absolutely no invitations.
‘I am here to work,’ she said spreading out her paint-covered denim apron. ‘I confess I don’t like the theaters and the cafes very well, and if I wanted society, I should have stayed in Seattle for that. I love my work. I love it! There is no place in the world, you know, where it is taught. I have been lucky enough to be born able to do a little, and I won’t share my time with anything else.
It’s a wise decision, no doubt, only she is so very pretty! Even in her denim apron, with 40 kinds of paint on it, she is pretty.
‘They told me at half of the theaters in town that a woman couldn’t do it,’ she said. ‘Anyway, I have proved one woman can.’
Wishaar was 25 years old when the reporter interviewed her that year. She had already married, but given birth to a son. She continued to work under her maiden name. As mentioned in the article, she came from a fairly progressive home; one that encouraged their children to follow their dreams. I have written many posts about Wishaar in the past, but this is her complete story.
Grace Norton Wishaar was born on October 26, 1876, in Beverly, New Jersey. She was the eldest of six children born to Emile Bernard Wishaar (1859-1918) and Marie Ida Smith (1849-1920). Her father was from France, and her mother from New York. The two married in 1874. In 1885, the New York State Census listed the Wishaar household as including: Emile B. Ida, Grace, Harry, Daisy, John and a servant, named Annie Lannan.
The full names of Wishaar’s younger siblings were Henry Gwinner Wishaar (b. 1878, New Jersey), Jenny “Daisy” McGraw Wishaar (b. 1880, New York), John Herman Wishaar (b. 1882, New Jersey), William Pitts Wishaar (b. 1886, at sea) and Louis Beauchamp Wishaar (b. 1888, California).
The Wishaar’s sailed from New York to California in 1886, where William Wishaar was born at sea. They remained in California until May 1888, when Lou Wishaar was born. The Wishaars then head north and were counted in the Washington State Census for 1892. The Wishaar family moved around a lot and eventually settled in Seattle, Washington where her mother became a playwright and her father was dramatic editor for a newspaper. Both Grace and her sister were encouraged to develop their talents. As mentioned in her 1901 interview, Grace studied art, while Daisy studied music.
Wishaar’s career as an artist began at the San José Art School in California. Interestingly, her first drawing instructor was the well-known scenic artist– Lee Lash (1864-1935). The Lee Lash Studio was founded in 1891 and continued operations until approximately the mid-1940s. A variety of artists filtered through his New York studio over the years.
When her family moved north California for Washington, Wishaar continued with her artistic studies. In 1894 she completed her first scene painting project at Cordray’s Theatre in Seattle, Washington. On Nov. 30, 1894, the “Washington Standard” reported, “Seattle has a young lady scenic painter, in Miss Grace Wishaar. A new drop curtain, at Cordray’s which is universally admired, is from her brush” (page 2). At the time, Wishaar had just turned eighteen years old.
In 1895, Wishaar activities continued to make the local news. Both her artistic accomplishments and travels were closely monitored, possibly with the assistance of a proud parent. On March 10, 1895, the “Seattle Post-Intelligencer” reported, Miss Grace Norton Wishaar returned yesterday from a six-week visit to her uncle Dr. James McNulty, in Santa Barbara, California” (page 9). Back in Seattle, Wishaar remained active in society. She and her sister Daisy were members of Seattle’s Progressive Literary Society. The two performed as part of the Nov. 8 in 1895. On Nov. 10, 1895, the “Seattle Post-Intelligencer” published the programme that was held in the school rooms of the business college (page 9). Grace not only read a paper, but also performed. She and Daisy played mandolin and guitar as the final act. Grace also performed with her sister for the Seattle Union Veteran Club’s seventh annual camp fire at the G. A. R. Hall. For the evening program, Grace and Daisy Wishaar performed “The Wilderness” (“Seattle Post-Intelligencer,” 8 Dec, 1895, page 10).
In Seattle, Wishaar’s parents both belonged to the Masonic Fraternity. Her mother was a member of Lorraine Chapter. No. 6, Order of the Eastern Star. On March 25, 1895, the “Seattle Post-Intelligencer” reported that Marie “Ida” Wishaar presented papers after degree work, both written by herself and others written by Maj. W. J. Rinehart (page 6). The next month, Wishaar read another paper after a special convocation (Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 22 April, 1895, page 5).
Her father, E. B. Wishaar, became the publisher of “Pacific Mason” in 1895. On August 1, 1895, the “Seattle Post-Intelligencer” announced, “New Masonic Monthly” (page 5). The article continued, “No. 1, volume 1, of the Pacific Mason is out. This monthly magazine, published by E. B. Wishaar, is devoted entirely to the interests of the Masonic fraternity. Mr. Wishaar, the publisher, is an old newspaper man, as well as a Mason, and if anyone could make a success of the venture he should. The frontispiece of the new magazine is a very good likeness of Prof. J. M. Taylor, P. G. M., and enthusiastic Free Mason. Pictures are also given of T. M. Reed, grand secretary, and Mary A. Amos, P.G.M. of the Order of the Eastern Star. The department of this order is conducted by Mrs. Wishaar and is creditably gotten up. Altogether, with the large field to be covered, including, Alaska, Washington, Oregon, British Columbia, Idaho and Nevada, and the ability and experience of its published, the magazine should be a success.” I have to wonder if his daughter was the one creating the Masonic portraits for publication. On October 7, 1895, the “Seattle Post-Intelligencer” reported, “The portraits and biographical sketches of prominent Masons appearing in the Pacific Mason from month to month will constitute that periodical a valuable repository of Masonic history (page 3).
Grace continued to make a name for herself in local newspapers as an artist. On Jan. 5, 1896, the “Seattle Post-Intelligencer” reported, “There will be placed on exhibition today in the window of the Globe art store a painting with a rather remarkable history. It is from the brush of a young artist whose work has already attracted considerable attention, Miss Grace Wishaar. Without the advantage of technical instruction in her chosen art, she has done some pieces that have drawn cordial praise from competent critics. The painting, which will be seen by the public for the first time today is an ideal head. The first suggestion of it came into the artist’s mind from the face of a little foreign boy, whom she met by chance at a fruit stand in the city several months ago. With one sitting of half an hour she made a rough sketch, but grew dissatisfied with her work and turned the unfinished face to the wall. On New Year’s morning, rambling through her studio, she turned suddenly with fresh inspiration to her abandoned task, and worked almost incessantly until she had put on canvas the idealized face of a Hungarian patriot. Of the extent to which she has succeeded in communicating her own conception to the cold canvas, of breathing fire into the eyes and giving the lines around the mouth their silent testimony of firmness and loyalty, the public must be left to judge for itself” (page 11). By the summer, Wishaar was known as “Seattle’s talented young artist.” The newspaper continued to post announcements about her portraiture projects. By Dec. 20, 1896, the “Post-Intelligencer” reported, “Miss Grace Wishaar, the talented young artist, whose portrait paintings have been greatly admired by art connoisseurs of Seattle and Portland, has just finished a portrait in oil of Prof. Gettus, which shows wonderful color and artistic merit” (page 9).
Wishaar’s reputation continued to grow and caught the attention of Chicago’s “Inland Printer” magazine. On July 11, 1897, the “Seattle’s Post-Intelligencer” reported, “Miss Grace N. Wishaar, a young artist of this city, whose talent is well appreciated by those who have seen products of her dainty hand, has attracted sufficient attention in the East to have the Inland Printer, a magazine of high art standing published in Chicago, devote considerable space to a reproduction of some of her pen pictures, giving at the same time a highly complimentary mention of the young artist. After speaking of Western art in general, the Inland Printer said:
‘Among others, Miss Grace N. Wishaar of Seattle, Wash., is a young pen-and-ink sketch artist whose work deserves a word of appreciation. Portraiture is her forte. In this she exhibits a winsome touch, a kind of feminine delicacy that does not impair the truthfulness of outline and shading. A ‘study head’ by her is a very attractive bit of drawing. Her other portraits show painstaking and skillful work with the pen. Miss Wishaar does not confine herself to line drawing. She has recently finished portraits in oil that, when placed on exhibition in Portland, received general commendation. Although not possessed of a technical education in her chosen art, Miss Wishaar has availed herself every opportunity to perfect herself in it, and her present success gives assurance of a promising career” (page 5). Wishaar continued to land work as an illustrator.
On September 13, 1897, Wishaar married her first husband, Whitney Irving Eisler (1873-1936) in Seattle. Although the marriage did not last, Eisler was quite an interesting fellow in his own right. Eisler’s obituary was published in the “Times Union” of Brooklyn, New York, and provides a little information after he separated from Wishaar: “A native of New York, Capt. Eisler had been in China since 1905, most of the time in Shanghai, He was an ensign in the Navy during the Spanish-American War, and served as captain in Naval Intelligence at Shanghai in the World War. At various times he was United States Shipping Board Representative and vice president of the American Chamber of Commerce.” At the time of Eisler’s passing, he was a senior partner of Eisler, Reeves & Murphy, marine surveyors. Eisler joined the Fraternity after leaving Wishaar and Seattle. In 1903, he was initiated, passed and raised a Mason in Shakespeare No. 750 Lodge, New York, New York. He was also affiliated with lodges in China and Shanghai. He eventually remarried, wedding Beatrice F. Leonard on Oct. 2, 1907, Manhattan, NY.
After marrying her first husband, Wishaar continued to work as an artist. On Dec. 19, 1897, the “Seattle Post-Intelligencer” reported that the title page for a new set of meta waltzes, composed by Harry Sherman Sharp and published by Winter & Harp, was designed by Grace N. Wishaar (page 8). The advertisement noted that Wishaar’s design was “a very artistic piece of work.”
Less that a year later, Wishaar became a mother. On October 30, 1898, she celebrated the birth of a son, Carrol Earl Beauchamp Peeke Eisler. The babay’s father, however, was not her husband Whitney Eisler. Carroll’s father was Oscar Graham Peeke. Later in life, Carroll dropped the adopted name of Eisler, and solely went by Carrol Earl Beauchamp Peeke for passport applications, social security applications and other official documents.
Wishaar remained married to Eisler for a few years, a period in which he primarily remained at sea. In1899 the Seattle City Directory listed Grace N. Eisler, boarding at the southeast corner of 12th Avenue and East Mercer. This was her father’s home at the time. Despite the directory listing, Wishaar returned to using her maiden name in professional settings. She soon left Seattle and studied at the Chase Art School during the fall of 1899. Keep in mind that her son is less than a year old at this point. This move took guts. Wishaar ventured east to continue her artistic training at the William M. Chase School of Art and attempt a scenic art career in New York. One of the first individuals that she sought out was her first instructor – Lee Lash. However, Lash he was not supportive of his former pupil entering as a competitor in the field of scenic art. A 1903 interview with Wishaar reported that he “coolly turned her down” and said that “scene painting was no work for a woman; that her sex would make her unwelcome among the workmen, and that women were too ‘finicky’ for work that demands broad effects” (“San Francisco Call,” October 13, 1904, page 6). Fortunately, Wishaar persisted and eventually secured a position with Dodge.
In 1900, she, Eisler, and son Carroll, were included as part of the Wishaar home in Grace House, located on the northwest corner of Summit and East Union in Seattle. The Wishaar household included: Emile Wishaar, Marie I Wishaar, Henry G. Wishaar, William P. Wishaar, Lou B. Wishaar, Daisy Wishaar, John H. Wishaar, Grace Wishaar Eisler, Whitney Eisler, Carrol E. Eisler. In the census, Grace Eisler’s occupation was listed as a portrait artist and Whitney Eisler’s occupation was listed as 2nd Officer USS Patterson. In all likelihood, after the birth of Carroll, Eisler returned to the sea and Wishaar moved East. Carroll likely stayed in Seattle where he was raised by Marie “Ida” Wishaar and extended family members.
By January 1901, the newspaper article about Wishaar made papers across the country as the only woman scenic artist. Obviously, Wishaar continued to return to Seattle. On March 2, 1902, she married Carroll’s father, Oscar Graham Lester Peeke, in Seattle. The two were married at the Seattle Theatre, the ceremony witnessed by Daisy Wishaar and Ralph Stewart. Although Peeke was frequently listed as “English,” he was actually born in Dublin, Ireland, emigrating to the United States in 1892. After marrying Peeke, Wishaar did not remain in Seattle and soon returned to New York where she continued to paint for Dodge.
Wishaar’s second marriage lasted a bit longer than the first, but not by much. Despite society’s traditional expectations concerning wives and mothers, Wishaar continued to excel as a scenic artist. I wonder if her first two marriages failed because she was expected leave her career after marrying. That certainly fell into line with societal expectations that remained in play for many throughout the twentieth century.
A 1905 newspaper article entitled “A Lady Scene Painter,” provided a little more information about Wishaar’s scenic art career. In an interview, Wishaar explained that not all of her work was confined to New York City. Wishaar detailed that she traveled “at Mr. Dodge’s request, to all parts of the country.” She also further explained the scenic artistic process at Dodge’s studio: “When we receive an order for an important production, a consultation is held with the author of the play, and if the scenes are laid in another State, either I or Mr. Dodge take a journey to the particular locality and make sketches. If the scene is laid abroad, we have to read up on it, and when the play is English we get many a useful hints from the beautiful production, ‘Country Life.’” She was not just a worker bee under Dodge, but also a designer who gathered source material.
This is exactly what the process implemented at many other scenic artists across the country. Although the rise of the studio system confined some scenic artists to a single location, there were still many completed on site after a series of sketches were completed on location. What I find fascinating is that as a female, she wasn’t being hidden inside a scenic studio with her work attributed to male colleagues. Wishaar actively represented the studio of Frank D. Dodge in 1905.
An article in “Success Magazine” from 1906 featured Wishaar in the segment “Life Sketches of Ambitious Young Men and Women” (page 32). The article started with “What Miss Grace N. Wishaar Has Accomplished in a Field in Which She Seemed Totally Unfitted.” It reported, “pluck, enthusiasm, and conscientious work have enabled Miss Grace N. Wishaar to become the only woman scenic artist in the United States.”
Her history with Dodge was expanding a bit, differing from previous recounts of the story. In this telling of the tale, Wishaar initially wrote to Frank D. Dodge in New York. After receiving no response, she appeared at his studio to make a personal plea.
The article continued:
“Mr. Dodge looked at her smilingly. He liked the enthusiasm she displayed, although he felt he had no use for women in his studio. The idea of women painting huge pieces of scenery on a bridge away up under the roof of the theatre struck him as being somewhat amusing.
‘I don’t see what I can do for you,’ he said. ‘Women are not adapted to this work. Besides, my men would certainly go on strike if I should put you among them on a bridge.’
‘I don’t believe they would at all,’ replied Miss Wishaar, ‘and so far as lack of adaptability for the work is concerned, I intend to show that I am adapted for it; I’ll disguise myself as a boy, – if I find that nobody will give me a chance as a woman.’
‘Well,’ he finally said, ‘come back to-morrow, and I’ll take the matter up again.’ The next morning, Miss Wishaar appeared with a satchel in hand holding her artist’s painting dress. She was ready to go to work. “This business-like method strengthened the good impression she had made on Mr. Dodge, and without further delay he put her to work in the model room, and a few days later gave her an opportunity to do real scenic painting on the bridge.” His artists protested, but were told they must give the young woman fair play. Within a week she had won their good will, chiefly because she asked no favors and had shown that as a craftsman she could “hold up her end” with any of them.”
Within a year and a half after arriving in New York [January 1901], Wishaar described that she became the director of scene painting at “an important theatre,” one that remained unnamed in the article. However, we know that when she was working for Dodge, the scenic art staff painted at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, Herald Square Theatre and the Manhattan Theatre. Wishaar must have been quite talented, in order to rise that quickly in the ranks. It took many scenic artists years to make the jump from staff painter to director.
A 1903 newspaper article written by Marilla Weaver provides a small glimpse into the extreme hardships encountered by Wishaar while searching for work in New York. Weaver reported, “There was success for her, but not till after a struggle so hard and bitter that it ought to make American men bow their heads and a dull red flush of shame dye their cheeks when they remember the mothers that gave them life. It was the old struggle against sex prejudice. Here was this slender, gifted, graceful girl, a skillful scenic artist, a stranger, away from her parents, seeking honorable employment at work she could do as well as the best. Men who should have welcomed her turned from her with ominous muttering and black scowls. Sex jealousy!”
So let’s look at the men who were painting in New York at this time…
Scenic artists active in New York at the turn of the century included Frank Dodge, Ernest Albert, Charles Basing, Wilfred Buckland, Joseph Clare, Homer F. Emens, Frank E. Gates, George Gros, J.M. and T.M. Hewlett, Lee Lash, H. Robert Law, St. John Lewis, W.H. Lippincott, John Mazzonovich, P. J. MacDonold, E. A. Morange, Thomas G. Moses, Joseph Physioc, Hugh Logan Reid, Edward G. Unitt, Charles G. Witham, Joseph Wickes, and John H. Young. A significant number of this crowd resented Wishaar and did not offer to help. Fortunately, Wishaar’s drive and talent caused her to excel in a world primarily dominated by men. Wishaar became so successful that she soon went into business for herself after returning to the West Coast.
An article in 1904 reported “Miss Wishaar’s talent sweeps over a wide range. Not only is she adept with a broad brush and tricky ‘distemper’ of the scene painter, but she is even more skillful with the tiny ‘camel’s hair’ and oil of the miniature artist.” In the article, Wishaar was quoted saying, “I love my work. It is progressive, there is room for originality, and results are quick. I do wish you would say something about the medium I use. People generally think that scenery is painted with a whitewash brush and that some kind of wash is used. But the distemper with which I work is an opaque watercolor. It is delightfully effective, but plays some tricks sometimes on those unfamiliar with its vagaries. The first trick it played on me was with a garden drop. I fairly reveled in the delicious greens that paled and deepened under my brush, but when it dried! I wish you could have seen it.” Wishaar was noted as laughing heartily when she remembered the “dull picture” into which her work had faded. In an earlier article Wishaar commented, “Distemper is a really beautiful medium. You can produce such fine effects with it! But it’s very tricky unless you know just how to handle it.” This article appeared throughout the country, including the “Topeka State Journal” (May 25, 1903, page 8), the “Racine Journal-Time” (Wisconsin, 27 July 1903, page 7), the “Wilkes-Barre Record” (Pennsylvania, 7 May 1903, page 2), the “Wichita Daily Eagle” (Kansas, 3 May 1903, page 22), the Richmond Item (Indiana, 2 May 1903, page 10), the “Marion Star” (Ohio, 2 May 1903, page 10), the “Decatur Herald” (Illinois, 14 June 1903, page 19), the “Lincoln Star” (Nebraska, 5 May 1903, page 9), and many others publications that are not digitally available to date. When news was published about Wishaar it appeared all across the country.
Grace N. Wishaar. “The San Francisco Call,” 13 Oct 1904.
Wishaar described that her return to Seattle in 1904 was prompted by a large order for painted scenery contracted by Mr. Dodge. As this was Wishaar’s home city, the idea of returning as “a successful worker in her chosen field” appealed to her. Arrangements were made for Wishaar to travel west. She never returned, but continued painting scenery along the Pacific Coast. She worked as a scenic artist at theaters in Portland, Seattle, Tacoma, San Francisco and Oakland. That year, Wishaar was listed as the scenic artist at Harry W. Bishop’s Ye Liberty Playhouse in Oakland when it opened to the public. For context, this was ten years after her scenic art career began and forty years before she would win the Ladies World Championship for chess. By 1904, Wishaar’s scenic art career was soaring. Ye Liberty Playhouse was located at 1424 Broadway in a portion of the Realty Syndicate Building. “Henry’s Official Western Theatre Guide” (1907-1908) listed the seating capacity for the venue as 1,980. It was a sizable house for Oakland and the space was illuminated with both gas and electric lights. The proscenium opening measured 36’ wide by 36’ high. The depth of the stage was 80’ with a 75’ revolve conceived by Harry W. Bishop. The height to the gridiron was 65’-0.” Ye Liberty was also considered to possess an extremely fine stock company and present remarkable productions.
For a little historical context, Harry W. Bishop (1872-1928) opened Ye Liberty Playhouse in 1904. It purportedly included the first revolving stage in the western United States. I want to take a moment to comment on the man who offered Wishaar a scenic art position as Ye Liberty Playhouse in 1904. Bishop was the adopted son of Walter M “Bishop” (1849-1901), otherwise known as Walter Morosco, the proprietor of Morosco’s Royal Russian Circus. Harry W. Bishop’s obituary reported that he “began his career as a showman in San Francisco and ended it brokenhearted and poor as a sometime real estate operator.” But the story wasn’t that simple. Oliver Morosco adopted Walter and Leslie Mitchell, orphaned sons of Sir John Mitchell and Dora Esmea Montrose of Utah. Some sources reported that Walter ran away from home at the age of 17 to join the circus as an acrobat. After Walter left his circus career, he took over the Howard Street Theatre in San Francisco and started his new venture as a producer and manager. He later took over the Burbank Theatre in Oakland, as well as the Union Hall and the Grand Opera House in San Francisco. It was at the opera house that Harry W. Bishop began his career and Oliver Morosco was the treasurer.
By 1905, Bishop managed Ye Liberty Theatre, San Francisco’s Majestic Theatre, Central Theatre, the American Theatre and Bell Theatre. His obituary reported that “he won a reputation as a star-maker and while his productions, both dramatic and stock, concert and musical were famous, he was not in the commercial way. Throughout his career he remained a dreamer and his sole use for money was to return it to the theatre in the way of more lavish productions and finer casts until the profit was reduced to a minimum.” Bishop was ahead of his time, not only offering Wishaar the opportunity to paint at his theaters, but also offering other women positions as ushers and ticket takers. There was another aspect to Bishop that I find fascinating as it would have greatly affected the venue where Wishaar worked. Bishop was also an inventor, filing for various patents that related to theatre design and stage construction.
Wishaar was with Bishop from the very beginning of Ye Liberty Theatre. Some of Wishaar’s 1904 productions there included “Frou Frou,” “Hamlet,” “A Gentleman of France,” “Merchant of Venice,” “Pudd’nhead Wilson” and “Held the Enemy.” Newspaper articles mentioned the combined efforts of the scenic artist Miss Grace Wishaar and Ye Liberty’s stage carpenter, Walter Woerner. Woerner was also in charge of the mechanical department and later worked at the Fulton Theatre. On May 16, 1904, the “Oakland Tribune” announced, “James Neill in New Play.” “A Gentleman From France,” was featured at Ye Liberty Playhouse. The article reported, “Miss Grace Wishaar has painted an entire new set of scenery and the costumers have made new clothes and dresses for everybody.”
In 1905, Wishaar painted scenery at Ye Liberty for “Juanita of San Juan” and “The Light Eternal.” That year, Wishaar also made headlines in the article “Clever Woman Invades Scene Painting Field” (“Albuquerque Citizen,” 21 July 1905, page 3). The article was published in newspapers across the country and reported “A woman sitting on a bridge at a dizzying height in the rear of the stage in an Oakland theatre, painting in with bold strokes skies and trees and castles, proves the ability of her sex to keep pace with the masculine gender in the following of any profession. While Miss Wishaar has gained fame and a good living from her scene painting, she is devoting herself to a branch of art that no doubt in time will bring her fame of the highest type. Her miniature painting shows the most exquisite appreciation of the value of colors. A rare skill in catching her subjects likeness, combined with a most subtle blending of tones make her miniature work worthy of the praise of the most critical of critics.”
Grace N. Wishaar. “Albuquerque Citizen,” 21 July 1905.
In addition to her scenic art, Wishaar continued as a portraitist. Some of her more notable fine art projects were miniatures of Jack London’s young daughters. London (1876-1916) was an American novelist, journalist, and social activist. He was considered to be a pioneer in the world of commercial magazine fiction, becoming quite a celebrity in his day. Wishaar’s relationship with London and other California socialites provided a variety of opportunities. I keep thinking back to her statement from the 1901 interview – “I am convinced that I am a curiosity.” She somehow managed to capitalize on that; people were immediately drawn to her. As in New York, she remained a curiosity to many who met her, captivating people with both her talent and intelligence. Wishaar exhibited and won awards many art exhibitions during this time, even chairing a variety of artistic clubs.
Grace N. Wishaar. “Oakland Tribune,” 25 Nov. 1906.
In 1906, Wishaar was again featured in the “Oakland Tribune” with a lovely illustration of her straddling a beam and painting scenery in bloomers – ironically, attire that was not her painting outfit. Another article in “Success Magazine” that year featured Wishaar in the section entitled “Life Sketches of Ambitious Young Men and Women” (page 32). The article started with “What Miss Grace N. Wishaar Has Accomplished in a Field in Which She Seemed Totally Unfitted.” It was followed with the statement, “pluck, enthusiasm, and conscientious work have enabled Miss Grace N. Wishaar to become the only woman scenic artist in the United States.” Again, not the only woman scenic artist at the time, just the most promoted.
On August 14, 1906, Wishaar married her third husband, John Bruce Adams. Sadly, this marriage was also very short lived. On July 17, 1907, the “Oakland Tribune” reported, “Mrs. Grace Wishaar Adams is in Matrimonial Trouble.” The article continued, “According to a dispatch received from Los Angeles, Bruce Adams, the handsome husband of Grace Wishaar Adams the well-known scenic painter, is contemplating securing a divorce from his wife. He is now said to be in Los Angeles. Mrs. Adams, who paints all the scenery at Ye Liberty Theater and Idora Park, and who is well known in literary and art circles, said today that she had no idea where her husband is, that he positively has no grounds on which to obtain divorce, but that she has plenty of charges against him, but, nevertheless, would not seek a separation, and should fights against him to a finish if he should attempt to do so. Mrs. Adams charges that her husband has deserted her, and that he has contracted a lot of debts in her name, and that he has concealed his present place of residence to her. Mrs. Wishaar, mother of Mrs. Adams said this morning: ‘If Mr. Adams intends suing for a divorce, it is my opinion that my daughter will fight him to the bitter end. I know nothing of my daughter’s intensions at this time, not having discussed the matter with her. One thing I do know is that my daughter’s matrimonial venture has proved an utter failure. As for Adams, he is hardly able to take care of himself, much less a wife.”
I have a good friend who repeatedly says, “No one loves you like your mom.” Such was the case with Wishaar. Ida continually supported and defended her daughter over the decades; she was always there to help.
When Wishaar’s third marriage ended, she was still painting all of the scenery at Ye Liberty Playhouse, Idora Park, San Francisco’s Majestic Theatre, and few other performance venues in San José. A few shows painted by Wishaar in 1907 include the elaborate scenery for “Cleopatra” at Ye Liberty and “The Toy Maker” at the Idora Park Opera House. Both received rave reviews. For “Cleopatra,” an article described her stage settings in detail: “The play opened with the meeting of the beautiful queen of Egypt and the Roman conqueror at Tarsus. This scene was gorgeously set. Cleopatra entered in her brilliantly decorated barge seated beneath a canopy of gold. But this first scene was no more splendid than the other five that followed” (“San Francisco Call,” 31 December 1907, page 4). Wishaar’s career continued to soar in California, with the public recognizing her artistic achievements in both theaters and fine art galleries.
Grace Wishaar. “The Pittsburgh Press,” 28 April 1907.
Wishaar continued to make headlines throughout 1907-1909. On March 29, 1907, “The Elgin Chief” of Elgin, Oklahoma, reported, “Only Woman Scene Painter. Miss Grace N. Wishaar, of San Jose, Cal., is the only woman theatrical scene painter in the United States, She was educated in Paris and painted the scenery for three New York theaters – the Fifth Avenue, Manhattan and Herald Square” (page 7). In 1908, Wishaar delivered scenery for Isabella Fletcher’s performance of “Nell Gwynne.” On March 24, 1908, the “Oakland Tribune” reported, “Grace N. Wishaar gives the play an atmosphere which puts the drama in a high class”
And then tragedy struck the Wishaar home. On July 3, 1909, “The San Francisco Call” reported that Miss Grace Wishaar “narrowly escaped death” when home at Folkers and Lake Shore Avenue burned to the ground (page 12). At the time. Piedmont Heights had no fire protection, so the Oakland fire department was called to battle the blaze. Tragically, the Oakland fire department was already responding to a small fire at the Empire foundry on Third and Broadway. Wishaar lived in the same neighborhood as Harry W. Bishop. Wishaar’s fire was attributed to a defective grate, but she lost everything: her home valued at $5,000, all of her furniture and prized collection of paintings. Inhabitants of the Wishaar home at the time were listed as Grace’s mother Mrs. M. I. Wishaar, her brother Louis Wishaar, and her son Carroll Peeke.
Grace N. Wishaar. “The San Francisco Call,” 3 July 1909.
Despite the tragedy, Wishaar persisted with work for a variety of venues. On October 16, 1909, the “Oakland Tribune” reported that Grace Wishaar is painting the scenery for Cupid and the Cow Punch.: The article commented that Wishaar was “truly a most wonderful artist, and the book has been splendidly dramatized” (page 9). In addition to painting scenery, Wishaar also designed the parade float, “Where Rail and Water Meet,” to represent Oakland in the grand Portola pageant in San Francisco that fall. The float was 27 feet long by 14 feet wide and 9 feet tall, drawn by six dapple-gray horses in white harnesses.
Regardless of abundant work, debt from both fire and her third husband’s spending spree, began to take a toll on Wishaar. On Nov. 6, 1909, the “San Francisco Call” reported that Wishaar collapsed from overwork and was compelled to take a “rest cure” (page 9). Her doctor advised a “rest trip” for treatment. For the upper classes, rest trips were prescribed as a cure. They were intended to offer respite from all of life’s demands and worries.
I am sure that there are many of us who would appreciate this type of medical treatment right now.
Enter California socialite, Marian Smith Oliver, the former ward of F. M. Smith, a multimillionaire known as the Borax King.
Under the advice of a physician, Oliver had already left for Australia during August 1909. She was not gone for long after learning of Wishaar’s series of unfortunate events. Oliver returned to California and planned an extended trip around the world with Wishaar. In 1910, Wishaar and Oliver journeyed to the South Sea Islands, New Zealand, Australia, the Orient, Mediterranean countries, and elsewhere. They ended up in Paris.
Marian was the wife of Roland Oliver, manager of the Leona chemical company. Leona Chemical Co. was one of F. M. Smith’s properties. One-time miner, Mr. Oliver stumbled upon the wealth of chemicals in Death Valley where he staked out the wonderful borax deposits. This paved the way for an immense fortune and the hand of Marian. In Oakland., Mr. Oliver developed a scheme known as the Realty Syndicate, a plan that issued certificates carrying guaranteed interest against the enormous realty holdings the syndicate acquired with high finance. Most importantly, the Realty Syndicate building housed Ye Liberty Playhouse. Wishaar painted at the Ye Liberty Playhouse and eventually became friends with Mrs. Marian Oliver.
Marian was a prize catch; one of several wards raised and educated by Mrs. F. M. Smith. She received $250,000 worth of jewels and a few articles of her costly and famous wardrobe. When Marian married Roland Oliver, F. M. Smith also gave her an independent fortune in securities and realty holdings. In the end, the Smiths ensured Marian’s financial independence from her husband. It was this financial independence that funded her world trip with Wishaar in 1909.
Two women on a rest trip seemed like a perfect escape until the rumors started flying about. On October 16, 1910, “The San Francisco Call” reported “Wife’s Long Stay Abroad Gives Rise to Gossip” (page 31). While away, Mrs. Oliver decided to remain abroad to study music and performance. Oliver continued to study music in Paris, with Wishaar setting up an art studio, well into 1911. Newspaper articles conveyed bits of information concerning Mrs. Oliver’s improved health and her life upon the stage. On April 6, 1911, the “Oakland Tribune” even reported that Mrs. Oliver was enjoying her “career before the footlights” (page 1). The article explained, “Her fascination for the stage led her to spend time among theatrical folk, and it was partly in this way that her friendship with Miss Grace Wishaar, the long time the scenic artist at Ye Liberty theatre formed.” By August 1911, Mrs. Oliver returned to the United States. Wishaar remained in abroad.
On April 5, 1914, the “Oakland Tribune” mentioned Wishaar’s extended absence under the heading, “Oakland Artist Gains Triumph” (page 29). The article reported that Wishaar was exhibiting three portraits at the Salon des Beaux Arts in the Grand Palais, beginning on April 12, a goal for which most artists strive. Two of her portraits featured Giralamo Savonarola and Countess Walewska. The article reported, “Miss Wishaar may be considered in every sense to have definitely arrived.” This marked the end of her scenic art career.
Wishaar was lucky in many things, but certainly not in marriage. I have to wonder if her husbands never quite matched her intellect. She married her fourth husband in Ceylon. Archibald C. Freeman was a dual British-American citizen. It was her marriage to Freeman that granted Wishaar British citizenship. After Freeman, Wishaar married her sixth husband, Henry James Bromley. Not much is known of their relationship, other than it was disclosed on her last marriage certificate. Wishaar’s seventh husband was Alexander Alekhine (1892-1946), the world chess champion.
Alekhine was born in Moscow. He grew up in an aristocratic and very wealthy family, learning to play chess at the age of six. He first encountered simultaneous blindfold chess games when he was nine years old and became enthralled with a visiting champion who competed in twenty-two games. Alekhine would eventually become one of the greatest blindfold players in history. He joined the Moscow Chess Club and won the All-Russian Amateur Tournament by 1909. In 1914 he emerged on the worldwide state, being one of the top five. That same year, Alekhine was retained in Germany with ten other Russian chess players when war erupted. Fortunately, he escaped and returned to Russia. After the war, he began to travel again and compete all over the world, landing on US soil in 1923. While in the States he participated in 24 exhibitions, even competing in one blindfold simultaneous game against twenty-one other players.
Ten years later, he met Grace Wishaar in Tokyo.
Wishaar was also competing in the Tokyo chess tournament, playing against Alexander Alekhine in a simultaneous exhibition. For her participation, she received one of Alekhine’s books and asked him to autograph her copy. Although sixteen years older than Alekhine, he was captivated with Wishaar and they married the following year.
Wishaar had been playing chess for quite some time. The game was a popular paint break activity early in her career. On October 13, 1904, “The San Francisco Call” reported, “To complete the versatility of this remarkable young woman, [Wishaar] is an excellent musician and a clever chess player. When her eyes grow weary of color and the brush becomes a heavy weight she turns to chess for recreation.”
On March 26, 1934, their wedding ceremony took place at Villefranche-sur-Mer in France. This is about 6 miles southwest of Monaco. They lived in a magnificent chateau (La Chatellenie Saint-Aubin-le-Cauf was near Normandy), with Wishaar keeping an art studio in Paris.
They traveled extensively for chess championships around the world. Both competed at the Hastings International Chess Congress in 1936/37 where Alekhine won the Premier. He won this same tournament in previous years (1922, 1925/6, 1933/4). Wishaar won 3rd prize in the 3rd Class Morning A class competition. By 1938, a civic reception was held in their honor at the Golden Jubilee Chess Congress in Plymouth.
Life wasn’t without challenges or struggles, however, as reports continued to depict Alekhine’s excessive drinking during competitions. Yet he continued to win, game after game, and excelled in blindfold simultaneous chess challenges.
During World War II, the Nazis took over their chateau and looted its contents. Alekhine was allowed to freely travel under Nazi occupation, but no exit visa was allowed for Wishaar. After the war, Wishaar sold the chateau and spent the last five years of her life in her Paris studio. She passed away on February 21, 1956 and is buried next to Alexander in the Cimetière du Montparnasse in Paris.
Final resting place of Grace N. Wishaar in France.
Her only son remained in the United States. Lt. Col. Carroll Peeke fought in WWI, and graduated from University California at Berkley. He followed in his grandfather’s footsteps and went into the newspaper business. Peeke joined the “San Francisco Call-Bulletin” in 1922 and later worked as city and diplomatic editor for “The Times Herald” in Washington, D.C.
There is one last person in the Buell Family that I have not covered yet, Horace Cyrus Buell. tHorace C. Buell was the he son of Nina Giles and Horace H. Buell.
[I was recently emailed by Mark Trainor who offered the following correction: Horace Cyrus Giles Buell’s grandfather was Cyrus Augustus Buell (1824-1904). His great grandfather was Horace Buell (1791-1837) of Troy, New York. I have no research showing Horace’s middle name was Cyrus].
Named after his great grandfather, Horace Cyrus Buell (1793-1870) of New York, he came from a theatrical family. His father was a portrait and landscape artist who also worked as a scenic artist. Buell & Son scenic studio was established in 1908, and the two painted many productions at the New Auditorium in Wichita, Kansas.
Horace C. Buell was born on April 29, 1891, in Santa Monica, California. He followed in his father’s footsteps as a scenic artist, but very little is known about him. The younger Horace remained relatively absent from print, other that a few brief mentions in Kansas newspaper; the polar opposite of his younger sister. Horace C. only appears in a 1900 US Federal Census, a 1905 Kansas state census, and a few Wichita City directories and newspaper clippings.
In 1908 Horace C. Buell was enrolled at the Wichita School of Music, the same institution where his father Horace H Buell briefly taught art classes (Wichita Daily Eagle, 6 Sept. 1908, page 12). In 1911, Horace C. Buell was listed as a student in Wichita, Kansas, residing at 1012 Lawrence Av. This was his parents home at the time.
While looking for artworks by his father Horace H. Buell, I stumbled across one painting by Horace C. G. Buell. The “G” was for his mother’s maiden name of Giles. Like the rest of his family, he was quite an accomplished artist. Unfortunately his career was snuffed out the early age of 24. Horace Jr. died on Sept 3, 1916, in Cleveland, Ohio, and was buried at the Brooklyn Heights Cemetery there.
Artwork recently sold at auction and erroneously attributed to his father Horace Hervey Buell. This is a still life by his son, Horace Cyrus Giles Buell (Horace C. G. Buell).Signature on painting – Horace C. G. Buell (1892-1916).
In 1915, Horace C. G. Buell enlisted in the New Work Guard, becoming a private in Co. F, 71st Inf. A year later he was dead, gone without any obituary or published memorial. I have no idea what happened, but the family had already splintered the year that he passed. Mother and daughter were working as scenic artists and Rapid City, Iowa, and his father was working elsewhere.
Horace H. Buell and Nina Giles Buell pictured in the “Wichita Daily Eagle” on Oct. 12 1911.
While looking for information about the Buell family I came across an article with both Mr. and Mrs. H. Harry Buell credited as the “Designers and Builders of Floats.” I have previously missed this article because the newspaper credits Mr. H. “Harry” and not H. “Hervey” Buell. This is the scenic artist Horace Hervey Buell, his wife Nina Giles Buell and children Mabel and Horace C. Here is the article from the “Wichita Daily Eagle” on Oct. 12 1911. This is simply a wonderful description of a community event and the artistic abilities of the Buell family.
“Work of Art is Electrical Street Parade.
Ten Floats Representing Historical Events, Seasons, ima and Civilization Prepared at Great Expense.
Parade Begins at 7:30 Thursday Night.
Line of March is Announced and Persons are Selected to Participate in Realistic Representations.
The Great Electrical Float parade which has been heralded far and near as the biggest conceived and built is now only a few days off, and the public is soon to be allowed to see the floats in all their glory and beauty. Months have been spent in the preparation of these floats but the tie has been well and skillfully used, and they are now completed and await only the word of the marshall of the parade to reveal their glories to the gaze of an admiring throng. Citizens of communities hundreds of miles from the Peerless Princess have signified their intention of attending the celebration of her Prophets and they will be well repaid for their trip.
There will be a slight change from the usual program and line of march. The parade will start promptly at 7:30 p. m. Thursday, October 12th, from the corner of Central and Main where it will be formed.
The parade will take its course south on Main to Lewis street, two blocks below Douglas; will double back on Main and Douglas; thence it will proceed east on Douglas to the Santa Fe tracks doubling back on Douglas to Market street, turning north on Market it will continue to First street where the parade will disband. Those having children in the parade will meet then in the second block on Market street after the conclusion of the parade.
As has been advertised so extensively, the parade will have in addition to the wonderful and unusual beauty, and educational value in their sequence, historically speaking. The first float representing the seasons covers all time, in that it represents the completed year and the completed cycle of existence, Following this, will come in detail the nine great characteristic period of human history as typified in the characteristic thought or country, or idea which dominated that period. In order that one seeing the trade may get his full value, it is suggested by committee that this article be clipped from the Eagle and taken to the parade.
The order and significance of the parade, together with a complete description of the floats and those privileged to occupy positions of hone upon them, follow. At the head of the parade will come Chief of Police, George T. Cubbon, with a pantoon [sic.] of mounted police. Following the pantoon [sic.] of policemen will be a pantoon [sic.] of cowboys from the stockyards and packing houses led my Marshall Fredericks. Following this body of Wichita Boosters, who represents one of Wichita’s greatest industries, will come the band of Oxford, Kansas, and immediately following this will be the first float, that of ‘the Seasons.’ This float is an entirely new conception of Mr, Buell, the official designer, and is one that will long be remembered. It is built in the form of a monument with four compartments in the base, representing Spring, Sumer, Fall and Winter. Those representing Spring will be Wilna Armstrong and Charles B. Payne, Harriet and Josephine Booth with be in the compartment of Summer. Raymond and Margaret Casey will represent Autumn and Elizabeth and Alfred Campbell impersonate the spirits of Winer. Surmounting these compartments will be characters representing the four seasons of human life. Anna C. Brown will represent childhood; Genevieve Saunders, Youth; Mrs. Gray and her baby will picture Motherhood; and Mrs. L. S. Carter will represent maturity of life.
Float Number 2 represents the ancient Oriental civilization, of which there were several, and all of which flourished before the Grecian era. History reveals the fact that the primal characteristics of the early days of any race was Religion, and this is portrayed in a striking manner. The Oriental idea is given by two immense pyramids, standing alone amid stretches of glittering sand. The sphinxes of Egypt and the winged bulls of Persia are the embellishments if the four corners of the floats. In a beautiful oasis in the midst of the desert appear the characters of the ancient religions. In a temple which will slowly revolve, spear Moses, represented by James Lawrence; Zoroaster by Dan Thurston; the priest of Buddha by Randall Cline; and the worshipper of Isis by Victory Mead. As an escort to this float will come the patrol of Midian Temple, under captainship of C. A. Baker, and accompanied by their inimitable band from the deserts of Arabia.
Float number 3 will take up the next era of human development and will represent the power and glory of Rome. This float has been skillfully designed and embodied a thrilling and lifelike picture if the Eternal City, as it burned in the time of Nero. The float is very gorgeous , and is one upon which the most action will take place. Nero, impersonated by Edwin Johnson, will sit high above the tumult upon his throne, enjoying the terrible sight. The Roman soldiers impenetrable in their reserve and steadfast in their discipline, will be represented by Jim Davidson, Fred Dold, Walter Innes, Theodore Johnston, Robert Campbell and Paul Johnston. Among the terrified populace, rushing in horror from the conflagration, will appear Marshall Mueller, Lloyd Taylor, Arthur Wolf, Gladys Wallace and Elizabeth Avey. A guard of Roman soldiers will be furnished by the Y.M.C.A.
Following the development of Rome, the world fell into a period of desuetude and decay. Learning in and the arts of civilization seemed to have disappeared, and savagery and superstition were rampant. The fourth float represents a scene in the forests of Germany among the old Saxon ancestors, before they assumed the habits and habiliments of civilization. Amid the forests, peopled by wild beasts of various sorts, will appear the Druids in their fire worship, before their rough stone altars. The Druids will be represented by Howard Anderson, and Nellie Hewey, Hortense Thompson and Milton Hutchinson. The Modern Woodmen of America will furnish and escort, i uniform, for this float.
Next in order is the Wichita Union band.
Float Number 5 will represent the Middle Ages and will represent a scene from King Arthur’s court. Irwin Bleckley will impersonate King Arthur and will be attended by two princes, Jack Stewart and Walter Taylor, and two guards, Neal Kirkwood and Rolle Thorpe. At the opposite end of the float will be the representation of knighthood rescuing womanhood from oppression. Orio Thorpe will be the Knight, and Ruth Mueller the fair damsel to be rescued. The dragon is pictured as a terrible creature, Harold Clark will see that the dragon does his duty.
Float Number 6 is a most beautiful allegorical representation of that period of awakening and development commonly called the Renaissance. This float of a beautiful galley, or ship. The oarsmen being represented by Gertrude McCullough, Ida Wilson, Ruth Heppe, Katherine Lewis, Genilee Gregg, Marion Dunn, Nannie Brubacher and Koa McComb. The pilot will be Gladys Warren. The spirit of the Renaissance, Katherine Stewart, while Hazel Johnson will impersonate the Herald which proclaims the coming of an enlightened age.
The seventh float will represent the landing of the Pilgrims. This float is certainly a work of art. A beautiful picture of the rugged, rock-ribbed coast, upon which are gathered a band of Pilgrims, while in the distance, in beautiful perspective rides a little bark, tempest-tossed upon the turbulent waves. the pilgrims will be Homer Hutchinson, Lawrence Rorabaugh, Grosvenor Charles, Aldrich Lasen, Robert Johnson, Marian Hutchinson, Nora Woods, Lillian Bailey, Helen Moore, Marie Gilbert, Lawrence McComb. The Indian will be impersonated by M. W. Longnecker.
Following this float will come the Moose band of this city.
The eight float will represent the United States, and will be one of the most beautiful and unique floats every seen anywhere. The idea of this float is ‘Zangwell’s idea of the ‘Melting to.; Columbus will be seated upon and immense throne and will be attended by four soldiers, Upon the front of the float are Liberty, Justice and Equality, represented by Helen Charles, Edith Saunders and Stella Armstrong. In the center fo the float is the Melting Pot from which arises the American flag as a result of the blending and amalgamation of all races.
The Ninth float will represent Kansas, and the spirit of the commonwealth is to be Miss Edith Gilbert, She, as queen, will be attended by her maids of honor, Anel Saunders, Francis A. Brown, Henrietta Allen, Helen Johnston, Cecil Gilbert, Dorothy Booth and Francis Williard. The center of this the float will be an immense cornucopia filled with overflowing products of the state. The best fruit in all lines has been contributed and will make a memorable show, presiding in all this display will be Pauline Ayers and Leon Cain.
The last float will of course be the climax of all ages and will represent Wichita, the Peerless Princess. The form of the float will be a monument to the greatness of the city. An immense granite monument has been built, surmounting which will be Miss Mabel Buell, representing Wichita. Upon the four wings of the base stand an Indian by the Buffalo he has killed, represented by Horace C. Buell, and the cowboy with his trappings, represented by David Jackman. These two representing the pioneers of the valley. Upon two other wings appear the mechanic and the traveling man represented by Phi Patterson and Harry Schuler. These representing two of the factors of the present financial greatness, Upon the front and rear of the float appear Bessie Applegate, May Weiss, Evelyn Rorabaugh and Helen Booth. representing Fairmount, Mr. Carmel, Friends and the High School, while Katherine and Margaret Ayres appear as pages to the queen.
In addition to these, the following gentlemen will be the marshals of the parade: J. A. Hopkins will be chief marshall of the floats, hill Messrs, Jay Gill, R. B. Campbell, Paul Wall, J. N. Chappie, R. E. Bird, C. L. DeLong, M. E. Garrison, Walter Parrott, James Crossfield and others will assist by being marshals with each float.
The committee consisting of G. M. Booth, H. W. Stanley, Lyman Woodruff and C. L. DeLong have worked tirelessly at the making a success of this parade, as of the other features of the carnival, and they feel that the result has justified the efforts put forth. They believe that no better float parade was every put on by any city. While this committee, however, has had supervision of the entire carnival, the particular task of designing building and decorating these floats has been delegated to H. Harry Buell. Mr. Buell is an artist of much ability and has in times past, as in this present instance done some exceedingly creditable work along artistic lines. Mr. Buell has been most ably assisted in the painting and decorative work by his daughter Mabel Buell and his son Horace Buell, who, seem to inherit a wonderful talent along this line. The detail work outside of the painting and construction, and of costuming has been left almost whole to Mrs. Buell, and she has made a great success of her work as Mr. Buell has at his. Wichita is to be congratulated upon having artists with the ability of the Buells.”
Yesterday, I explored the 1884 antics of Horace H. Buell
when he shipped himself in a crate from Chicago to Manhattan, Kansas. His strange
journey made headlines across the country. At the time he was married to Fannie
B. “Nina,” future head of Buell Scenic Co.
Buell was born in 1857, one of four boys born to Cyrus A.
Buell, a hatter. At the age of thirteen, Buell moved with his family to
Wabaunsee, Kansas and then Manhattan, Kansas. At the age of 18, Buell was sent
to Brooklyn to live with his uncle, where he worked as barber. Eventually he
returned Manhattan, Kansas, initially working as a barber and later an artist.
In Manhattan he established his own art studio by the age of 22 years old. On
May 30, 1879, the “Manhattan Nationalist” included an advertisement for H. H.
Buell’s “new photograph gallery” (page 2). Located over the post office,
Buell’s services included tintypes, photographs, crayon portraits and oil
portraits. By the early 1880s, Horace opens another art store in Topeka,
Kansas. On April 15, 1882, “The Topeka Daily Capital” reported, “H. H. Buell, a
telented [sic.] young artist of this city, proposes giving an art drawing at an
early day in Union hall. He has a number of beautiful paintings and artotypes
to dispose of” (page 8). Interestingly, in Topeka Buell was active in the
Knights of Pythias, Topeka Lodge No. 38, (Daily Commonwealth, 29 Jan. 1882,
page 1).
By the summer, however, Buell sets his sights on better
opportunities in Chicago and left Topeka. “The Topeka Daily Capital” announced,
“H. H. Buell went East yesterday to take a position under Geo. Pullman, of the
palace car company” (13 June 1882, page 8). It was purported that Buell met his
future wife there, as she was a Pullman relative. By the end of the year. Buell
married Fannie B. “Nina” Giles on Dec. 1. The Buell’s were encountering
financial difficulties in the Windy City by 1884, and work was not a plentiful
as Buell had hoped. On May 31, 1884, the “Salina Semi-Weekly Journal,” reported,
“Manhattan is just now enjoying the excitement of a novel romance. Saturday
night a large box of express matter was rolled out at the station, and on being
opened was found to contain a young man who figured quite prominently here two
years ago, a crayon artist, society blood and capital guard. H. H. Buell is his
name. He was in Chicago, got broke there, wanted to get home, so shipped
himself C.O.D., by express. Lawrence
Herald” (page 4). Note there is no mention of his wife, at all. Buell did
not return to Chicago and was still living in Manhattan the next year. The
“Manhattan Nationalist” reported, “H. H. Buell has been doing some nice work in
his line lately. All who have ever seen anything from his brush recognized
unusual ability. The battle scenes that added so much to the impressiveness of
the opera house were his latest works” (5 June 1885, page 1). This was the first mention that I have
located to date that mentioned Buell as a scenic artist.
By 1886, both Buell and his wife were living in Kansas City,
Missouri, at 1328 Lydia Ave. Not much is known of their life in Kansas other
than nearby familial ties. Soon, they headed west, settling in California by early
1890s and welcoming two children to their home – Horace, Jr. (1892) and Mabel
(1896). In regard to their daughter, sources vary about a birthdate. 1896 is
Mabel’s birthdate on census reports and the gravestone that she shares with her
daughter. However, newspapers and the social security administration list consistently
list Mabel’s birthday as 1900. Keep in mind that newspaper articles give
Mabel’s age as four years younger than she actually was at the time. So,
working as a sixteen-year-old scenic artist by herself in 1916 really meant
that she was twenty; this puts a slightly different take on her wunderkind
status in retrospect.
By the turn of the twentieth century, the Buell family moved
Portland, Oregon. The 1900 US Federal census
lists a 41-years-old Horace Sr. working as a portrait and landscape artist and
living in Portland with his family. Nina
Giles Buell, was still listed as “Fannie B.” in this census, but the children
remain the same Horace C. and Mabel A., ages 8 and 6 respectively. Both children
were attending school.
The Buells returned to Kansas in 1904, the same year that Buell’s father (Cyrus Augustus Buell (1820-1904) passes away. Until 1904, Buell artistic endeavors are primarily absent from print, as he was working as a portrait artist and not connected with any theatrical productions. There are mentions of his checking into hotels and visits home to Manhattan, Kansas. In 1904, the “El Paso Herald” announced, “H. H. Buell of San Francisco, has completed the work of painting a large oil painting of the city of Alamogordo, 12×21 feet, for the Alamogordo Townsite company, to be displayed at the World’s Fair. It is a beautiful piece of work” (3 June 1904, page 2).
In 1905, a snapshot of the Buell’s life was again captured
in a state census report. Horace H. Buell, Fannie B. (Nina) Buell, Horace C.
Buell and Mabel A. Buell are listed and living together in Manhattan. The
“Manhattan Nationalist” included a Buell advertised: “Portraits and frames.
Studio at residence, southwest corner of Fifth and Houston. –H.H. Buell,
Artist” (31 March 1905, page 4). Later
that summer, Buell’s advertisements noted that his studio was located on North
Second Street, opposite of the Manhattan Marble Works. The second advertisement
announced, “We make portraits and photographs at the summer school of painting
and photography, Positions furnished to students in photographic retouching as
soon as qualified” (Student’s Herald, Manhattan, Kansas, 8 June 1905, page 2).
Not everything went well for Buells in Manhattan. The
“Manhattan Nationalist” reported an unfortunate incident at the Buell home:
“The other night, after H. H. Buell had installed water pipes in his house, he
felt water dripping on the bed where he slept. He got up to investigate just in
time to avoid a large mass of plastering which fell from the ceiling. As the
ceiling is high, he probably made a lucky escape” (30 June 1905, page 4). This
just made me think of the crate story.
The family left Manhattan and moved from Kansas City to
Wichita in 1908, presumably for better employment opportunities. In Wichita,
Buell became the scenic artist for the Wolfe Stock Company, providing scenery
for their production of “The Princess and the Girl” at the New Auditorium that
summer (Wichita Daily Eagle, 18 June 1908, page 12). He also painted the
scenery for “Salomy Jane” that fall. Of
the production, the “Wichita Daily Eagle” reported, “Mr. Horace H. Buell, the
Wolfe scenic artist, and his assistants, have made a record for themselves painting
the life-like reproduction of the famous California redwoods in which the Bret
Harte stories are laid” (11 Nov 1908 page 10). Buell’s son, Horace C. Buell was
sixteen years old at the time. Buell’s scenic work in Wichita continued with
the help of his children and wife. By December 1908, the scene painting work
for Manager Wolfe at the New Auditorium was credited to Messrs. Horace H. Buell
& Son (6 Dec. 1908, page 15). Horace Sr. and Horace Jr. painted scenery for
“The Eternal City”. The “Wichita Daily Eagle” reported, “For the past two weeks
the scenic artists of the New Auditorium, Messrs. Horace H. Buell & Son,
have been busy preparing the backgrounds for this richest of all plays, and
they will show the Holy City as true to life as it is possible for brush and
colors to depict on canvas.” In 1923, Mabel would recall, “Of course I learned much from my
father, though even he was more often than not loath to have me around. It was
my brother who used to act as his ‘paint boy,’ cleaning his brushes and mixing
his paints. But I made the most of my opportunities. I hung around and picked
up what information I could, and always kept in mind that some day I was going
to climb to the bridge and do scene painting all by myself.’
The Buell’s were still living in Wichita in 1911 when Buell
began working for the Wichita College of Music’s art department. The “Wichita Daily Eagle” reported, “The art
department, under the direction of H. H. Buell, late of Paris and London, will
be a success…H. H. Buell, who is a thorough artist, will be in a position to
give very valuable instruction as well as produce some specially artistic work”
(22 Jan 1911, page 6). Little is known of his trip abroad, the timeline or
purpose. However, his trip to Paris was again sited when Buell received the
contract to design electrical floats for the Peerless Prophet’s Parade that
year too. The “Wichita Daily Eagle” reported “Paris Man to Design Electrical
Floats. Contract Let to H. H. Buell for $2,000 Feature of October Jubilee” (23
July 1911, page 3). In the “Hutchinson News,” Buell was actually noted as the
“well known scenic artist” (9 Sept. 1911, page 1). It is uncertain when Horace
H. Buell & Son became known Buell Scenic Co.
By 1912, Horace was working as an itinerant artist and mentioned in a few newspapers across the country, including Jacksonville, Florida. Four years later, his wife and daughter were working in Sioux City, Iowa at the Princess Theatre, with not mention of Horace H. Buell. This is the same year that Horace Jr. passed away.
The notice of Horace H. Buell’s own passing was brief, and
appeared in only few papers. The “American Art Annul” reported, “Buell, Horace
Hervey. – a painter and head of the Buell Scenic Company, died in New York,
December 22, 1919” (Vol. 16, page 266).
If you need a good belly laugh, this may be the post you
want to read. Horace Hervey Buell was the father of scenic artist Mable Buell
and husband of scenic artist Nina Giles Buell.
Born in New York in 1857, Horace was one of four boys. He
had an older brother that was three years his senior (George K.), and two twin
brothers that were his junior by two years (Walter and Warren Cyrus). Remember
the name W.C. Cyrus when you get to the second newspaper article.
When he was quite young, his father (Cyrus Augustus Buell) left to fight in the Civil War. A hatter by trade, he returned to civilian life to run a hat shop in Albion, New York. In 1870, the Buell family moved to Wabaunsee, Kansas. The 1870 census listed Cyrus as a farmer, but he soon returned to his former profession as a hat merchant. By 1875, Horace was sent to live with his uncle in Brooklyn, New York, working as a barber. Five years later in 1875, Horace returned west, still working as a barber and living with his family in Manhattan, Kansas. By the early 1880s, Horace opened an art store in Topeka. After experiencing only mediocre returns, he set his sights on better opportunities in Chicago. By 1882, he was married to Miss Nina Giles. Two years later, Horace made headlines in newspapers across the country – not for his art, but for his antics.
In 1884, he is low on funds and decides to save eight dollars by mailing himself in a wooden crate, C.O.D. This story is published and republished at the time. Over the decades the story of Horace H. Buell continues to pop up in newspapers here and there; the tale outlives the memory of Buell as a scenic artist. It is well worth reading.
Here is one version published in the “The Garnett Republican
(30 May 1884, page 8):
“A Strange Journey.
Truth is often stranger than fiction, and the following
proves the saying: Residents of Topeka will remember that a few years ago a
young man named Horace H. Buell arrived in Topeka and opened an art studio, but
finding that his efforts to gain a reputation and a living were not as
successful as he wished, he left the city and went to Chicago. There he became
a Pullman car conductor and eventually married, our informant thinks, a
relative of the Pullmans. At any rate he was in Chicago last Thursday and
wanted to go to Manhattan, but didn’t have the funds to pay for a ticket. He at
length determined to go as express matter, and with this in view, arranged a box
in which he could sit quite comfortably, and he could, if necessary, release
himself. He then went to the express office and left an order for a wagon to
call at a certain address and get a box which he billed as from H. H. Buell to
Horace Buell, Manhattan, Kas., and directed that it should be sent and the
charges collected at Manhattan. His scheme worked perfectly. The box was taken
to the depot, weighed and put abroad the cars, and then the adventurous Kansan
was so en rout to his old home by the
Blue. Once an express messenger suspicioned that something was wrong and said
he was going through the box, but he changed his mind. The box weighed 247
pounds, and at Kansas City Buell heard a voice say, ‘I believe I’ll let this
box lay over.’ But fortunately the strange freight was re-loaded, and at 1:27
o’clock Saturday morning was thumped out on the platform at Manhattan. All had
gone well so far, and Buell was congratulating himself o the success of his
scheme, but when the last jolt of the box was over, and he was ready to take an
active part in the strange journey, he discovered that the box was lying bottom
side up, or so it was impossible to work the release. He therefore waited a
more favorable opportunity, expecting it would come when he had been tumbled
into the express office. Fate was dead against him, though, for when the box
was placed in its position to remain until delivered in the morning, the
occupant found himself standing on his head and unable to assume any other
position. The express agent, having all his goods in the room, then proceeded
to ‘check up’ and used the box for a table. The unfortunate victim of his own
ingenuity was forced to listen to the satisfactory ejaculations of the agent,
who seemed to require a long time to complete his work. At length, being unable
to bear it any longer, Buell yelled, ‘How much longer is it going to take you
to check up?’ The agent was frightened and fled to another room, but soon
reappeared with a friend, and two revolvers were leveled at the offending box.
The agent supposed a robber was hidden in it, announced his intention of
perforating it, whereupon Buell begged to be released, when he promised to
explain all. The men at length consented, and a sorry looking individual, a
satchel and the remains of a lunch, were polled out on the floor. Buell paid
the express charges, $9.25, and thinks he succeeded fairly well – in saving the
difference between that amount and the fare, which was $17.55. [To put this in
perspective, today’s equivalent of $17.55 is about $450 today]. Buell organized
a company under the name of the Topeka Zuoaves, and was quite well known here.
At one of the masquerades given in the skating rink he took first prize for the
best character.”
A few months after the incident, Buell explains himself in
the “Holton Recorder” (12 July 1884, page 1). Under the title “New Way of
Travel,” the article reports, “My name is Horace Buell, and I have relatives
living in Manhattan. From my earliest youth I have displayed wonderful talent
for art. Believing that there was a field open for me in the larger cities I
sought a situation, and for a time was successful, but I lost my health, and
being severely distressed and in need, resolved to return home. Too proud to
write for means to defray my expenses, I hit upon the plan which has landed me
to-night, thirty-six hours from Chicago. The way I managed to get billed out of
the city was very easy. I called t the main office and told them I had a box
which I wished to ship to Manhattan, giving instructions where it could be
found, I then packed myself in it and was soon speeding westward. Once I was
left in the car for some time alone, and had a chance to stretch myself. Before
entering the box I supplied myself with sufficient crackers and cheese to
sustain me for fours days, and suffered only for water. I don’t feel much worse
for the trip, it was an easy matter to brace myself in the box so I would not
be injured.”
From the “Buffalo Commercial,” 6 June 1884, page 2.
There is only one question that I would like to ask Buell: “Did you tell your wife?”
I explored the life and career of scenic artist Mabel A.
Buell in the past two posts. However,
the Buell family’s history is complicated and will take a few more posts bit to
unwrap. This is the most interesting theatre family that I have encountered to
date, so I am going to take a little time and enjoy myself. The tales
surrounding Buell’s would be an absolutely fascinating book; maybe even a
miniseries as there is romance, death, intrigue and kidnapping.
To start with, it was a theatrical family entirely composed
of scenic artists: Horace H. (father), Fannie “Nina” Giles (mother), Horace C.
(son) and Mabel A. (daughter). The patriarch was a well-known scenic artist, assisted
by his wife, son and daughter. The son
was initially selected to follow in his father’s footsteps, but passed away in
1916 at the young age of 24. Although
the patriarch of the family actively once discouraged his daughter from the
profession, she had also assisted him on projects when he needed an assistant
and was an accomplished artist in her own right. Regardless of her father’s
warning, Mabel became a scenic artist and was actively working the year her
brother passed. In fact, in 1916 both Mabel
and her mother were listed as scenic artists in the Sioux City Directory, working
at the Princess Theatre. There is no indication of what their father is doing
at that time, but in 1912 he was working and living in Florida.
Horace Sr. passes away in 1919, and both mother and daughter
now constitute the Buell Scenic Company. In many newspaper reports, they explain
the desire to continue the Buell name in the scenic art world, an acceptable
rationale for two women running a scenic art business. Mabel makes the paper as a petite pretty blond
who holds a union card and works just as hard as the men who dominate the world
of scenic art. The mother is listed as
head of Buell Scenic Company and becomes a member of the Vaudeville Artists’
Club.
In 1923, the Mabel marries Herbert Schulze, also a scenic
artist and designer, but a sickly one with a heart condition. Three years later, the mother “retires” from
heading Buell Scenic Company, but is still involved as a consultant. Interestingly,
she retires the same year that her granddaughter Joy is born to Mabel and
Herbert. My guess is that she opted to stay home with her granddaughter so that
her own daughter could keep working. The family of four – mother, daughter,
son-in-law and granddaughter – all live
in Manhattan during the 1930s.
It is in the mid-1930s, however, that the daughter meets
Yates Stirling, Jr., a retired admiral. She begins working with him on several
projects, including providing illustrations for his various publications, such
as “Sea Duty: Memoirs of a Fighting Admiral.” They also partner to create the
musical comedy “Sea Legs.” Then, as now, some of society has a hard time
believing men and women can work together and maintain a platonic friendship
without some sort of romantic liaison, so there is speculation that the two
were having an affair. Whether this is the case or not, really doesn’t matter,
but Stirling’s family had a problem with it.
But is in the in 1930s and 1940s that Stirling becomes an increasing involved
with the Buell family, going on extended absences with the three Buell women to
work on his writing projects. This is at the same time Mabel’s husband, Herbert
Schulze, nears the end of his life. He passes away in 1940 at the relatively
young age of 48. At the time of his passing, Schulze was no longer living in
the Buell home, but lodging with others and still working as a scenic artist.
Other than a heart condition listed on his WWI draft card, there is no
indication of what caused his early departure.
Stirling’s relationship with the Buell’s only became a
problem because of his children. His adult children were not happy with his new
friendship and the time spent with the Buell family, to the extreme. There is
all sort of drama revolving around his activities at the Buell’s and the reported
disappearance of the admiral. In fact, when he left with the Buell’s to work on
another publication in Florida, his children reported him missing and hired a
detective. After Stirling requested that more personal items be shipped to him in
Florida due an extended stay, the children broke into the Buell’s home and left
with their father – who was in his 70s at the time. During the home invasion,
18-years-old Nina Buell was injured in “a scuffle with the admiral’s offspring”
(“Tampa Bay Times,” 15 May 1946, page 11). Other reports proclaim that her
injury occurred after she pulled a gun on the invaders and they were trying to
disarm her, hence injuring her hand. Nina was even pictured in the newspaper
with her granddaughter inspecting her injury. Charges against the Stirling children
were filed and the drama continued.
Nina G. Buell and her granddaughter Joy Buell, picture in the “Tampa Times,” 11 May 1946, page 1.
Nina Fannie B. Giles Buell is a fascinating character in her
own right. Various historical records
list provide a variety of names for her, including Nina G., Nina C., Nina B.,
Fannie G., Fannie B. and Fannie C. Buell; yes, they are one in the same. When
Mabel and her mother were painting at the Princess Theatre in Sioux City in
1916, she was listed as Nina C. Buell. Upon her passing though, newspapers
remembered her as Nina Giles Buell and her position as “Former Scenic Firm
Head” (Tampa Tribune, 31 Dec. 1947, page 2).
“The Miami News” announced, “Woman Theatrical Designer Dies”
(30 Dec. 1947, page 1). The “Post Standard” reported, “Palm Beach, Fla. – Mrs.
Nina Giles Buell for many years the head of Buell Scenic company, theatrical
designers of New York city, died here yesterday after a short illness” (Syracuse,
NY, 31 Dec. 1947, page 1). The Jan. 10, 1948 issue of “The Billboard”
announced, “Mrs. Nina Giles, head of the New York theatrical designers, Buell
Scenic Company, December 31 in New York. She was a member of the National
Vaudeville Artists’ Club” (page 42). Nina was not simply window dressing or
doing the accounting for a scenic studio, she was a major presence in the
company, both designing and painting; still associated with the company two
decades after her retirement.
Nina’s obituary is indicative of her unusual life. I have
always found newspaper obituaries fascinating.
Until you actually write one and submit it to the newspaper, it’s not an
activity that one ponders. Having to encapsulate one’s life while contemplating
length, and if an issue, overall expense. I have read thousands of obituaries
to obtain little bits of information about others’ existences to gain little
crumbs of truth. As the obituary is often submitted by a family member, typically
they know how the dearly departed wanted to be remembered; what was really
important to include about their life. On Dec. 31, 1947, “The Palm Beach Post”
reported, “Mrs. N. G. Buell Dies in Resort (page 2).
Here is the article as it was written and submitted:
“Services for Mrs. Nina Giles Buell, former theatrical
designer of New York, who died Tuesday morning at her apartment in the
Paramount Bldg., will be held at 2 p.m. today at the graveside in Hillcrest
Cemetery. The Rev. Ryan Wood, pastor of the Memorial Presbyterian Church will
officiate.” I am going to stop here to point something out. Buell dies on Tuesday
morning, the announcement and burial is the next day. I had no idea that a burial could occur that
quickly, when considering the process that I have encountered in the past. This
suggests that there was no need to plan a memorial service for friends or
family coming from afar. Continuing with the article:
“Mrs. Buell, who would have been 82 in a few days, died
after a short illness. For many years she headed the Buell Scenic Co., and
after her retirement from active work in 1926, she was consultant to their
daughter, Mabel Buell, a widow of Herbert Schulze, scenic designer, who uses
her maiden name professionally.
“Mrs. Buell, her daughter and the latter’s daughter, Joy,
came to Florida in April 1946, after spending some time in Miami Beach. They
have made their home in Palm Beach for more than a year, where Miss Buell has
been engaged in doing murals for a number of clubs.
“Mrs. Buell was born in Milwaukee, where her father was the
second white man to settle in the community. For several years she worked for
the Presbyterian Board in slum work in Portland, Ore. Later conducting a
kindergarten which the board built for her in Mexico near the border.
“She was married to Horace Hervey Buell, portrait and mural
artist.
“Their children, Mabel and Horace Cyrus Giles Buell, who
died in 1916, were born in California, and when they were both quite young the
family went abroad, living in London for two and a half years.
“After Mr. Buell’s death in 1919, Mrs. Buell who managed his
business affairs and her daughter devoted themselves to their scenic business
for years, and did sets for many shows, including a number of Schubert
productions.
“Mrs. Buell was a lay member of the National Vaudeville
artists Club, did many sets for vaudeville acts and was beloved by the
profession.
“Though there are many nephews and nieces in California,
immediate survivors include only the daughter and granddaughter.
“Friends who wish may view the body from 10 a. m. to 1 p. m.
today at the Mizell-Simon Mortuary.”
The following article was written by Henry T. Parker and published
in “American Magazine” (August 1923, page 68). Keep in mind that this was the
same year that Sosman & Landis closed their doors. Times were certainly changing.
Photograph that accompanied the article “A Successful Woman Scenic Artist” in 1918.
“A Successful Woman Scenic Artist.
When Mabel Buell was a child of two, and barely able to
crawl about a California beach, she grasped a stick and began to draw figures
bigger than herself in the sand. When she was ten she painted two heroic
tapestries for a hotel in southern Florida. When she was a year older she
“splashed” huge signs over a theatre curtain in Savannah, Georgia, and when she
was fifteen she climbed an eighty-foot ladder to a ‘bridge’ above a theatre
stage and began to paint her way down, rung by rung, to success, paradoxical as
that may sound. To-day, at twenty three, she is called upon for some of the
biggest productions along Broadway. She is the only woman scenic artist in
America.
“Her success, she says, is due to the fact that she has
always held to one ideal and has reused to be swayed from it by criticism,
handicaps, or disappointment. Even from those earliest days on the California
beach she knew that she could never deal in the miniature in art. She wanted
only the heroic, the statuesque, the bigger-than-life-itself. But once did she
try to evade the issue. Then, at the insistence of her father, she studied
landscape and portraiture for two years in London.
“Scene painting is an exacting art. It calls for a
physical strength and endurance that is not demanded in any of the allied arts.
Many times, especially when one is working in stock, and one or more complete
sets must be turned out each week, the scenic artist is called upon to work for
thirty and forty hours at a stretch. And when one considers that every minute
of each of those hours is filled with wielding a brush that weighs from five to
eight pounds, turning the big windlass that raises or lowers your canvas,
mixing one’s own paints, and forever considering the details of colors and
lights that are involved, it is easy to realize that scene painting is not
child’s play.
“I talked with Mabel Buell of the arduous side of her work,
as she paused after ‘sweeping’ a sky line across a forty-foot canvas that was
destined to be a back drop for a new production by the Coburns. Miss Buell
looks all of five years younger than her confessed twenty-three. She is small,
slim, and dainty, and her trim knickers and tailored smock were so bedaubed
with pigments that she looked as though she should have been in a nursery,
coloring cut-out dolls, rather than tackling the huge canvas that hung before
here.
‘Hard work? Of course, it is hard work,’ she said; ‘but
then so is everything else that is worthwhile. I am never so happy as when I am
‘way up here on my bridge with my paints, brushes and canvas. It is only then
that I am really living my life as I first conceived it, and I know that I
would be miserable if I couldn’t do it. I despise the detail of little work,
and have ever since I was a child in pinafores. Making a set in miniature
drives me to distraction and sometimes – even when I am in a hurry to finish a
model to show to some manager or director – I have to quit and come up here in
this atmosphere of bigness to think things out and get the right perspective.
‘But I do know that it is the so-called drudgery of the
thing that turns most women against scene painting as a means of expression and
livelihood. I have had hundreds of girls come to me and ask about my work and
by what means they, too, might take it up and succeed at it. And they have all
seemed highly interested until I have told them that the real scenic artist
must of necessity do all or most of his own painting, then they have turned
away.
‘It was simply too much for them, and very wisely, I
presume, they have sought other fields more suited to their tastes. Not
necessarily that they are afraid of so much of it and also of the handicaps
that beset every woman who takes up scene painting as a profession, for there
is, as always will be, a great prejudice against women in this field.’
‘It was probably the knowledge of this fact that, more than
anything else, led my father to try and discourage me against it. Even to-day
many theatrical managers are inclined to refuse to allow women on the bridge,
and it is only there that one can work satisfactorily. The scenic artist
naturally sees only part of his work at the time. The vast canvas is stretched
out before him, and, unless he knows the exact scale on which he is working,
the perspective is likely to go all wrong.
‘I have found many men, managers, electricians, stage
carpenters, and others, who have been only to glad and willing to help me in
every way. That is – as soon as they learned that I knew my business and was
competent to do the work for which I have been employed. But they must be
convinced, and therein lies the hardest part for the girl who is trying to
break into the game. Of course I learned much from my father, though even he
was more often than not loath to have me around. It was my brother who used to
act as his ‘paint boy,’ cleaning his brushes and mixing his paints. But I made
the most of my opportunities. I hung around and picked up what information I
could, and always kept in mind that some day I was going to climb to the bridge
and do scene painting all by myself.’”
Mabel Buell directing operations in one end of the ballroom in the Opera Club of Chicago. Photo accompanied “A Successful Woman Scenic Artist” by Henry T. Parker and published in “American Magazine” (August 1923, page 68).
In 1923, the “Olean Evening Herald” reported, “Mabel A.
Buell, the only woman scenic artist in New York, claims that scene painting is
ideal work for the woman artist, combining aesthetic progress with a large
salary as few other artistic professions do” (6 June 1923, page 9).
Mabel Buell pictured in the “Buffalo Courier,” 31 Dec 1919.From the “Tucson Citizen,” 4 Jan 1920, page 10.
Today I explore the life of Mabel Buell (1896-1982) as she
became a popular subject in 1918 newspapers. As I am covering that year in the
life and times of Thomas G. Moses, this seems like an appropriate moment to add
a little historical context about female scenic artists. On March 10, 1918, the “Buffalo Times”
reported that Mabel Buell was “a noted scenic artist with the Bonstelle Company
and has a host of friends in New York” (page 30). The “Buffalo Courier” added
that she was “one of the few women scenic artists with the Bonstelle Company at
the Star Theatre” (Feb. 17, 1918, page 7). However, Buell’s scenic art career
began well before 1918. By 1916, both Buell, and her mother Nina C. Buell were listed
as scenic artists in the Sioux City Directory, each working at the Princess
Theatre and rooming at the Jackson Hotel. Mabel’s father, Horace H. Buell, was
also a well-known scenic artist, but working and living elsewhere at the time. I
will explore the entire Buell family in a few days. However, Horace H. Buell passed away in 1919,
three year after his son, Horace Jr., who was also a scenic artist.
Mabel Buell pictured in the “Buffalo Courier,” 17 Feb, 1918, page 7Mabel Buell pictured in the “Buffalo Times,” 10 March 1918, page 20.
The story of Mabel’s rise to fame was told to many
newspapers over the years. She shaped her introduction to scenic art and
training to fit with societal expectations. In 1922 the “Washington Post”
reported, “Mabel Buell, still in her early twenties, petite and blond, is the
last person one would associate with a big paint brush and scenery, yet this
diminutive young woman is the only feminine possessor of a union card in the
Scene Painters’ union, and is in fact, the only woman in the United States who
is a real scenic artist. Miss Buell’s father was Horace Buell, one of the most
famous scenic artists of his time, and as a small child Mabel learned from him
the fundamentals of her art, for real art it is. When still a girl in her teens
she assisted him when he was engaged in stock, and upon his death she undertook,
on her own, to carry on the Buell name in theatrical history. A year ago she
was a scenic artist in stock in Detroit with the Jessie Bonstelle stock company
and last summer she was with Henry Hull in Dayton. She built and painted
scenery for ‘The Squaw Man.’ But she considered her production of ‘Main Street’
one of he best works, for she admits it is not as easy to get all of Main
Street, as it was pictured so vividly in the book, on the stage. Any day you
may care to you will find her high on the bridge on the stage in the Manhattan
opera house where she has her studio, brush in hand, working industriously on
some set. Miss Buell is one of the few independent scenic artists who possess
their own studios, and the nicest thing about her is that she is delightfully
naïve and cannot understand why there is anything unusual for a woman to be in
her profession. Her production of ‘Main Street’ has been highly praised for
retaining the correct atmosphere of the book” (March 12, 1922, page 3, in “Much
on the Job”).
A few years earlier, on Dec. 31, 1919, “The Newark Advocate”
featured Buell and mentioned some of her early history (Newark, Ohio, page 9).
The article reported, “To be a scenic artist at twenty-one with five years’
experience to one’s credit at an early age is something unusual for anyone, but
when the person is a slight little blond girl one simply has to investigate.
This is what the investigator finds out about Miss Mable Buell and the unusual
career in which she is steadily climbing to fame and fortune. She lives in New
York City and has been creating scenery for stock companies and vaudeville
teams since she was a slip of a girl, sixteen. She thinks perhaps she inherited
her ‘work,’ for her father, Horace Harvev Buell, was well known for his scenic
and portrait painting in New York and elsewhere in the country. When in London
doing scenery for a theatre there Mr. Buell sent his little daughter to an art
school to study. Mabel was but a tiny kiddie then with short skirts and long
pig-tails but she studied in the same class with, grown-up professional
artists.”
There is an interesting parallel
between Mabel and an earlier female scenic artist, Grace A. Wishaar (1876-1956)
who also made a splash in the scenic art world during the 1890s. Mabel was born
the same year that newspapers began mentioning Grace Wishaar. I explored the life of Wishaar almost three
years ago (see past posts 284 to 290), the petite brunette who eventually
married world-class chess champion Alexander Alekhine. Wishaar was also born
and started out on the West Coast, but began painting in New York at the turn
of the twentieth century. The “Buffalo Morning Express” interviewed Wishaar on
April 4, 1901 and published an article about her (page 3). Under the heading, “She is a Scenic Artist,”
the article reported that Wishaar had recently arrived from Seattle and was
working as the scenic artist Frank D. Dodge. After describing her artistic journey,
Wishaar was quoted as saying, “They told me at half the theaters in town that a
woman couldn’t do it. Any way, I have
proved one woman can.” Almost two decades later, Buell had made a similar
journey, but she had a head start in a scenic art family. In 1923 when
questioned about women in the scenic art field, Buell responded, “For there is, as always will be, a
great prejudice against women in this field” (“American Magazine” page 68)
Grace Wishaar pictured in the “Albuquerque Citizen,” 1905.
Regardless of either woman’s
accomplishments, each was erroneously credited as the only female scenic artist
in the country at the time, which was simply not the case, but that title it
made headlines. My research confirms
that there were many more female scenic artists at the time. The only
difference is that they evaded the printed record and were subsequently not
included in history books.
By 1918, Mabel was pictured in the “Dayton Herald” on July 11, (page 7). Under her portrait was the caption, “Miss Mabel Buell. This scenic artist of the Brownnell Stork Players at the Lyric, is responsible for a beautiful piece of tapestry which she painted for ‘The Thirteenth Chair,’ this week’s attraction. Miss Brownell will donate this very artistic piece of work to the Red Cross Society next Monday.”
There were also personal interest stories about Buell. The “Dayton Daily News” noted, “Miss Mary Buell, the scenic artist, has a little collie dog, Sheamus, a most loving pet whom she has shaved so closely this summer that he actually thinks that he is a poodle, and wants to climb into your lap” (Dayton, Ohio, 14 July 1918, page 44).
Mabel Buell pictured in the “Dayton Herald,” 11 July 1918, page 7.
Her Broadway credits for scenic design include “Fifty-Fifty,
Ltd.” (Comedy Theatre, Oct. 27, 1919-Nov. 29, 1919), “Plain Jane” (New
Amsterdam Theatre, May 12, 1924-Oct. 4, 1924), “Blackberries of 1932” (Liberty
Theatre, April 4-23, 1932), “Blackbirds of 1933” (Apollo Theatre, Dec. 2-Dec.
1933), “Summer Wives” (Mansfield Theatre, April 13-18, 1936), “Sea Legs”
(Mansfield Theatre, May 18-May 29, 1937), “Straw Hat” (Nora Bayes Theatre, Dec.
30, 1927-Jan. 1938), and “Lew Leslie’s Blackbirds of 1939” (Hudson Theatre, Feb.
11-18, 1939).
Mabel Buell was the scenic designer for “Blackbirds.”
The 1930 census listed Mabel as an artist working, also
painting in the interior industry. Her husband was Herbert H J Schulze (b. Oct.
30, 1891), also an artist, and listed as working in the picture industry. Schulze’s
WWI draft registration noted that he was working for Gates & Morange in New
York in 1917. At the time he filled out the draft registration, Schulze listed
that for the past five years he had been under the care of a doctor for heart
disease. The couple were married on Feb. 6, 1923 and celebrated the birth of
their daughter Joy the next year. He passed away on July 23, 1940. At the time
he was still working as a scenic artist for the theater, but lodging at another
residence.
On May 6, 1937, “The Brooklyn Daily Eagle” reported “Rear
Admiral Yates Stirling Jr., who retired a year ago as commandant of the
Brooklyn Navy Yard, has interrupted his writings on naval matters to become a
stage designer. Today he was busily at work in the studio of Miss Mabel A.
Buell at 1828 Amsterdam Ave., Manhattan, with whom he has formed a partnership.
In the set at which the two are now at work Admiral Stirling’s sea experience
is standing him in good stead, for it is set for ‘Sea Legs,’ a musical comedy
which opens with Dorothy Stone and depicts the exterior of a stream-lined cabin
on the deck of a private yacht. ‘Flesh has been wiped out,’ said the Admiral,
discussing the plight of the theatre today.’ All the training of talent is in
the night clubs or in the stage shows of a few theaters, the movies have eaten
up the seed corn. The harvest better be planted and Hollywood and the films
should start up theaters to train talent for the coming dearth’” (page 26). In
1939, Buell provided the illustrations for Yates Stirling’s “Sea Duty: Memoirs
of a Fighting Admiral” (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1939). They had a very
close relationship.
Inscription from Yates Stirling to Mabel Buell’s daughter. Image posted on a military forum.Inscription from Yates Stirling to Mabel Buell’s daughter. Image posted on a military forum.
In 1941, Mabel visited her cousin, Mrs. P. M. Baldwin, in
Las Cruces, New Mexico. Of her visit,
the “Las Cruces Sun-News” reported that Buell was an artist of New York City
and collaborator with Admiral Yates Sterling, writer and speaker. The article
elaborated, “Miss Buell is a portrait painter and does the frontispieces for
Admiral Sterling’s books. Also those pen and ink drawings that head each
chapter. She also does scenic painting and often works on stage sets for the
largest theatres in New York” (16 Feb. 1941, page 3).
By 1947 and 1948, Mabel was
living in west Palm Beach Florida, continuing her work as an artist until her
passing. More on Buell tomorrow.