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Adah Isaac Menken
(June 15, 1835 - August 10, 1868) U.S.A.
Adah Isaac Menken
Actress, poet

Born into a Jewish family, probably in Chartrain (now Milneburg), Louisiana, a suburb of New Orleans, the later Miss Menken apparently was given the names Adah Bertha, and her surname was apparently originally Theodore, but other facts concerning her early life are obscured by later and confused publicity stories.

Her mixed-race father died when she was very young, and her mother was left without means until she married a man named Josephs. Adah became fluent in several languages, including German, Spanish, and Latin, and displayed a talent for singing and dancing as well. She was later to claim that in her youth she rode horses in a circus, modeled for a sculptor, and danced in the New Orleans French Opera House.

She married Alexander Isaac Menken in Livingston, Texas, in 1856 and thereafter retained his name on the stage through several short-lived marriages. She appeared on the stage at Shreveport, Louisiana, in The Lady of Lyons as early as 1857 and made her debut in New Orleans the same year in Fazio. She began to publish verse about that time; several poems appeared in the Cincinnati Israelite during 1857-59 and in the New York Sunday Mercury in 1860-61.

Menken first appeared on the stage in New York City in March 1859, but it was not until she opened in Albany, New York, in a dramatic adaptation of Lord Byron's Mazeppa, in June 1861, that she achieved lasting recognition. Appearing in the play's climactic scene apparently (though not actually) nude and strapped to a running horse, she created a sensation in several cities.

Strikingly beautiful, the central figure in a scandalous divorce case, and a talented poet who received encouragement from Walt Whitman, she numbered such literary men as Mark Twain, Bret Harte, and even Henry Wadsworth Longfellow among her friends and admirers.

Her fame preceded her to London, where she opened in Mazeppa in 1864. Her literary entourage there soon included Charles Dickens, Algernon Swinburne, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti. In 1865 she had a run in New York City and the following year another, and she made a successful United States tour before returning to Europe in 1866. Everywhere she played before record audiences.

Her performances in such pieces as Dick Turpin, The French Spy, Three Fast Women, and The Child of the Sun were generally respectfully received, but always the demand was for Mazeppa. She performed extensively in Paris and in Vienna, returning to London in 1867. She gave what proved to be her last performance at the Sadler's Wells Theatre in May 1868.

She died in Paris. Eight days later her Infelicia, a collection of poems that was dedicated to Dickens, was published in London.

© 1999 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

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