Papers relating to the Pioneer Players
- Dates:
- 1913-2007
Description
- Admin History:
The Pioneer Players were a theatre society founded by Edith Craig in London in May 1911. Similar to the larger Stage Society, the Pioneer Players operated by charging an annual subscription and performed plays (effectively in private) for their membership. Some plays explicitly challenged censorship of the stage - they were politically active in the early nineteenth century and supported women's suffrage. From 1915 they devoted more energy to creating an art theatre in London with productions in translation from Anton Chekhov among many others.
Dame Ellen Terry was born on 27 February 1847 and later became the leading Shakespearean actress in Britain. Terry started acting as a child, marking the beginning of a career that would last for almost seven decades. Aged only 16, she married the artist George Frederic Watts but this marriage ended in separation within the year. Soon after she began a relationship with the architect Edward William Godwin, with whom she had several children including Edith Craig. At this point she left the stage for six years but returned in 1874 to great acclaim in Shakespearean and other classical roles.
She joined Henry Irving's company in 1878 as leading lady, and for the next twenty years she was considered the top Shakespearean and comic actress in Britain. Her management of the Imperial Theatre in London, which she took over in 1903, proved to be a financial failure and so Terry returned to acting and also began lecturing. She continued acting on stage until 1920 and also appeared in a few films before 1922. Ellen Terry died on 21 July 1928.
Edith Ailsa Geraldine Craig was born on 9 December 1869, the illegitimate daughter of Ellen Terry and Edward William Godwin. She became an established theatre director, producer and costume designer. When she was younger she also acted on stage, making her first appearance in 1878. Between 1887 and 1890 she trained as a pianist under Alexis Hollander in Berlin.
Craig was also an early supporter of the women's suffrage movement in England and in 1911 founded the feminist and reform minded 'Pioneer Players', of which she was the managing director and stage director. Her mother served as president of the society and the advisory committee including George Bernard Shaw and his wife. Craig produced 150 plays for the Pioneer Players before they closed in 1920, reviving for a final production in 1925.
As well as working with the Pioneer Players, Craig was involved with several suffrage groups, directing plays, street processions and selling newspapers on their behalf, and was also a substantial figure in the British Drama League. Also from 1916 until her death, she lived in a ménage a trois with dramatist Christabel Marshall and artist Clare Atwood. Craig also appeared in a number of silent films.
After the closure of the Pioneer Players, Craig worked producing plays for the 'Little Theatre' movement, and in 1929, after her mother's death, she converted the barn adjacent to Terry's house at Smallhythe Place into a theatre. A Shakespeare play is produced every year at The Barn Theatre to commemorate Ellen Terry's death.
Edith Craig died on 27 March 1947.
- Description:
- This collection comprises a scrapbook of press cuttings relating to the Pioneer Players, in particular Ellen Terry and Edith Craig, and loose photographs and cuttings. Many of these were removed from the scrapbook but others were added to the collection by the depositor, at a later date than the original accession.