Shakespeare Riots: Revenge, Drama, and Death in Nineteenth-Century America by Nigel Cliff

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  • Pub. Date: February 2009
  • Available for download via Wi-Fi and 3G
  • 336pp
  • Sales Rank: 587,152
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 2009
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: eBook, 336pp
    • Sales Rank: 587,152

    Synopsis

    One of the bloodiest incidents in New York’s history, the so-called Astor Place Riot of May 10, 1849, was ignited by a long-simmering grudge match between the two leading Shakespearean actors of the age. Despite its unlikely origins, though, there was nothing remotely quaint about this pivotal moment in history–the unprecedented shooting by American soldiers of dozens of their fellow citizens, leading directly to the arming of American police forces.

    The Shakespeare Riots recounts the story of this momentous night, its two larger-than-life protagonists, and the myriad political and cultural currents that fueled the violence. In an engrossing narrative that moves at a breakneck pace from the American frontier to the Mississippi River, to the posh theaters of London, to the hangouts of the most notorious street gangs of the day, Nigel Cliff weaves a spellbinding saga of soaring passions, huge egos, and venal corruption.

    Cliff charts the course of this tragedy from its beginnings as a somewhat comical contretemps between Englishman William Charles Macready, the haughty lion of the London stage, and Edwin Forrest, the first great American star and a popular hero to millions. Equally celebrated, and equally self-centered, the two were once friends, then adversaries. Exploiting this rivalry, “nativist” agitators organized mobs of bullyboys to flex their muscle by striking a blow against the foppish Macready and the Old World’s cultural hegemony that he represented.

    The moment Macready took the stage in New York, his adversaries sprang into action, first by throwing insults, then rotten eggs, then chairs. When he dared show his faceagain, an estimated twenty thousand packed the streets around the theater. As cobblestones from outside rained down on the audience, National Guard troops were called in to quell the riot. Finding themselves outmatched, the Guardsmen discharged their weapons at the crowd, with horrific results. When the smoke cleared, as many as thirty people lay dead, with scores more wounded.

    The Shakespeare Riots is social and cultural history of the highest order. In this wondrous saga Nigel Cliff immerses readers in the bustle of mid-nineteenth-century New York, re-creating the celebrity demimonde of the day and capturing all the high drama of a violent night that robbed a nation of its innocence.

    The Washington Post - Daniel Stashower

    It seems hard to fathom in modern terms -- "Judi Dench Launches Nuclear Strike" -- but, as author Nigel Cliff demonstrates, there was a certain inevitability about the drama. "In an age when theatres were the crossroads of a whole society," he writes, the subject of Shakespeare inspired "an almost hysterical passion." Cliff argues persuasively that "the Astor Place riot," as it came to be known, marked a turning point in America's search for a national identity. "Before American cultural imperialism there was British cultural imperialism," he notes, and the tension between the two seemed "inextricably bound up with the question of what sort of nation America would become." … The Shakespeare Riots is an intriguing, thought-provoking book.

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    Biography

    Nigel Cliff was educated at Oxford University, where he was awarded a double First in English and the Beddington Prize for English literature. He is a former theater and film critic for the London Times and a contributor to The Economist. This is his first book.

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