Margaret Mitchell (actress)

Maggie Mitchell
Born Margaret Julia Mitchell
June 2, 1836
New York City, New York
Died March 22, 1918(1918-03-22) (aged 81)
New York City, New York

Margaret Julia Mitchell (popularly known as Maggie Mitchell) (1836–1918) was an American actress, born in New York City.[1] She made her speaking debut as Julia in The Soldier's Daughter at the Chambers Street Theatre in 1851. The parts in which she earned the greatest fame were Jane Eyre, Mignon, Little Barefoot, and Fanchon the Cricket.

Family

She was married to Henry Paddock, her manager, in 1868, and they had two children, Fanchon and Harry M. Paddock. They divorced twenty years later and she was wed to Charles Abbott (Mace), and retired from the stage to live in New York. She was (variously) the mother or aunt of Julian Bugher Mitchell (b. 7 Nov. 1851), a musical comedy director associated with Weber & Fields and Florenz Ziegfeld.[2][3]

Maggie Mitchell's mother was born Hannah Dodson in 1805 in Knaresborough, Yorkshire. She married John Lomax, a native of Bolton, and emigrated to the USA in 1830. In 1832, they were preparing to return to England to escape an epidemic of cholera, but Lomax died before they sailed. Hannah afterward married Maggie's father, Charles S. Mitchell (b. 1805) in Scotland, to whom Lomax's bookbinding business had been sold. Mitchell's cousin, Joseph Dodson Greenhalgh, recalled stories that circulated in the English side of the family about the actress's salary, her servants, accoutrements and jewelry.[4]

After her death on March 22, 1918 in New York City, Maggie Mitchell was interred in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.

References

  1. J. B. Clapp and E. F. Edgett (1899) Players of the Present, The Dunlap Company, New York
  2. Notable American Women 1607–1950: A Biographical Dictionary, Volume 2; copyright 1971, pgs. 551-552; by Edward T. James, Janet Wilson James, Paul S. Boyer
  3. Maggie Mitchell; North American Theatre Online
  4. Joseph Dodson Greenhalgh (1869) Memoranda of the Greenhalgh Family. (Bolton: T. Abbatt), pp. 22–27.
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "article name needed". New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.


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