Johnstone Bennett (1870 – April 14, 1906) was an American actress and vaudeville performer.
Early life
Walenton (or Valentine) Cronise was possibly born in France, or Spain, or at sea (sources tell various stories), and was adopted as an infant by Mrs. Mary Bennett in the United States. When Bennett died, she was adopted again, by actress Sibyl Johnstone. She called herself "Johnstone Bennett" after the two women who raised her.
Career
Johnstone Bennett was with a small touring company when she was discovered by Richard Mansfield and cast in Monsieur (1887) in Madison Square Theatre. Still with Mansfield's company, she appeared in Prince Karl (1887), Lesbia (1888), A Parisian Romance (1888), and Beau Brummell (1890). She also appeared in Honor Bright (1888), All the Comforts of a Home, A Noble Son (1889), The Story of Rodion (1895), and in starring roles of Jane (1891), The Amazon, Fanny, and A Female Drummer (1898). In vaudeville she performed in sketched titled A Quiet Evening at Home and American Types.
Bennett wore masculine clothing and short hair, both on and off the stage. She collected cuff buttons and shirt studs, and had her skirts made with trouser-style pockets. She hired a male valet instead of a maid or press agent, and she lent her name to a haberdashery company in New York. In 1899 she caught a mouse in her dressing room, and planned to keep it for a pet.
Novelist Willa Cather described her as "jovial, natty Johnnie Bennett, a hail-fellow-well-met, and the trimmest tailor-made New Woman of them all. She is another one who has learned how to cheat time: her cheeks are just as ruddy and her big gray eyes as frank and frolicsome and boyish as they were in the days of Jane, eight or nine years ago." Theatrical manager Robert Grau remembered Bennett as "distinctly without an equal in her time."
Personal life
Johnstone Bennett was destitute in her last years and survived with assistance from the Actors' Fund. She tried moving to California for her health, but it did not improve and she returned to New Jersey. She died from tuberculosis in 1906, aged 36 years, in Bloomfield, New Jersey.
References
- Fraser, Stuart (March 1913). "A Rose by Any Other". Green Book Magazine. p. 517.
- "The Theatre" Evening Star (January 26, 1901): 22. via Newspapers.com
- "Our Gallery of Players" The Illustrated American (November 5, 1892): 434.
- Wilson, Scott (2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons (3rd ed.). McFarland. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-4766-2599-7.
- Untitled theatrical news item, New York Times (July 17, 1887): 12. via Newspapers.com
- "Jane" The Illustrated American (October 31, 1891): 501-502.
- "The Stage" Munsey's Magazine (October 1893): 100.
- A. D. Storms, "Johnstone Bennett" The Players' Blue Book (Sutherland & Storms 1901): 260-261.
- "The Stage" Munsey's Magazine (December 1892): 339.
- Thomas Allston Brown, 'A History of the New York Stage (Dodd Mead 1903): 182, 340, 425, 428, 429, 432, 436.
- "Johnstone Bennett" Los Angeles Times (May 6, 1906): 73. via Newspapers.com
- Untitled opinion item, Detroit Free Press (April 22, 1892): 14. via Newspapers.com
- "Has Her Valet" The Tennessean (October 18, 1896): 21. via Newspapers.com
- "Lime Light Flashes" The Capital (June 24, 1899): 10.
- "Metropolitan" Profitable Advertising (February 15, 1898): 351.
- "Vanquishes a Mouse; Johnstone Bennett's Trousers Stood Her in Good Stead" Los Angeles Herald (June 23, 1899): 3. via California Digital Newspaper Collection
- Willa Cather, "The Player's Rubiyat" (February 4, 1899), reprinted in William J. Curtin, ed., The World and the Parish: Willa Cather's Articles and Reviews 1893-1902, Volume 2 (University of Nebraska Press 1970): 543. ISBN 9780803215450
- Robert Grau, Forty Years Observation of Music and the Drama (Broadway Publishing Company 1909): 96.
- "A Noted Actress Ill and In Want" San Francisco Chronicle (August 16, 1905): 3. via Newspapers.com
- "Johnstone Bennett Ill" New York Times (March 24, 1906): 9. via ProQuest
- "Johnstone Bennett Dead" New York Times (April 15, 1906): 9. via ProQuest
- "Miss Johnstone Bennett Dead" Chicago Tribune (April 15, 1906): 6. via Newspapers.com
External links
- Johnstone Bennett at the Internet Broadway Database
- Johnstone Bennet photographs and clippings, at Queer Music Heritage.