Anita Bush Players

January 23, 2008 
/ Contributed By: Anthony Duane Hill

Anita Bush Players

Anita Bush Players

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The Anita Bush Players, also known as the Anita Bush All-Colored Dramatic Stock Company was organized by Actor Anita Bush in New York City in 1915. An actor, dancer, and producer, Anita Bush turned to drama after a back injury ended her dancing career in musical theatre and vaudeville. She organized the Anita Bush Players (ABP), a pioneer African American dramatic stock company. Bush presented her idea of launching a dramatic stock company to Eugene “Frenchy” Elmore, assistant manager of the newly renovated Lincoln Theatre, a vaudeville house in Harlem, New York. Bush convinced Elmore that she could assemble a production within two weeks (even though she did not have a company). Elmore was sold on the idea and signed Bush to a contract. She in turn secured Billie Burke, an active white director/playwright in the Harlem community to direct the group in his play The Girl at the Fort, a light comedy with five characters. Bush also assembled a promising group of actors that included Carlotta Freeman for the dramatic and emotional roles, Dooley Wilson for the comedic and light character roles, and Andrew Bishop for the juvenile lead roles.

The Anita Bush All-Colored Dramatic Stock Company opened with Fort at the Lincoln Theatre in November 1915. During the next six weeks, they presented a different play every two weeks with great success. Maria C. Downs, however, a wealthy entrepreneur of Cuban descent and proprietor of the Lincoln Theatre, ordered Bush to change the name of the group to the Lincoln Players. Bush refused and took her company to the Lafayette Theatre where they opened in Across the Footlights in December, 1915. Thereafter, ABP mounted a play each week–mainly adaptations of Off-Broadway melodramas and the classics. They included The Gambler’s Sweetheart (adapted from The Girl of the Golden West) and an abridged version of Dion Boucicault’s The Octoroon. In March 1916, the Lafayette Theatre management purchased the company from Bush and changed the name (with her consent) to the Lafayette Players which eventually became one of the best-known black dramatic stock companies in America. Within a year, Bush organized four new groups of Lafayette Players in other cities for her circuit tour. In 1920, Bush left the Lafayette Theatre to pursue a film career in all-black films.

Author Profile

Dr. Anthony D. Hill, writer, director, administrator, and associate professor of drama in the Department of Theatre at The Ohio State University, has also taught at Vassar College, University of California at Santa Barbara. He has concentrated on previously marginalized theatre practices, African American and American theatre history, and performance theory and criticism. He currently focuses on the life and works of August Wilson, and African American Cinema, and Black masculinity in the works of African American male playwrights. Hill is author with Douglas Q. Barnett of Historical Dictionary of African American Theater (Scarecrow Press, 2008, 642 pgs.). His book Pages from the Harlem Renaissance: A Chronicle of Performance (Peter Lang, 1996, 186 pgs.) is now in its third reprint. He is featured in Whose Who in Black Columbus (2006 ed.). His essays have appeared in such journals as Text and Presentation, Journal of the Comparative Drama Conference; Black Studies: Current Issues, Enduring Questions; and African American Review (formerly Black American Literature Forum). He contributed historical articles to Dr. Quintard Taylor’s on-line Pursuing the Past in the Twenty-first Century; a book review in The Journal of the Southern Central Modern Language Association; and was contributing editor for History of the Theatre (9th ed.), Theatre Studies, and Elimu. Hill received degrees in theatre at the University of Washington (B.A.), Queens College (M.A.), and in performance studies at New York University (Ph.D.).

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Hill, A. (2008, January 23). Anita Bush Players. BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/anita-bush-players/

Source of the Author's Information:

Anthony Duane Hill, ed., An Historical Dictionary of African American Theatre (Prevessin, France: Scarecrow Press, 2008).

Further Reading