This will be an unprecedented post, as I’m combining a TT and a review of the book from whence it came.
On the stage of Ford’s Theatre, Harry Hawk, facing upstage and bent over in mock civility, rotated his comic face to the audience and started his retort: “Don’t know the manners of good society, eh? Well, I guess I know enough to turn you inside out, old gal—”
Before he could finish, John Wilkes Booth with outstretched arm squeezed the trigger and their world turned upside down. BACKSTAGE AT THE LINCOLN ASSASSINATION
On April 14th, 1865, not even a week after General Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of North Virginia to General U.S. Grant, President Abraham Lincoln was murdered while attending a play at the Ford Theater in Washington, D.C. Backstage is an unusual history of the event, because it centers itself on the Theater itself and its cast and crew. The author opens with a look at the Ford Theater, and theater in general in the 1860s: I was surprised to learn how South-biased theater companies often were, but the author attributes this to the fact that southern men of means were often the theater’s leading patrons. John Wilkes Booth, who had ardent southern sympathies, was thereby not out of place when he talked politics — even in a Washington theater. He was well known as a former colleague to many of the members of the Ford Theater company, though before the assassination he’d declared he was giving up acting to pursue oil. The book captures the moments of the assassination very well, particularly the confusion — the darkness of the theater, the strange noise, Booth suddenly appearing on the stage from one of the upper boxes, and then disappearing amid confusion and then screaming. After setting the stage by introducing us to the cast and crew in the days leading up to the assassination, Bogar then follows the aftermath. Irrational mobs being what they were, some Washingtonians wanted to burn the theater on the very night Lincoln was shot. Bogar tracks the strange priorities of Seward, harassing stage-hands who Booth barely knew while ignoring his former colleagues with whom he’d spent years talking. Because of the nature of the crime, those who were arrested and accused with some connection to the plot were very poorly used: their homes ransacked, their possessions stolen, their persons consigned to solitary cells for weeks on end. The Ford Theater, too, was poorly used by the Union soldiers who seized it: the taint attached to Ford’s name undermined his future in dominating the theater scene, though he did receive a small consolation in being paid for the property by the US government. This was interesting little history, not merely for the backstage look but the look at 19th century theater in general.







