Norman Hackett

(Redirected from Norman H. Hackett)

Norman Honore Hackett (September 7, 1874 – February 12, 1958) was a prominent Canadian-born American stage actor of the early 1900s.[1] He was particularly noted for his Shakespearean roles. After he retired as an actor, he went on to a distinguished career at the Theta Delta Chi fraternity.

Norman Hackett
Hackett in 1906
Born
Norman Honore Hackett

(1874-09-07)September 7, 1874
DiedFebruary 12, 1958(1958-02-12) (aged 83)
OccupationStage actor

Early life

edit

He was born in Amherstburg, Ontario, Canada. His father was Thomas Hackett, a Master Pilot on the Great Lakes.[2] His mother, Christiana Honner, was also born in Amherstburg.[3] Young Norman and his family emigrated to Detroit, Michigan, in 1882.[4] He attended the University of Michigan in 1894,[5] where he studied literature, especially the Elizabethan period and Shakespeare, languages and oratory, with the intent of becoming a theater critic.[6] He was one of the founders of the Michigan Comedy Club at the University.[6][7]

Acting career

edit
 
Norman Hackett in 1919

Hackett left college after his second year, joining Actress/Manager Mlle. Hortense Rhéa in her production of Josephine, written by Albert Roland Haven of Rochester NY[6][8][9] Following three years with the company headed by Mlle. Hortense Rhea, he appeared in productions of the James-Kidder-Hanford Company for several more years.[10] In the early 1900s, he was associated with such eminent actors as Louis James, Frederick Warde, E. H. Sothern, Julia Marlowe, Kathryn Kidder, James O'Neill (father of Eugene O'Neill), Helena Modjeska, and Robert B. Mantell.[6][11]

Hackett was noted as a Shakespearean actor and lecturer, performing as Henry VIII, Macduff (Macbeth), Claudio and Horatio (Hamlet), Lysander (A Midsummer Night's Dream), Florizel (A Winter's Tale), Benvolio (Romeo and Juliet) and Cassius (Julius Caesar.)[6][11][12][13]

Hackett believed that classic training was the best foundation for an actor, and he took up more modern drama for its popularity.[6] A notable starring performance was in Satan Saunderson,[14] produced by Stair and Nicolai at the American Theatre (St. Louis; 1911) directed by Jessie Bonstelle.[15]

Other roles he appeared in included: Alexander the Great (under the management of Wagenhals and Kemper);[16] Double Deceiver (1913);[17] The Knife by Edward Sheldon (c. 1917);[5] Classmates, by William C. DeMille;[6][18] Enter Madam;[19] Beau Brummel; and Little Shan Toy.

He also appeared in the film The Crimson Dove (1917).[20]

In 1927, his theatrical company was caught up in the Great Mississippi Flood of that year.[21] His last theatrical performance was in The Constant Wife with Charlotte Walker and Lou Tellegen, presented at the Lyceum Theater in Rochester NY.[9]

Acting philosophy

edit

In an address to the Rochester Community Players on September 25, 1941, at the Sagamore Hotel, Hackett expounded on his theory of acting. He stated that Mrs. Fiske (first cousin to Robert Stevens, the managing director of the Community Players) was the pioneer of the 'ultra modern' school of acting, which considered taboo anything that "savors of exaggeration in voice or action. This striving toward naturalism has created a tendency in the profession to underplay. Motion pictures, a repressed art, have contributed to this tendency, for in them there must be no jerky movements, no grand gestures."

He went on to say "I agree that the natural school of acting is the better school, but not at the loss of getting your lines across. That's the important thing, and all the 'drawing room manner' you can command on the stage is ineffective if the audience cannot hear those cultured voices or understand those gentle gestures."[22]

Later years

edit

Following his acting career, Hackett served as National Secretary of the Theta Delta Chi Fraternity.[9] He is the author of the Pledge Manual of Theta Delta Chi. He has been described as 'Mr. Theta Delta Chi' and quoted as saying "Loyalty to a cause is what keeps life fine, and loyalty to your fraternity must be lived."[23] The Theta Delta Chi Educational Foundation supports the "Norman Hackett (Gamma Deuteron 1898) Memorial Leadership Conference Center" at the Theta Delta Chi Central Fraternity Office in Boston, Massachusetts.

Norman Hackett died February 2, 1959, in Detroit from a coronary occlusion.[1]

Publications written by Norman Hackett

edit
  • Come My Boys: Memoirs Of Thirty-Four Years On The American Stage And A Lifetime In Theta Delta Chi (Hackett Memorial Publication Fund, 1960)
  • The Pledge Manual of Theta Delta Chi (George Banta Publishing Co, 75th Grand Lodge;1952)

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Yonkers, N.Y. Herald-Statesman, Feb. 13, 1959
  2. ^ Petition of Norman Hackett for Naturalization, April 2, 1919
  3. ^ 1910 United states Census; Detroit, Michigan
  4. ^ 1900 United States Census; Buffalo NY; note: he also appears in the 1900 Census in Detroit, Michigan, with essentially identical personal information
  5. ^ a b The Michigan Alumnus, Vol. 24 (1917-18), ph. 211
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "The business man in the amusement world : a volume of progress in the field of the theatre", by Robert Grau, 1910; pg. 348
  7. ^ The University of Michigan, An Encyclopedic Survey, pg. 1869 (http://quod.lib.umich.edu/u/umsurvey/AAS3302.0004.001/1:3.2.22?rgn=div3;view=fulltext)
  8. ^ The Shield; Official Publication of the Theta Delta Chi Fraternity, Vol. 11, pg. 327
  9. ^ a b c "Hackett to Open Play Drive"; newspaper clipping dated Sept. 24, 1941, located in the 1941–1944 Scrapbook of the Rochester Community Players, on deposit with the Local History Department of the Rochester, NY Public Library
  10. ^ The Shield, published by Theta Delta Chi, Vol. 16, No. 1, pg. 81
  11. ^ a b Pittsburgh Press, February 18, 1912
  12. ^ "Norman Hackett Lectures Today on 'Shakespeare and his Haunts'", Cornell Daily Sun, Cornell University, April 19, 1907; similar lecture, Feb. 10, 1908, at the University of Michigan: Michigan alumnus, Volume 14, pg. 208
  13. ^ Romeo & Juliet Prompt book of the Southern and Marlowe tour of 1904–05, in the collection of Harvard University Library: http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/viewtext/2573358?op=t&n=16847&s=4
  14. ^ The Toronto Sunday World, Dec. 15, 1912, pg. 7
  15. ^ Belknap Playbill and Program Collection; George A. Smathers Libraries; University of Florida (http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/belknap/ufplaybills5.htm)
  16. ^ New York Times Sept. 1, 1903
  17. ^ Macauley's Theatre Collection, University of Louisville
  18. ^ New York Times, Sept. 18, 1908
  19. ^ New York Times, July 28, 1921
  20. ^ imdb.com/name/nm0352492/
  21. ^ New York Times, "Byrd Urges Flood Aid at Good-Will Meeting", May 19, 1927
  22. ^ As quoted in a newspaper article of the Rochester Times-Union, dated September 26, 1941, located in the 1941–1944 Scrapbook of the Rochester Community Players, on deposit with the Local History Department of the Rochester, NY Public Library
  23. ^ "Theta Delta Chi - Epsilon Triton. ASU - Arizona State. Tempe, AZ". epsilontriton.org. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
edit