Maud Hoffman: Difference between revisions

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== Theatrical career ==
== Theatrical career ==


Maud was not trained as an actress before she took on her first role, but somehow she was cast as Juliet and made a noteworthy debut in Boston:
<blockquote>
Her opening night drew the largest and most fashionable audience that ever filled the theater. For the first time in its career, every critic in town was there. The audience was quick to recognize the value of her work and quick to respond to her acting, and she won a decided triumph. That a debutante should draw a crowded house for seven consecutive performances, in a Shakespearean play, is indeed remarkable. The fact of her having never performed before even as an amateur, and having had only two months real dramatic training, makes her success all the more astonishing.<ref>"Miss Maud Hoffman, a Webfoot [Oregonian] Juliet," ''The Oregonian'' (June 4, 1893): 13.</ref>
</blockquote>


American newspapers continued to follow her career after she moved to London. In 1911, the ''New York Times'' wrote that a performance in London's famous Royal Court Theatre of a new comedy in three acts entitled ''Married by Degrees,'' was " noteworthy, chiefly because it provided the medium for an American actress, Miss Maud Hoffman, to make a distinctly successful appearance before a British audience.''<ref>"AMERICAN ACTRESS SCORES IN LONDON; Maud Hoffman Makes Success of Difficult Role in New Comedy, ''Married by Degrees,'' ''New York Times'' (September 17, 1911): Section C, page 4.</ref>
American newspapers continued to follow her career after she moved to London. In 1911, the ''New York Times'' wrote that a performance in London's famous Royal Court Theatre of a new comedy in three acts entitled ''Married by Degrees,'' was " noteworthy, chiefly because it provided the medium for an American actress, Miss Maud Hoffman, to make a distinctly successful appearance before a British audience.''<ref>"American Actress Scores in London; Maud Hoffman Makes Success of Difficult Role in New Comedy, ''Married by Degrees,'' ''New York Times'' (September 17, 1911): Section C, page 4.</ref> This play was written by [[A. P. Sinnett]], and her success probably had a role in cementing their friendship.


== Feminist activities ==
== Feminist activities ==

Revision as of 21:53, 8 December 2023

UNDER CONSTRUCTION
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Maud Hoffman in photographic postcard

Maud Hoffman (1869-1953) was an American Theosophist and actress who was heir to the estate of A. P. Sinnett. She entrusted A. Trevor Barker with the task of publishing The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett and The Letters of H. P. Blavatsky to A. P. Sinnett, both based on correspondence from the Sinnett estate.

Personal life

Theatrical career

Maud was not trained as an actress before she took on her first role, but somehow she was cast as Juliet and made a noteworthy debut in Boston:

Her opening night drew the largest and most fashionable audience that ever filled the theater. For the first time in its career, every critic in town was there. The audience was quick to recognize the value of her work and quick to respond to her acting, and she won a decided triumph. That a debutante should draw a crowded house for seven consecutive performances, in a Shakespearean play, is indeed remarkable. The fact of her having never performed before even as an amateur, and having had only two months real dramatic training, makes her success all the more astonishing.[1]

American newspapers continued to follow her career after she moved to London. In 1911, the New York Times wrote that a performance in London's famous Royal Court Theatre of a new comedy in three acts entitled Married by Degrees, was " noteworthy, chiefly because it provided the medium for an American actress, Miss Maud Hoffman, to make a distinctly successful appearance before a British audience.[2] This play was written by A. P. Sinnett, and her success probably had a role in cementing their friendship.

Feminist activities

Theosophical Society activities

Maud Hoffmann joined Theosophical Society's H.P.B. Lodge in London on January 6, 1909.[3]

Mr. Jinarājadāsa wrote of her involvement with A. P. Sinnett and the Mahatma Letters that were published by her agency in 1923:

Mr. Sinnett had a devoted friend, Miss Maud Hoffman, almost like a daughter, who tended him in his last years, and he made her his legatee and executrix, and so the Letters came into her possession. Miss Hoffman then asked Mr. A. Trevor Barker to do the best that he could with them, and Mr. Barker published them as the work The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett.[4]

H. N. Stokes, in his The O. E. Library Critic, wrote that the president of the Theosophical Society based in Adyar, Annie Besant, ejected Miss Hoffman from the Esoteric Section for releasing the Mahatma Letters to the public against the wishes of the Mahatmas. However, Sinnett himself saw no objection in publishing the letters, and was supported in this by Gottfried de Purucker and others. Many of the letters had previously been published in books and periodicals. Miss Hoffman formed the Mahatma Letters Trust, and turned over responsibility for future editions to Christmas Humphreys and Elsie Benjamin.

In 1931, Miss Hoffman was a participant in the Centennial Conference in London held to honor the birth of Theosophical Society founder Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. The conference was an attempt proposed by Gottfried de Purucker to bridge gaps in the fractured Theosophical Movement in order to restore a sense of brotherhood and unity. Miss Hoffman was invited as an independent Theosophist of England.[5]

Connection to Gurdjieff

Writings

Miss Hoffman adapted the popular Mabel Collins book Idyll of the White Lotus into a play called Sensa, a Mystery Play in Three Acts.[6]

Additional resources

Notes

  1. "Miss Maud Hoffman, a Webfoot [Oregonian] Juliet," The Oregonian (June 4, 1893): 13.
  2. "American Actress Scores in London; Maud Hoffman Makes Success of Difficult Role in New Comedy, Married by Degrees, New York Times (September 17, 1911): Section C, page 4.
  3. Theosophical Society General Membership Register, 1875-1942 at http://tsmembers.org/. See book 3, entry 38033 (website file: 3D/37).
  4. C. Jinarajadasa, "On the Watchtower" The Theosophist 72 no.9 (June, 1951): 146-147.
  5. Anonymous, "In the Future - a Spiritual Brotherhood" The Eclectic Theosophist no.20 (Jan 15, 1974): 1.
  6. Published in 1950 by Theosophical University Press in Covina, California. It is available online at Theosophy Northwest [1]