Saturday, December 30, 2023
Thursday, November 16, 2023
Confidence Man
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Dr. J.W. Amey appeared in a 1918 "great men" directory. |
Ironically, the first time the newspapers took note of Jesse
Willis Amey, he was playing the role of a confidence man in a play, Black
Diamond Express.
As the 29-year old Amey toured Pennsylvania and Maryland with the
troupe Railroad Comedy Drama, he formulated grand plans for the rest of his
life. It was 1900 and he did not intend to spend much more of the twentieth
century living with his sister and brother-in-law in upstate New York.
Within a few years Amey enrolled at the New York University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College and by 1907 he was an MD ensconced in the NYU Department of Dermatology. Among his first patients, who both died, were the ringmaster of the Hippodrome Theatre and a repertory actor. The doctor always kept one foot in the theater.
Dr. Amey was living on West 45th
Street and getting around town as a member of the Friars Club and the New York
Athletic Club when he made the acquaintance of Nelle Burrelle, wealthy widow
and president of Burrelle’s Clipping Bureau.
An Ohioan named Frank Burrelle established the Bureau in New York City in 1888. Purportedly the idea came from a conversation he overheard: two businessmen in a bar bemoaning the fact that they had no way to keep track of the newspaper stories about their companies.
Frank’s second wife,
Nelle, a native of Indiana who’d led a wild life as the wife of a Pittsburgh
railroad man before she divorced him and came to New York, was creative and
enterprising. She expanded the Bureau with commemorative scrapbooks and pitched
Burrelle’s services to writers and performers on the circuit, such as Emile
Zola in 1898.
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Nelle and Frank embraced automobiles around the turn of the twentieth century. This article appeared in 1905. |
In 1910, Frank died unexpectedly while he and Nelle were on a cruise in the Gulf of Mexico. By that time Burrelle’s had 3,000 clients and a large office in the City Hall neighborhood where all of the New York newspapers were headquartered. Nelle moved into an apartment in the Carlton Hotel on 44th Street, which she decorated with patent medicine ads, tools, and “For Sale” signs.
On March 9, 1911, a notice
of the engagement of Nelle Burrelle to Dr J. W. Amey appeared in the society
pages. The Brooklyn Times-Union commented:
Beside having shown herself a competent
business woman and having registered the biggest year’s business in the life of
the firm, Mrs. Burrelle is well known in social circles and supports many
charities unostentatiously. Dr. Amey is one of the most popular physicians in
the city and he and Mrs. Burrelle have long been friends.
That very night Nelle denied the engagement. Amey followed with a statement: “The story of the engagement between Mrs. Burrelle and myself, as published today, was authorized by me and issued in good faith.”
Nelle mused to a reporter:
Why did Dr. Amey make such an announcement?
I suppose, in his case, the wish was father to the thought. Perhaps the doctor
has imagination and wished to carry me by storm. Well, we are not living in
medieval times. Men don’t strap their women across their horses now and carry
them away.
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During these years, Nelle and her company were on top of the world. |
Ten months later, Nelle fell ill at her apartment. Her death followed a 48-hour coma. Acute nephritis and uremia were listed as the causes, but the coroner received an anonymous telephone tip that hinted at murder.
Coroner Holtzhauser did not say, “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark,” but he did make an announcement: “From what I have learned thus far I believe there may be something wrong.” He performed an autopsy and ruled Nelle’s death to be of undetermined cause.
Speaking to the press, Holtzhauser expressed surprise that Dr. Amey had been one of the three physicians who attended Nelle, that Amey had put his own nurse in charge of the patient, and that he had prescribed medicine that was found at Nelle’s bedside.
The drama continued.
Dr. Amey, whose inappropriate behavior did not seem to draw further suspicion among the authorities, reported to the police that thousands of dollars’ worth of jewelry was missing from Nelle’s bedroom and her safe in the Carlton Hotel. He described two solitaire rings, a pear brooch, a purse studded with diamonds, and so on.
Nelle’s will was missing, too! But about six months later, Dr. Amey delivered Nelle’s will to the surrogate. It had been slipped under his door, he said.
Someone leaked the contents to the press. Nelle had left shares of Burrelle’s stock and money to various employees, her two sisters, and Frank Burrelle’s two children by his first wife. She named Jesse W. Amey co-executor and left him the rest of her estate.
The date of execution and Nelle’s signature were missing, rendering it invalid. Eventually Nelle’s two sisters claimed the inheritance.
Dr. Amey went on with his life, purchasing a yacht, competing in trapshooting contests, and marrying Grace May Hoffman, a coloratura soprano who toured with John Philip Sousa. The couple had two sons who were young when their mother died in 1924.
Grace’s parents were devastated—not only by their daughter’s early death. For some reason, the prospect of Dr. Amey continuing to play a part in the lives of their grandsons was out of the question.
Jesse, Jr. and Frank were reared in Manhattan until their grandfather’s death and then in Schenectady by their great-aunt Grace.
Dr. Amey never missed a chance to get his name in the papers. In the late twenties, he started a cosmetic surgery clinic well before such doctors knew what they were doing in the operating room. Mehmet Oz-like, he promoted a controversial anti-cancer serum. His pronouncements were clunky and pompous at the same time.
He fit neatly into his
time as an actor-doctor.
*Eventually Dr. Amey
wended his way to Coral Gables, Florida, remarried to a wealthy divorcee, and died
in 1939.
Tuesday, November 14, 2023
Calling Joseph Mandelkern
“Famous for his artistic eye,” the early-twentieth century theater agent Joseph Mandelkern liked to boast that he discovered the ethereal prima ballerina Anna Pavlova.
This was not true. However, between 1900 and 1924, the New York-based impresario sailed to Europe dozens of times and always returned clutching a bunch of contracts for Russian performers to tour the United States.
Perpetually wielding a cigar, Mandelkern was “Mephistophelian,” “fast-talking,” and “wily,” according to reports.* I bet that his rivals, and perhaps some of his friends, occasionally felt the urge to punch him or sue him. He landed in court at least a few times.
Yet he did help to ignite
the American passion for classical Russian ballet. In the fall of 1911, many
U.S. newspapers ran this story:
RUSSIA
FORBIDS IMPERIAL DANCERS TO LEAVE COUNTRY
The ranks of the imperial artists have been
so depleted that Chief Director Krupensky is at his wit’s end to provide a
suitable ballet to be given before the Tzar at Krasnoye Selo, the famous “red
village” near St. Petersburg where Russia’s ruler spends the summer.
At the center of the controversy stood Lydia Lopokova, one of Mandelkern’s prize catches. Beautiful and independent, Lydia possessed an extraordinary presence although she was only sixteen years old.
Three dancers—Lydia, her brother Feodor, and Alexander Volinine—signed with Mandelkern in Paris during the summer of 1910. At the time, Lydia and Alexander were performing with the avant-garde Ballets Russes.
Then Lydia disappeared. After
a few days, during which detectives dashed madly around Paris, she emerged on
the arm of a nobleman of Polish descent. He had been following her around for
months and finally persuaded her to marry him. Now they would return to Russia
for the wedding.
Mandelkern must have twisted her arm hard because Lydia changed her mind and boarded the ship. When they arrived at Ellis Island a few weeks later, she said, “I like New York very much.”
During the next two years, Lydia earned a lot of money and fame. Mandelkern booked her all over the country, including Buffalo, N.Y., where a producer arbitrarily cut Lydia’s appearances in half.
Irate, Mandelkern lost control and shouted at the audience from a private box. The police arrested him and led him from the theater. The producer followed, delivering a few body blows along the way.
After paying a $25 fine, Mandelkern was released on $300 bail. Lydia returned to Europe, married the economist John Maynard Keynes, and left Joseph Mandelkern behind.
"House in the Pines," located in Jamesburg, N.J., was owned by a Russian couple. Mandelkern often visited there during the 1920s. |
After World War I, the business of artist representation saw considerable change, and there may have been less room for Joseph Mandelkern. Besides, he wanted a different life back in the old world.
In 1922 he applied for a
new passport. In his photograph, Mandelkern appears wizened, half-hidden by
large glasses and a straw boater. Six months after the passport was issued,
Mandelkern wrote to the Department of State to request that the headshot be
swapped for another picture in which he looked much younger.
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Passport photo, Joseph Mandelkern, 1922 |
Then he went off to Wiesbaden, where he married Therese Jung, a woman nearly 30 years younger than he. In June 1925, they moved to Merano, Italy, just south of the German border.
In May of 1938, Hitler visited Italy for the second time and enjoyed, in the words of historian Paul Baza, “a massive display of fascist spectacle in three cities: Rome, Naples and Florence.”
Soon after, Mussolini ordered the enforcement of severe antisemitic laws. Unsurprisingly, Therese and Joseph Mandelkern were marked “di razza ebraica” on a census of Jews conducted in Italy in August 1938.
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Hitler and Mussolini, 1938 |
There is evidence that Joseph tried unsuccessfully to return to the U.S. He suffered a stroke in December 1939, died soon after, and is buried in Merano’s Jewish Cemetery. In the official report of his death, no known relatives were listed besides Therese.
Few acknowledge that Joseph Mandelkern played a major part in shaping the cultural tastes of Americans at the turn of the twentieth century.
Really, he must have
been insufferable.
*Quotes from Bloomsbury Ballerina by Judith Mackrell, an excellent biography of Lydia Lopokova.
**https://www.jamesburg.net/jhistory.html
https://www.throughthehourglass.com/2023/11/calling-joseph-mandelkern.html
Saturday, October 21, 2023
Wednesday, October 4, 2023
Joseph Mandelkern's Return to Russia
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Tolstoy and Gorky, 1900 |
On July 4, 1905, the Polish-born
impresario and real estate man Joseph Mandelkern landed on page two of the New
York Times.
The 41-year old hotshot had arrived in Europe a few weeks earlier. He toured Warsaw, Lodz, and Bialystok. In the small town of Dzialoszyce with its majestic synagogue, Mandelkern visited his widowed mother, whom he had not seen since 1884 when he immigrated to America.
FOUND
ANARCHY IN POLAND
JOSEPH
MANDELKERN OF NEW YORK
TELLS
OF HIS OBSERVATIONS
He saw a parade of 20,000 people carrying red flags. Revolutionaries in blue shirts. Everyone armed with pistols and knives.
It is intriguing that Mandelkern chose the summer of 1905, a scant six months after the First Russian Revolution, to make a three-month trip into political and social chaos.
Days before Mandelkern arrived in St. Petersburg, the officers of the battleship Potemkin had been overcome by revolution-minded mutineers who were enraged by their treatment during the Russo-Japanese War.
As famously portrayed in
the 1925 film Battleship Potemkin, Cossacks murdered 1,000 men, women,
and children who stood cheering the mutineers from the Richelieu Steps in
Odessa while the ship was anchored offshore in the Black Sea.
Famous scene from Battleship Potemkin, directed by Soviet film director Sergei Eisenstein |
It was a dangerous, bloody
time but Mandelkern felt confident about navigating through the Russian Empire
because he possessed a “release from allegiance” signed by a consul general
named Count Ladyzhensky. Mandelkern had paid 800 rubles for the document.
A supply of Havana cigars also greased the wheels.
Crossing the border
between Germany and Russia, Mandelkern became aware of a new word, “Uligani,” derived
from the English word “hoodlum.”
It entered into every conversation he held, with friends or
strangers, in his home city. He heard it uttered in terror at the bier of a
murdered friend. When he looked for his dead father’s gravestone, the same word
was whispered into his ear by the gravedigger as a warning. When he wanted to
seek rest and recreation in a public park he heard it again on the lips of a
gendarme.
The Uligani preyed on everyone.
Now here was Mandelkern, a Jew, making his way through Russia as if he were an old friend of Nicholas and Alexandra. He also visited two anti-Czarists, famous writers both—Leo Tolstoy and Maxim Gorky.
Then Mandelkern went off to Yasnaya Polyana, Tolstoy’s country estate a few hours by train from Moscow. After lunch, Mandelkern learned that the Okhrana—the Czar’s secret police—regularly harassed Tolstoy. Meanwhile, the Bolsheviks demanded that he relinquish his property to divide among peasants.
Returning to the U.S. in August, Mandelkern met with a Times reporter to share grim tales of corruption, deprivation, and violence.
Nonetheless, Mandelkern told the reporter, he detected courage among the Russians, a willingness to speak out against the Czar’s tyranny and the waste of the Russo-Japanese War.
***
By the time of his 1905 visit, Mandelkern had established himself as a stealthy theater agent who nabbed gifted performers. His fluency in English, Russian, and Polish enabled him to execute contracts before anyone else in the room knew the details.
Always in motion, Mandelkern traveled through the Midwest and to Europe. His wife Pauline and their five children—at least two of whom were already superb musicians—watched him come and go.
One senses he was aloof and finicky.
He certainly had no time for his family in 1906, when Maxim Gorky accepted an invitation to come to America. Mandelkern even hinted at the possibility of a visit with President Theodore Roosevelt.
On a sparkly April day, Gorky arrived at Hoboken on a German steamship. A crowd of 1,000 greeted him. At the end of the gangplank, a delegation of socialists stretched out its hands: Abraham Cahan, editor of The Forward; Morris Hillquit, a labor lawyer; Gaylord Wilshire, a California entrepreneur; Leroy Scott, a writer and settlement worker; and Joseph Mandelkern.
Thus began Gorky’s high-flying adventure with Mandelkern at his elbow. Lunch at the St. Regis. A visit to Grant’s Tomb. Watching children feed the squirrels in Central Park. The circus at Madison Square Garden.
“In a Russian city almost every other man one meets is either a soldier or a policeman,” Gorky told Mandelkern. “I haven’t seen a single soldier all day, and only two policemen. Marvelous!”
That evening, he was driven down Fifth Avenue to “Club A,” a brownstone owned by a group of revolutionary-minded New Yorkers. Here would occur the highlight of Gorky’s visit: dinner with Mark Twain, William Dean Howells, and other American writers who supported the movement to overthrow the Czar.
A few days later, however, Gorky was beset by scandal.
It turned out that the writer had left his wife Katharine and two sons back in Russia. The woman who accompanied him to the U.S. was actress Maria Feodorovna Andreyeva, his mistress of several years.
Now Gorky ran into an American
problem: relentless prudishness about an issue that would have been irrelevant
in Russia.
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Hotel Brevoort, Fifth Avenue & Eighth Street |
Tossed from the Hotel Rhinelander to the Hotel Brevoort to the Hotel Belleclaire, denounced by the press and pushed away ever so gently by Twain et al, Gorky and Andreyeva found themselves begging for a place to lay their heads.
Joseph Mandelkern, who was very enthusiastic at first in his
eulogies of Gorky, said to a reporter for the Eagle that he had known it
for a long time and that others on this side knew of the relations with the
actress.
It does not appear that Gorky and Andreyeva went back uptown to stay with the Mandelkern family.
To be continued.
https://www.throughthehourglass.com/2023/10/joseph-mandelkerns-return-to-russia.html
Wednesday, September 6, 2023
Interrogating Joseph Mandelkern
In 1886, Joseph Mandelkern left his desk job in Bialystok City Hall and immigrated to America. His plans were far grander than many an Eastern European newcomer. He already knew that he would become an impresario.
After settling in New York City, Mandelkern placed a newspaper announcement that he had established a “New Yiddish Theatre.” Then he sailed off to London to recruit famous Yiddish-speaking performers. He had his eye on Jacob P. Adler, once a juvenile delinquent; now a renowned European actor.*
Wackily, the trip was funded by two wealthy Chicago clothiers named Rosengarten and Drozdovitch who thought that New York had no business staking a claim on Yiddish theater.
But the deal fell apart and Mandelkern came home instead with the team of Moishe Finkel and Sigmund Mogulesko, who had been a smash hit on the Romanian stage.
It didn’t bother Mandelkern that they were not a hit in New York. He had bigger fish to fry.
In 1889, Mandelkern traveled to Russia, Rumania, and Austria in search of more performers. Until the early 1920s, he would visit Russia recurrently through pogroms, war, and revolution.
Most Jews who fled Eastern Europe in the late nineteenth century did not intend to return to the land of persecution. Joseph Mandelkern’s ambition left no room for fear. Armed with a document which took two years to obtain, he managed to dodge reprisals—to put it mildly—from Cossacks and “Uligani,” as hoodlums were known.
In June 1910, the Brooklyn
Daily Eagle reported:
It appeared yesterday that while Oscar Hammerstein, the
impresario, had been barred out of Russia, it is said, because of his Jewish
parentage, and also because it had become known that he was seeking to persuade
Russian singers and dancers, favorites of the Czar, to leave Russia, Joseph
Mandelkern, another Jewish impresario of this city, had been freely traveling
through the Czar’s domains. Mr. Mandelkern, who lives at 20 East 120th
Street in this city, just received in Moscow and St. Petersburg, had great
success in contracting with popular ballet and operatic favorites of both
cities for American tours.
Evidently Mandelkern liked
to show off, tempt fate, and challenge authority.
That is why I wish the brilliant, effervescent dance critic Ann Barzel were still alive to explain Mandelkern to me. I met Ann in the summer of 1982 when she spent two weeks in Jackson, Mississippi covering the International Ballet Competition for Dance Magazine and Dance News.
At 77 years old, she had been devoted to all aspects of dance since the age of fourteen although she didn’t care for “Twyla Twerp.”
Since I was the Competition’s director of public relations, Ann and I spoke often even before the competition. In particular, she shared insight and background on the esteemed jury co-chaired by Robert Joffrey.
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Ann Barzel contributed an essay to the program for the 1982 International Ballet Competition. |
A few days after the appointment, Miss Golovkina called me to ask about proper attire for the galas to which she had been invited.
“I plan to wear the silk pajama,” she confided.
Ann loved the story.
Born in 1915, Sofia Golovkina would have been too young for Joseph Mandelkern to pluck from the arms of Mother Russia and put on tour in the United States.
But Ann—with her encyclopedic knowledge of the history of ballet and the business of dance—might have been able to explain Joseph Mandelkern’s rapid ascent as an agent and producer.
Was he a Czarist, a socialist or a capitalist? How did he manage to poach all of those Eastern European dancers and actors? And why did he leave the United States so hastily in 1924?
To be continued.
*Jacob Adler’s daughter
founded the Stella Adler School of Acting in 1949.
Monday, July 10, 2023
The Short Happy Life of Norman F. Wells: a Mount Vernon Story, Part I
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Montefiore Hospital's Country Home Sanitarium, early twentieth century A father and son, both stricken with tuberculosis, died 30 year...