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10 - The Fourth Continental Tour

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 May 2021

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Summary

Aldridge's friends and admirers in Germany and Prussia were indeed eager to welcome him back, but a notice soon appeared in Ferdinand Roeder's Theater-Moniteur saying, “Ira Aldridge has asked us to announce that due to an illness he will not be able to begin his guest-tour through Germany before the New Year.”

This must have been a great disappointment for Aldridge as well, but during the interval he continued to make preparations for his tour by refurbishing his costumes and props:

Aldridge's illness lasted nearly a month, but eventually a Hamburg paper reported that “According to a wired message the famous African actor Mr Ira Aldridge will arrive here, and he will soon open his interesting guest-performance as ‘Othello’ which he will continue with ‘The Merchant of Venice’ and ‘Macbeth.’” The City Theater in Altona, a suburb of Hamburg, was already preparing for his arrival in a festive manner. Ludwig Dessoir, in a series of comic performances which included a parody of “Ludwig Devrient, or the Actor as Matchmaker” as well as a farce, also featured an amusing recital by Dessoir of “Ira Aldridge as Freier [suitor, or customer of a prostitute].”

However, Aldridge evidently had a relapse, for he remained in London recovering for close to another three months. During his convalescence, he wrote to Octavian Blewitt, secretary of the Royal Literary Fund, seeking financial relief for a friend, J. H. Keane, a London correspondent for a Continental journal who had fallen on hard times. Keane had also been serving as Aldridge's private secretary, handling his communications with theaters abroad, particularly those in Germany and Prussia.

Wellington Lodge, Wellington Road

Kentish Town 13th Feb/61

Sir,

Being fully acquainted with the circumstances which have placed a literary man, Mr J. H. Keane, in sudden and unexpected embarrassment— circumstances not arising in any way from any fault or improvidence on his part—I beg to testify to the fact that a grant of fifteen or twenty pounds would come not only most opportunely to the present relief of himself and family, but would immediately enable him to retrieve his position.

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Ira Aldridge
The Last Years, 1855-1867
, pp. 154 - 168
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2015

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