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Harry Eytinge (Actor 1822-1902) : ウィキペディア英語版
Harry Eytinge

Harry Eytinge (1822–1902) was the stage name of American actor, stage manager and producer, Henry S. Eytinge, (also known as Henry St. C. Eytinge) who captained the ''USS Shepherd Knapp'' during the American Civil War.
==Early career==
Eytinge was the son of Dutch merchant, Solomon Eytinge, who had settled in Philadelphia and in 1821 married American, Mary Ann Miller.〔Wedding at St Stephens Episcopal Church, 4 September 1821, reference: New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Vol. 140, No. 3, July 2009; page 221〕 Henry, their first of eleven children, was born in Philadelphia on October 30, 1822. He received a good education before taking to the stage, joining a group of strolling players and getting his first serious role at the age of seventeen with C. A. Logan at the ''Albany Pearl Street Theatre''. The following season he played Mitchell's ''Olympic Theatre'' in New York.
He was also interested in the sea and took a break from the stage, sailing to the Netherlands possibly in connection with his father's mercantile business. On his return he continued his stage career and produced a play by Dion Boucicault's, called ''London Assurance'', in Norfolk, Virginia, but it was not profitable. In about 1843 he went to sea again as owner/master of the brig ''Ganges'', trading between America, Europe and the Mediterranean with his father acting as shipping agent. During this period he visited London and appeared in two minor plays in the Strand Theatre – ''Ben the Boatswain'' and ''Monsieur Tonson'' (1847). 〔The English newspapers of the period reported that the actor who played these parts was Harry St. Cyr Perry, either a stage name used by Eytinge or misprint. 〕 After eight years he returned to the American theatre; in 1852 he was a stage manager in Cincinnati and in 1854 entered into a joint management venture with Henry E. Willard at the ''Metropolitan Theatre and New York Opera House''.

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