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Gustave Frohman

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Name
  
Gustave Frohman

Role
  
Producer


Movies
  
The Fairy and the Waif

Children
  
Philip H. Frohman

Gustave Frohman

Died
  
August 16, 1930, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Marie Hubert Frohman (m. ?–1930)

Siblings
  
Charles Frohman, Daniel Frohman, Rachel Davison

People also search for
  
Charles Frohman, Daniel Frohman, Rachel Davison, Marie Hubert Frohman, George Irving

Gustave frohman top 8 facts


Gustave Frohman (c. 1854 – August 16, 1930) was a theatre producer and advance man. He was one of three Frohman brothers who entered show business and he worked for most of his career alongside his brother, Charles Frohman. These two financed a number of theatre productions, often featuring African American actors. For instance, in 1878, they starred Sam Lucas in the first serious stage production of Uncle Tom's Cabin with a black man in the lead role.

Gustave Frohman Gustave Frohman Wikipedia

Gustave Frohman saw his greatest success in blackface minstrelsy. In 1881, he and his brother bought Callender's Consolidated Colored Minstrels, a small African-American troupe, from Charles Callender. They kept the valuable Callender's name but focused on ornamenting their sets and costumes; the troupe eventually became the most lavishly produced black troupe in the world. Their success was so great that by 1882 the Frohmans were able to buy J. H. Haverly's black troupe and merge it with theirs. The new troupe's size was so big and the Frohmans' grasp on the market so tight that Gustave and Charles Frohman split the troupe into three so as to allow them to tour more widely.

In 1915, the three Frohman brothers created The Frohman Amusement Corp. as a motion picture production company but Charles died a few months later in the sinking of the RMS Lusitania. Gustave and Daniel assumed control of the theatre operations plus ran the film production company until 1920.

He died in New York City in 1930.

References

Gustave Frohman Wikipedia


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