Blanche Hays Fagen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
Blanche Florence Marks

(1884-12-12)December 12, 1884
New York, U.S.
DiedApril 1980(1980-04-00) (aged 95)
Fort Pierce, Florida, U.S.
OthernamesBlanche Hays
OccupationsActress, activist, writer, businesswoman
Blanche Hays Fagen
Blanche Hays, from the 1906 yearbook of Barnard College
Born
Blanche Florence Marks

(1884-12-12)December 12, 1884
New York, U.S.
DiedApril 1980(1980-04-00) (aged 95)
Fort Pierce, Florida, U.S.
Other namesBlanche Hays
OccupationsActress, activist, writer, businesswoman
Spouse(s)Arthur Garfield Hays
William H. Fagen
Children1, Lora Hays
RelativesRita Weiman (sister-in-law)
Jean Lenauer (son-in-law)

Blanche Florence Marks Hays Fagen (December 12, 1884[1] – April 1980) was an American actress, civil rights activist, journalist, and businesswoman. She was a member of the Provincetown Players.

Hays was born in New York City, the daughter of Samuel A. Marks and Frances E. Marks. She had an older brother, Maurice Marks, who became a playwright and married a screenwriter, Rita Weiman.[2] She graduated from Hunter College High School in 1899.[3] She graduated from Barnard College in 1906.[4] At Barnard she acted in student theatre productions,[5] and co-wrote and produced an operetta, Barnadesia, with classmate Edith Somborn Isaacs, as a fundraiser for a new dormitory.[6]

Career

In October 1920 Hays and two socialist activists tried to hold a street meeting in Mount Vernon, but they were denied a permit. They held the meeting anyway and were arrested. The charges were dismissed,[7] but they challenged the process by which their permit was denied. They took the case to the New York Supreme Court,[8] before losing in the appeals court in 1921.[9]

Hays was a member of the Provincetown Players.[10] She appeared in their New York productions of plays by Susan Glaspell, including Tickless Time in 1920,[11] and Inheritors and The Verge in 1921,[12] in casts with Margaret Wycherly, Ann Harding, James Light, Norma Millay, and Henry O'Neill.[13][14] She also performed in Savitri, or Love Conquers Death by Kedar Nath Das Gupta, at Cooper Union in 1921.[15] She acted in another Provincetown Players show in 1922.[16]

Before she divorced her first husband in 1924, she moved to Paris, where she was a close friend to Elsa Schiaparelli[17] and was a correspondent for several American publications, including Harper's Bazaar.[18] She studied art in Mexico in the studio of Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo in 1941.[18][19][20] During World War II she returned to the United States, and worked in a government censorship office.[21]

She moved to Florida with her second husband after the war, and they ran a smoked fish business together until they retired in 1961.[21] She ran an art gallery in Fort Pierce in the 1970s.[22] The Fort Pierce Arts League celebrated her 95th birthday in 1979, a few months before she died.[18]

Personal life and legacy

References

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