Harold Robertson Heaton (born January 19, 1861)
[U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 for Harold Robertson Heaton, Passport Applications, 1795-1905 > 1890-1892 > Roll 366 - 01 Apr 1891-13 Apr 1891, retrieved from Ancestry.com] was a newspaper artist whose work focused on cartoons. His prodigious body of work contributed to the development of political cartoons. He also illustrated books and produced sketches and paintings. He left newspaper work in 1899 to begin acting on the stage, and later wrote plays as well. He returned to cartooning for six years beginning in 1908, but continued acting while doing so. He appeared in many Broadway productions through 1932. A brief retrospective on his employment with the ''
Chicago Tribune'', from October 1942, mentioned his obituary had been printed "a few years ago".
Early years
Born in
Salem, Illinois, he was the son of Charles Heaton, a civil engineer from England, and Amy Robertson from Missouri.
[1870 United States Federal Census for Harry Heaton, New York > New York > New York Ward 15 District 02, retrieved from Ancestry.com][Amy A. Robertson in the Illinois, U.S., Compiled Marriages 1851-1900, retrieved from Ancestry.com] Although born in Illinois,
he spent much of his childhood in New York,
before moving to St. Louis. As a boy and young man he went by "Harry Heaton".
He attended the
St. Louis School of Fine Arts
The St. Louis School of Fine Arts was founded as the Saint Louis School and Museum of Fine Arts in 1879 as part of Washington University in St. Louis, and has continuously offered visual arts and sculpture education since then. Its purpose-buil ...
then worked on the ''
Missouri Republican'' in St. Louis.
In 1887 he was the first artist hired by the ''
Chicago Daily Tribune'',
where he later headed the illustration department.
Newspaper artist
Chicago Tribune
The first drawings Heaton prepared for the ''Tribune'' were done using the "chalk plate" method
[A base plate of metal the height of type was coated with a plaster of paris compound about an eighth of an inch thick. The drawing was done upon the dried compound, then etched into the base plate using a steel needle.] at his own home.
This gave way to the
zinc etching
Photoengraving is a process that uses a light-sensitive photoresist applied to the surface to be engraved to create a mask that protects some areas during a subsequent operation which etches, dissolves, or otherwise removes some or all of the mate ...
method by the end of 1887.
One drawing of the still incomplete but newly opened
Auditorium Building for the
1888 Republican National Convention
The 1888 Republican National Convention was a presidential nominating convention held at the Auditorium Building in Chicago, Illinois, on June 19–25, 1888. It resulted in the nomination of former Senator Benjamin Harrison of Indiana for preside ...
was reprinted fifty years later by the ''Tribune'' as an example of Heaton's skill.
Heaton's illustrations became some of the newspaper's most popular features, and his work was presented on the front page soon after he began working for the ''Tribune''. During the 1890s he signed his newspaper artwork as "HRH", which led to the nickname "His Royal Highness".
In 1893, he produced illustrated weekly commentaries on the
World's Columbian Exposition. The newspaper had him continue the Events of the Week drawings long after the exposition closed, and later published annual compilations in book form.
These "pen pictures" as the ''Tribune'' labelled them were a series of contiguous panels, a bit like a comic strip, though without a continuous storyline. Only the central panel bore the "HRH" signature. Besides drawing, Heaton also delivered lectures on newspaper illustrating to professional societies and social groups.
During the later years of the 1890s he also started taking part in amateur theatricals.
Heaton left the newspaper in the Fall of 1899 to pursue a stage career.
The Inter Ocean
In the fall of 1908 Heaton re-entered journalism by joining ''
The Inter Ocean'' as an editorial cartoonist. Although his cartoons with ''The Inter Ocean'' began as wide-ranging commentaries on current events, he found his niche within the world of Chicago politics. His cartoons developed a particular focus on Chicago Mayor
Fred Busse
Fred A. Busse (March 3, 1866 – July 9, 1914) was the mayor of Chicago, in the U.S. state of Illinois, from 1907 to 1911.
Biography
Busse became a local Republican leader, first elected to the Illinois House of Representatives in 1894 and ag ...
and State's Attorney John E. Wayman. For this time period, he signed his work as "Harold Heaton" and often inserted a small crow into drawings as a trademark.
He gave a lecture on newspaper illustration to the Illinois Woman's Press Association in 1910,
and with other newspaper cartoonists contributed drawings to the
Actors' Fund Day special program, distributed in Chicago theaters on April 17, 1914.
At first appearing on the front page, his daily cartoon was moved to the editorial page 3 in later years. One cartoon, called "Merely a Passenger", won acclaim from a national group of bankers meeting in Washington, D.C. to lobby Congress for financial reform.
However, a retrospective by a ''Chicago Tribune'' writer many years later claimed that though Heaton had good ideas, his style while at ''The Inter Ocean'' was out of date.
His last drawing for the newspaper appeared on April 25, 1914, when the paper was already in
receivership.
Other artwork
Although best known for his cartoons and drawings for newspapers, Heaton was also an accomplished artist in both black-and-white sketches and water-color landscapes. He traveled a great deal for the latter, with pictures from Maine, Florida, and Tangier being noted at a Chicago exhibition in 1900.
Heaton also traveled to Spain and Morocco for a book illustrating assignment in the early 1890s, and had several illustrations for magazine stories published during 1893–1895. His black-and-white pictures were favorably received at the Chicago Society of Artists annual exhibitions at the Athenæum.
His artwork of all types was annually on exhibition at Anderson's Art Gallery and O'Brien's Art Gallery.
Acting career
With the death of his mother in January 1899,
Heaton decided to give up newspaper work for acting. An interviewer, visiting him in August 1899, was told if he'd come "a month hence, you wouldn't have found me here".
Heaton expressed frustration with his inability to break into magazine illustration, saying a newspaper artist was typecast by publishers. According to Heaton, he'd wanted to quit newspaper work four years previously, but had his mother living with him.
Early stage work
William Gillette cast Heaton in ''
Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes () is a fictional detective created by British author Arthur Conan Doyle. Referring to himself as a " consulting detective" in the stories, Holmes is known for his proficiency with observation, deduction, forensic science and ...
'' as Sir Edward Leighton, a role he would play from the play's first tryout in Buffalo, New York during October 1899
through its Broadway run
up to its final tour in Boston during March 1901.
When Gillette went to London with ''Sherlock Holmes'', Heaton was again part of the cast, but he stayed on in England after the play closed.
He spent a year in the United Kingdom with the James Welch company, playing at the
Comedy Theatre in the West End of London and on tour in England and Wales with ''The New Clown''.
Heaton's next stage work was for the American version of
J. M. Barrie's ''
The Admirable Crichton'', which opened in November 1903.
After it closed in March 1904, he formed a three-person troupe,
[The other two members were Lily Lorrell (ingenue) and Ada Boshell (character/comedian).] Harold Heaton & Company, which played a one-act farce of his own writing called ''The Rat'' on a
vaudeville circuit.
Heaton then joined the touring company for ''The Admirable Crichton'' starting in October 1904.
Heaton was again cast by William Gillette for a revival of ''Sherlock Holmes'' in March 1905.
Heaton also wrote another one-act play, ''In the Artist's Studio'', for
Jessie Busley to use in vaudeville.
He then joined
Lawrence D'Orsay's troupe for the tryouts and Broadway run of ''The Embassy Ball'' in early 1906.
''Lady Jim''
The first full-length play Heaton wrote was this three-act comedy. ''Lady Jim'' had been purchased by Walter N. Lawrence in March 1906
as a vehicle for
Hilda Spong
Hilda Spong (14 May 1875 London – 16 May 1955 Ridgefield, Connecticut
Ridgefield is a town in Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States. Situated in the foothills of the Berkshire Mountains, the 300-year-old community had a population ...
,
with rehearsals starting in August.
Heaton and George Forster Platt staged the play, which featured
Antoinette Perry.
The play premiered on August 28, 1906, at Weber's Theatre.
The reception was severe; writing, staging, and acting all came in for criticism, with only the set design escaping censure.
''
The New York Times'' was harsh and personal, asserting that "Harold Heaton" must be a nom de plume for a naive young girl, and disparaging Hilda Spong's acting.
Despite some rewriting by Heaton and the producer, the show closed on September 19, 1906. Heaton spent the remainder of 1906 and part of 1907 on tour with ''The Embassy Ball''.
In early 1908 he played a role in a
Julia Marlowe revival of ''
When Knighthood Was in Flower''.
Intermission
During the second half of 1908, Heaton took a position with ''The Inter Ocean'' as cartoonist. His acting slowed for several years, but he still took part in Chicago-based performances. Some were for benefits,
another was a work called ''The Stolen Story'', where the cast consisted of real newspapermen from Chicago papers.
In 1911 he performed in a musical comedy called ''The Heart Breakers'' by
Frank R. Adams and Will M. Hough, with songs by
Harold Orlob and
Melville Gideon
Melville J. Gideon (May 21, 1884, New York City – November 11, 1933, London) was an American composer, lyricist and performer of ragtime music, composing many themes for hit Broadway musicals including ''The Co-Optimists'' and ''The Beauty Spot ...
, that ran for seven weeks.
His cartoons, meanwhile, continued to appear in ''The Inter Ocean''. By late April 1914, however, the newspaper was failing financially and Heaton's cartoons for it stopped.
Later stage work
For the next year Heaton continued to live in Chicago, appearing in and staging amateur productions for a variety of clubs, social groups, and
Chautauqua assemblies. Sometime in 1915 he moved to Cincinnati, Ohio where he became active in the Little Theater movement there. He gave lectures at the Schuster-Martin School of Drama and staged plays at the attached Little Playhouse Company. In April 1916 he joined the touring
Redpath Chautauqua Redpath may refer to: Businesses
*Redpath Motor Vehicle Company, a former Canadian automaker
*Redpath Sugar, a Canadian sugar refining company
People
*Redpath (surname), a list of people with the surname Redpath
Places
*Redpath, Scottis ...
,
for which he wrote a new one-act play, ''Account Overdue'' (1916).
After several years with professional touring companies, Heaton returned to Broadway in 1920 with ''The Guest of Honor''.
William Hodge wrote and starred in it, and caught the full brunt of
Heywood Broun
Heywood Campbell Broun Jr. (; December 7, 1888 – December 18, 1939) was an American journalist. He worked as a sportswriter, newspaper columnist, and editor in New York City. He founded the American Newspaper Guild, later known as The Newspaper ...
's merciless review.
Despite the savaging, the play lasted two months on Broadway then went on tour. At Chicago, critic Percy Hammond commiserated with Heaton's character losing the girl to the star, saying it was "no reward for a pleasant actor and a reformed cartoonist".
Heaton's next Broadway role was in ''The Fan'', which starred Helen Spong, who had evidently forgiven him for ''Lady Jim''.
He spent three years playing revivals with touring companies, before landing a character role in the Broadway version of ''
Mozart
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 17565 December 1791), baptised as Joannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart, was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical period (music), Classical period. Despite his short life, his ra ...
'' in November 1926.
Heaton was then cast in two more Broadway plays, both involving
Zoe Akins. For ''The Crown Prince'' in 1927, Akins adapted a play by
Ernest Vajda from the Hungarian.
The popular success, ''
The Greeks Had a Word for It
''The Greeks Had a Word for It'' (also known as ''The Greeks Had a Name for It'') is a 1930 play written by Zoe Akins. It is a three-act comedy that becomes farce only at the end. It has a medium-sized cast, multiple settings, and pacing that re ...
'', was written by Akins in 1930. By this time Heaton was sixty-nine years-old, and relegated to a feature role, as he would be in ''Three Times the Hour'' in 1931.
Final performances
Heaton was a featured player in two Broadway productions during the first half of 1932, ''Happy Landing''
and ''The Boy Friend'',
[This was not related to the later musical of the same name.] both of which lasted less than a month.
His last known acting work was for a play called ''Cain's Sister''.
It had a three-day tryout starting September 29, 1932 at the
Shubert Theatre in
New Haven, Connecticut,
followed by a one-week tryout at the Broad Street Theatre in Newark, New Jersey.
The producer then retired the play "for revision".
Personal life
When he applied for a passport in April 1891, he was recorded as being 5'11.5" (181.6 cm) tall, with grayish-blue eyes and dark brown hair.
The art critic James William Pattison said Heaton was tall and a clever "joke-maker".
Besides drawing, painting, and acting, Heaton also played the piano,
and wrote poetry.
He had an active social life in 1890's Chicago, attending parties, balls, and the opera with such notables as
Mrs. Fiske
Minnie Maddern Fiske (born Marie Augusta Davey; December 19, 1865 – February 15, 1932), but often billed simply as Mrs. Fiske, was one of the leading American actresses of the late 19th and early 20th century. She also spearheaded the fig ...
and
Marshall Field.
He was described by a reporter as "one of the pleasantest men I ever met, and surely one of the most versatile artists who ever worked on a metropolitan newspaper".
He was a member of The Savage Club, a Chicago-based professional men's social club,
and as late as 1932 was elected president of the Cartoonists' Club of Chicago.
Works
Books
* ''Events of the Week: A Pictorial Record'', (1894) - First series of HRH drawings, published by the ''Chicago Tribune''.
* ''Events of the Week: A Pictorial Record'', (1895) - Second series of HRH drawings, published by the ''Chicago Tribune''.
* ''Events of the Week: A Pictorial Record'', (1896) - Third series of HRH drawings, covering from December 1, 1894, through December 1, 1895, published by the ''Chicago Tribune''.
Plays
* ''The Rat'', (1904) - One-act domestic farce, played on vaudeville circuit by Harold Heaton & Company.
* ''In the Artist's Studio'' (1905) - One-act farce, first performed May 8, 1905 at Boston's Empire Theater.
* ''Dressing for Dinner'', (1905) - One act play, originally written for and performed by
Clara Bloodgood
Clara Bloodgood (née Sutton Stephens; August 28, 1868 – December 5, 1907) was an American socialite who became a successful Broadway stage actress.
Early life
Clara Sutton Stephens was born in Long Branch, New Jersey, the daughter of Edward ...
.
* ''A Friend in Need'', (1905) - One-act farce presented on a matinee program by the
American Academy of Dramatic Arts
The American Academy of Dramatic Arts (AADA) is a private performing arts conservatory with two locations, one in Manhattan and one in Los Angeles. The academy offers an associate degree in occupational studies and teaches drama and related art ...
at the
Empire Theatre, January 11, 1906.
* ''Lady Jim'', (1906) - Heaton's first three-act play was not a success on Broadway.
* ''Where There Is Smoke'', (1914) - One-act play, first performed by Hull House Players at the
Hull House Theater.
* ''Account Overdue'', (1916) - Written for the Redpath Chautaqua, and played on tour in 1916 and 1917.
* ''Alan Intrudes'', (1917) - Three-act comedy, first performed in Cincinnati at
Memorial Hall on March 19, 1918.
* ''The Third Generation'', (1919) - Never produced.
* ''A Woman Had a Friend'', (1920) - Society melodrama, never produced.
Stage performances
Notes
References
External links
Harold R. Heaton Political Cartoonsat
Newberry Library
The Newberry Library is an independent research library, specializing in the humanities and located on Washington Square in Chicago, Illinois. It has been free and open to the public since 1887. Its collections encompass a variety of topics rela ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Heaton, Harold R.
1861 births
1940 deaths
American cartoonists