Old Poetry Old Poetry Poetry Poets Essays Forums

Adah Isaacs Menken

I lived from 1835-1868. I was from the United States, and am in the Americas category.

Ada Isaacs Menken, who is also known as Adelaide McCord and as Ada Bertha Théodore, was an actress and a poet, who was most-likely born as Ada C. McCord on June 15, 1835, to Richard and Catherine E. McCord in Memphis, Tennessee. Menken's life before she took the stage is hard to uncover because she created elaborate stories about her beginnings, attributing to herself different names and bithplaces as well as diverse ethnic backgrounds, including Creole and Jewish.

It has been claimed by others that she attended Nacogdoches University, but the first documented proof of her presence in Texas appeared in a Liberty Gazette advertisement on October 8, 1855, which announced that Ada Bertha Théodore would be giving readings of Shakespeare.

On April 4, 1856, in Livingston, Texas, she married Alexander Isaac Menken, who was a Jewish theatrical musician from Cincinnati, Ohio. After a few engagements with her husband, Ada Menken urged her husband to introduce her to his family, where it is said that she embraced the religion of Judaism; in her past she had even claimed that she had actually been born a Jew.

She made her theatrical debut in 1857 as Pauline in The Lady of Lyons at Shreveport, Louisiana, and subsequently appeared in Fazio, as Bianca, in New Orleans. In 1869 she made her New York debut as the Widow Cheerly in The Soldier's Daughter.

She had published many of her poems in the Cincinnati Israelite. Menken's husband's family didn't care too much for Menken's lavish life, which they thought quite unorthodox and so the couple secured a rabbinical diploma that dissolved their marriage, but even after their marriage ended, Ada still used "Menken" as her stage name.

On September 3, 1859, Menken married John Carmel Heenan, a noted Irish prizefighter, in New York. A scandal arose when it was found out that Menken and her previous husband weren't yet legally divorced; Heenan left Menken pregnant with a son who died in infancy. They divorced in 1862.

During the coming years Menken married and divorced two more husbands: Civil War satirist Robert Henry Newell, whose pseudonym was Orpheus C. Kerr, whom she married in 1862, and then divorced in 1865; and James Paul Barley, who was a professional gambler, in 1866, whom she left almost immediately after marrying him.

She tried to associate herself with literary figures of the time, such as Walt Whitman, whom she admired, and a young Samuel Clemens [Mark Twain], Joaquin Miller, and Bret Harte. When in Europe she supposedly had affairs with the French novelist Alexander Dumas and the English poet Algernon Charles Swinburne. Menkens dedicated her book of verse to Charles Dickens. The great love of her life may have been the then-teenager Juan Clemente Zenea, the Cuban Romantic poet, whom she met while performing in Havana

She was by nature a generous person and assisted her friends, struggling actors and artists, as well as organized charities charities, so at the end of her life she had little left for herself.

She tried reviving her acting career unsuccessfully near the end of her life. She experienced complications from an injury sustained while performing in London. Her last performance was on May 30, 1868; she died a couple months later on August 10, 1868, at the age of 33 years, and was buried in the Jewish section of the Montparnasse cemetery.

Read full description by Nam...

Popular poetry

Search my poetry:
  • I
    Yes, yes, dear love! I am dead!
    85 lines, 4 comments
  • God's armies of Heaven, with pinions extended,
    Spread wide their white arms to the standard of Light;
    152 lines
  • "And they shall be my people, and I will be their God."
    --Jeremiah xxxii. 38.
    67 lines
  • I
    O angels! will ye never sweep the drifts from my door?
    84 lines
  • Visions of Beauty, of Light, and of Love,
    Born in the soul of a Dream,
    52 lines, 1 comment
  • In feeling I was but a child,
    When first we met--one year ago,
    40 lines, 1 comment
  • Alone on the hill of storms
    The voice of the wind shrieks through the mountain.
    120 lines
  • I
    Lost--lost--lost!
    96 lines
  • I
    Oh, I am wild--wild!
    94 lines
  • "Sounding through the silent dimness
    Where I faint and weary lay,
    22 lines

Start a forum topic about this poet

, Content