Coyne Fletcher | |
---|---|
![]() Coyne Fletcher, from an 1895 publication | |
Born | Lydia Coyne Fletcher about 1853 Dublin, Ireland |
Died | March 2, 1904 Washington, D.C. |
Occupation | Writer |
Relatives | Joseph Stirling Coyne (cousin) |
Lydia Coyne Fletcher (about 1853 – March 2, 1904) was an Irish-American playwright and novelist.
Fletcher was born in Dublin, Ireland and raised in Baltimore, Maryland.[1] Her uncle Charles Leonard Fletcher was a playwright in New York City, and ran an acting school there.[2] "Coyne" was her grandmother's family name; dramatist Joseph Stirling Coyne was her cousin.[3]
Fletcher was a governess as a young woman. She was a postal clerk in Washington, D.C., and wrote novels and plays.[4][5] She was a charter member of the Association of American Authors when it was founded in 1892.[6] She adapted her military comedy A Bachelor's Baby for the stage, and it was produced in Tennessee and Washington in 1895,[7][8] and on Broadway in 1897. Olga Nethersole was cast to star in her play Yvolna (1898), based on Salammbo by Flaubert.[9][10][11]
Beyond fiction and plays, Fletcher's 1891 essay on the South Carolina lowlands is still cited as a useful first-hand account of the region a generation after the American Civil War.[12][13] She went to court in 1902 concerning 32 acres of land in Washington, known as "Girl's Portion".[14]
Fletcher was described as a "tall, handsome woman",[1] a "strong character"[5] and a "bachelor woman", with a knack for decorating and entertaining. She collected steel engravings and souvenir cushions.[20] "As a dialect storyteller, she has no equal among any women I have known," wrote one reporter in 1894.[5]
Fletcher died in 1904, at the age of 50, in a hospital in Washington, D.C.[21][22] In 1909, a play named A Bachelor's Baby was produced by Charles Frohman in New York, without credit to Fletcher; her nephew sued to stop the production.[23] The credited playwright, Francis Wilson, claimed that the works only shared a title.[24] Three films were produced with essentially the same title: A Bachelor's Baby (1922), The Bachelor's Baby (1927) and Bachelor's Baby (1932); but none of them credited Fletcher's novel or play as source material.