C H A P T E R 1
helped establish the original Players’ Club (the one for people
in the arts, not the one for polyamorous pimp daddies).
✖ ✖ ✖
Incidentally, Edwin’s father, Junius Booth, was one of the most
famous actors of his generation as well. After Junius died,
Walt Whitman wrote, “Th
ere went the most noble Roman of
them all.” But Walt didn’t have to live with Junius, who was
(like many noble Romans) a mean drunk. His sons bore much
of their father’s alcoholic wrath, and Edwin drank, too. And
while Edwin’s brother, John, did abstain from booze, he wasn’t
exactly a saint. Less talented than either his father or brother,
John found a way to be famous nonetheless—John, of course,
murdered Abraham Lincoln on Good Friday, 1865. Speaking of
dead presidents . . .
from
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