While in
Paris in 1855, Heron saw the popular play
La Dame aux Camélias (The Lady of the Camellias), and decided to present her own version, in English, in America. The resulting
Camille, premiered at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia on 3 October 1855 with Heron playing the protagonist Marguerite Gautier. The play did not receive much attention at the Walnut Street Theatre, nor at any locations on the tour that followed. Eventually,
Camille came to
St. Louis in January 1856 and had great success there.
Camille had successful performances in Cincinnati, Mobile, and New Orleans as well. On 22 January 1857,
Camille made its New York debut at
Wallack's Theatre and was an immediate success. Starting with
Jean Davenport in 1853, most of the female stars of the day had appeared in the role, but Matilda Heron's Camille, more true to the original, was generally acknowledged to be the greatest on the American stage. Her emotion-charged acting and personal magnetism, particularly in the role of Marguerite Gautier with which she became so closely identified, hypnotized audiences and critics alike with her captivating beauty. For eight years after her initial triumph she acted with comparative success in New York, London, and on tour throughout the United States, appearing as the lead in plays she had written or adapted herself. She continued to enact the role of Marguerite Gautier in New York theaters. In 1859, she was welcomed as Gautier at
McVicker's Theater in Chicago; she returned to Chicago again in 1862. Her adaptation was seen in most of the important cities of the country. In New York during the season which she appeared in other plays, including her translation of
Ernest Legouvé's
Médée, marked the highest peak of her career. Of her role in Camille, prominent theater critic
William Winter later wrote: "Other parts she
acted; that one she
lived." Heron left no explanations of her theory of acting, but there is evidence that she identified herself closely with this role; while she achieved only minimal success in any role other than Camille, her minor successes bore strong resemblance to the Camille character. In fact, it is reported that, later in her career, while speaking to an author who was to write a play for her, she was careful to state that the heroine must be "a lost woman." The "lost woman" was a type that Matilda Heron identified with, both in her personal life and on stage. It is known that Heron's sister was a prostitute and that the actress kept close ties with her sister in spite of condemnation from family and friends. In fact, her sister's profession was implicated as being a factor in the break-up of Matilda Heron's first marriage. == Personal life ==