’s New Theatre The third Olympic Theatre was located on 622 Broadway, near
Houston Street in Manhattan. The stage manager in the 1860s was
Harry Eytinge. Many of Keene's productions had music by
Thomas Baker and starred
Joseph Jefferson. Under Keene's management, the theatre saw a number of notable premieres including
Our American Cousin in 1858 by English playwright
Tom Taylor when the title character was played by Jefferson with
Edward Askew Sothern as
Lord Dundreary. Keene was acting in the play at
Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., on 14 April 1865 when
United States President Abraham Lincoln, in the audience, was
assassinated by actor and
Confederate sympathizer
John Wilkes Booth. Other works to receive their premieres here included the
melodrama The Colleen Bawn by
Dion Boucicault (1860) and the long-running musical
The Seven Sisters (1860–1861). In
The Colleen Bawn, Keene played Anne Chute with Boucicault playing Myles na Coppaleen. After Keene left in 1863 the theatre was renamed the Olympic and was managed by a number of actresses, including
Mrs. John Wood (c. 1866). The theatre closed in 1880 and was demolished in the same year.
Productions (as Laura Keene's Theatre) '' (1873) •
The Elves (1857) – musical with music by
Thomas Baker • ''
Mary's Birthday; or the Cynic'' (1857) – play by
George Henry Miles •
The Heir at Law (1857) – play by
George Colman •
The Lyons Mail (1858) – by
Charles Reade •
Our American Cousin (1858–1859) – play by
Tom Taylor •
The Colleen Bawn (1860) – by
Dion Boucicault •
Jenny Lind (1860) – musical farce by
Joseph Jefferson, with music by Thomas Baker •
The Seven Sisters (1860–1861) – original burlesque by Thomas B. DeWalden with music by Thomas Baker
Productions (as the Olympic Theatre) • ''
L'Assommoir'' (1879) – play by
Augustin Daly •
The Scouts of the Plains; or, The Peril of the Frontier (1878) – western by
Texas Jack Omohundro •
Bluebeard (1872) –
pantomime by
Henry Brougham Farnie •
Humpty Dumpty (1871–1872) –
pantomime by Mon. F. Strebinger and
George L. Fox •
Horizon (1871) – play by
Augustin Daly •
Wee Willie Winkie (1870–1871) – pantomime with music by Mon. F. Strebinger; libretto by
George L. Fox •
The Fair One in the Golden Wig (1870) – burlesque: Mrs
Alice Oates and her company •
The Daughter of the Regiment, or the 800 Fathers (1870) – Mrs Alice Oates and her company •
The Field of the Cloth of Gold (1870) – Mrs Alice Oates and her company •
Little Faust (1870) – opera by
Hervé: Mrs Alice Oates and her company •
Macbeth (1870) – music by
Matthew Locke •
Hamlet (1870) – written by
Thomas Cooper de Leon •
Paul Pry (1870) – play by
John Poole •
The Writing on the Wall (1870) – play by
John Maddison Morton •
Under the Gaslight (1869) – play by
Augustin Daly •
The Streets of New York, or Poverty is No Crime (1869) – play by
Dion Boucicault • ''
Uncle Tom's Cabin'' (1869) – play by
George Aiken •
Hiccory Diccory Dock (1869) –
pantomime by
George L. Fox •
Humpty Dumpty (1869) – pantomime with music by Anthony Reiff; written by
George L. Fox •
The Rose of Castile (1867) – opera with libretto by
Augustus Harris and
Edmund Falconer to a score by
Michael William Balfe •
The Bohemian Girl (1867) – opera by
Michael William Balfe and
Alfred Bunn •
The Doctor of Alcantara (1867) – opera with music by
Julius Eichberg; libretto by
Benjamin Edward Woolf •
Fra Diavolo (1867) – opera with music by
Daniel Auber; original French libretto by
Eugène Scribe •
Maritana (1867) – opera with music by
William Vincent Wallace; libretto by
Edward Fitzball •
Rip van Winkle or The Sleep of Twenty Years (1866) – play by
Dion Boucicault •
Po-Ca-Hon-Tas (1866) – musical with score by James Gaspard Maeder; written by
John Brougham •
The Rose of Castile (1864) – opera with libretto by
Augustus Harris and music
Edmund Falconer •
The Bohemian Girl (1864) – opera with libretto by
Alfred Bunn •
Brother and Sister (1863) – musical with score by Sir
Henry Bishop; libretto by
William Dimond ==Fourth Olympic Theatre (1908–1928)==