New Women Dramatists in America,
1890-1920 discusses the lives and works of five prominent, yet historically neglected
early women dramatists: Martha Morton, Madeleine Lucette Ryley, Evelyn Greenleaf
Sutherland, Beulah Marie Dix, and Rida Johnson Young. Entering playwriting at a time
when very few women wrote for the stage, these pioneers achieved thriving careers and
entertained theatergoers throughout the United States and Great Britain with their
wholesome, light comedies, farces and musicals. Their collective experience as
professional dramatists reveals trends of late nineteenth-and early twentieth-century
theater practices. Their accomplishments in a male-dominated profession serve to
underscore hitherto unacknowledged contributions to America’s Progressive Era theatre.