Ann Maria Thorne


Ann Maria Thorne, more widely known as Mrs. French '' was an early American concert singer and actress from Philadelphia. As "Mrs. French," she was among the most famous singers in America during the 1820s.

Career

According to an 1896 publication, Annals of Music in Philadelphia and History of the Musical Fund Society, another singer, Mrs. Burke, had been the most famous American singer until she was outrivaled by Mrs. French. Mrs. French had studied music with Benjamin Carr, an early American composer, music publisher, and music teacher from Philadelphia. She also studied with a Henri-Noel Gilles, a French-born and musically educated guitarist, oboist, and composer of Philadelphia. She first appeared as a child in Philadelphia at the Chestnut Street Theatre.
Several early nineteenth century American composers and publishers dedicated works to her. Moreover, her performance of works was used to advertise sheet music. For example, the cover pages of several compositions by James P. Aykroyd—published by George E. Blake—advertise that Mrs. French as a singer of the works.

Family

Thorne was born Ann Maria Mestayer in a family of well-known American actors that included her parents, grandparents, siblings, husband, and children. Her parents, John Mestayer and Maria , were well-known Philadelphia stage and circus professionals. She married young, and before marriage, took a stage surname of "Mrs. French", borrowing her mother's maiden name. In December 1830, in Richmond, Virginia, Mestayer married Charles Robert Thorne, an actor. She and Charles had four sons and a daughter:
  1. Neil Thorne
  2. Thomas Thorne
  3. Charles Robert Thorne, Jr., actor
  4. Edwin F. Thorne
  5. Emily Thorne, actress
A maternal aunt of Thorne, Rosalie Pelby
was an actress married to William Pelby, who, in Boston, in 1927, became the manager of the Tremont Theatre, and in 1932, built the Warren Street Theatre, and in 1936, built, founded, and managed the National Theatre.

Selected theatres and stock companies