Robert Burns Mantle (December 23, 1873February 9, 1948) was an American theater critic and screenwriter. He founded the Best Plays annual publication in 1920.[Chansky, Dorothy (2011). "Burns Mantle and the American Theatregoing Public", in Theatre History Studies (via Google Books). Vol. 31.]
Biography
Mantle was born in Watertown, New York, on December 23, 1873, to Robert Burns Mantle and Susan Lawrence. As a child he moved to Denver, Colorado.
By 1892, he was working as a linotype machine operator in California and then became a reporter.
By the late 1890s, Mantle was working as a drama critic for the Denver Times. He later moved to Chicago, Illinois, and then New York City, New York, in 1911.[ He was at the New York Evening Mail until 1922, and then the Daily News until his retirement in 1943. Mantle was succeeded as the drama critic at the Daily News by his assistant John Arthur Chapman.][Staff (August 16, 1943). Burns Mantle Quits as Drama Reviewer". Associated Press (via The Gazette via Google News). Retrieved February 16, 2012.][Abstract (August 15, 1943). "Burns Mantle Retires". The New York Times. for full article.]
He died, aged 74, of stomach cancer on February 9, 1948.
His wife was the former Lydia (Lillie) Sears; her sister Clara Sears Taylor was a journalist and government official who assisted Mantle with compiling his Best Plays publications.[Brooks Atkinson, "Keeper of the Drama's Books" The New York Times (September 11, 1938): 185.]
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