Reduced to a political symbol, the “Indian maiden” character was made to testify both for and against removal policies. The playwright George Washington Parke Custis produced a celebratory drama in which John Smith was a patriotic stand-in for President Andrew Jackson, a notorious engineer of anti-Indian policies. For her part, Pocahontas became a Christianized mother figure for Manifest Destiny—the belief that European racial superiority and divine favor made expansion from coast to coast inevitable.
Opponents of Indian removal created satires that pointed out the irony of Pocahontas justifying genocide. Seba Smith, a New England satirist, presented Powhatan: a Metrical Romance, in which Pocahontas’s father was the hero for refusing to give away his lands to the English. Seba Smith bemoaned how “the embellishment of history” with a sentimental love story had blinded the public to injustice happening in their backyards.
The “Indian drama” eventually lost its appeal, trickling down from prestigious theaters to traveling minstrel shows and burlesques. Satires like Pocahontas, or the Gentle Savage (1855) reduced the whole pseudo-history to absurdity, turning Pocahontas into a student at the “Tuscarora Fashionable Finishing School,” and skewering John Smith as a greedy lecher. “If truth be told,” this Smith explains to Powhatan, “our goal we’ll reach when we have reached your gold.”
Still, the tropes of Indian dramas remained deeply embedded in American popular culture. With the seizure of western lands for settlement after the Civil War, a new genre of Wild West shows and “cowboy and Indian” novels revived familiar stock characters and carried them well into the 20th century.
Pageants that distort or erase Indian cultures have a long history on the American stage, from New York opera houses to suburban elementary schools. However, Native Americans also used literature to assert their presence and rights, and to celebrate ongoing practices of survival. In the 1880s, the Pamunkey tribe, part of the Powhatan confederation that originally encountered the Jamestown settlers, staged its own version of the Pocahontas story. By embracing the myth of her service to the colonists, they tried to assert their identity and historical presence, while reminding white Virginians of their ancestral land rights, which were under threat from land-hungry neighbors.
More recent Indian playwrights reclaim—and redefine—the stock characters of the 19th century. Playwright Hanay Geiogamah, who created radical stage experiments in the 1960s with his Native American Theatre Ensemble, described his 1973 play Foghorn as a “dramatized lobotomy” to remove “false stereotypes about Indians.” In one satirical vignette, Pocahontas reports to her friends that John Smith was a dud as a lover, reversing the trite symbolism of sexual and imperial conquest. Meanwhile, in the 1990 play, Princess Pocahontas and the Blue Spots, playwright Monique Mojica has two women play 17 characters competing in a surreal beauty pageant set in the “Indian Princess Hall of Fame,” where they perform joking renditions of the Pocahontas myth.
Nineteenth-century Indian dramas established tropes about Native Americans’ role in national history that still infuse the popular imagination, especially around Thanksgiving. But taking to the stage is now a way for Native American artists to reckon with that legacy and define their own theatrical presence.