[2][3] George W. Munroe was born in Philadelphia and began his career in that city as a member of the Wheatley Dramatic Association.
[3] He joined the touring theater company of actor George S. Knight (1850–1892), making his debut as Bridget, an Irish woman, in Over the Garden Wall at the Chestnut Street Opera House (built 1870 as Fox's American Theatre) on September 1, 1884.
In placing Munroe's career within the context of the broader history of drag during the 19th century, Laurence Senelick, writing in The Cambridge Guide to American Theatre, stated thatPuritans had attacked as 'sodomitical' the Elizabethan convention of boys playing girls, and it disappeared with the Restoration; but the accompanying tradition of the "dame" role – an elderly woman impersonated by a male comedian – survived on the American stage, carried on by Neil Burgess as the Widow Bedotte, George W. Munroe as various Irish biddies, Gilbert Sarony as Giddy Gusher, and the Russell Brothers as clumsy Irish maids.
[2]Munroe developed a partnership with comedian and fellow Philadelphian John C. Rice;[3] an actor who had also had a comic role in Over the Garden Wall.
[3] A second play followed this work, Aunt Bridget's Baby, which debuted at the Park Theatre in Boston in January 1891.