The Belle of New York (musical)

The Belle of New York

Vocal Score
Music Gustave Kerker
Lyrics Hugh Morton
Book Hugh Morton
Productions 1897 Broadway
1898 West End

The Belle of New York is a musical comedy in two acts, with book and lyrics by Hugh Morton and music by Gustave Kerker, about a Salvation Army girl who reforms a spendthrift, makes a great sacrifice and finds true love.

Opening on Broadway at the Casino Theatre on 28 September 1897, it ran for only 64 performances. It subsequently transferred to London in 1898, where it was a major success, running for an almost unprecedented 674 performances, and became the first American musical to run for over a year in the West End.[1] The Standard stated that the entire Broadway cast "numbering sixty-three persons" was brought over to London, "the largest stage troupe from the other side of the Atlantic that has ever professionally visited this country."[2]

The show starred Edna May, whose performance as Violet made her a star in New York and London. Postcards of her in costume became ubiquitous; more photographs of her were sold in London than of any other actress in 1898.[3] In London, the piece opened on 12 April 1898, produced by J. C. Williamson and George Musgrove.[3] The composer conducted at the opening night.[4] The work had stiff competition in London in 1898, as other successful openings included A Greek Slave and A Runaway Girl.[1]

Long runs in Paris and Berlin followed, and there were nine West End revivals over the next four decades. The musical was also produced regularly by amateur groups from 1920 until about 1975.[5] Two film versions were made, in 1919 with Marion Davies, Etienne Girardot and L. Rogers Lytton, and in 1952 with Fred Astaire, Vera-Ellen, Marjorie Main and Keenan Wynn that replaced the original songs with a score by Johnny Mercer and Harry Warren.[6][7][8][9]

In 1921, a rewritten version of the musical called The Whirl of New York premiered on Broadway.

Synopsis

Edna May as Violet
Edna May as Violet, painted by John Lavery
Act 1

Ichabod Bronson is a wealthy hypocrite who preaches virtue to the young, so as to leave more scope for dissipation among the old. His son, Harry, is a feather-brained spendthrift, engaged to Cora Angelique, the Queen of Comic Opera. After a riotous stag night, Harry ends up with Fifi, the daughter of Fricot the confectioner. Ichabod discovers them together and disinherits Harry. Deserted by all but Fifi, Harry wanders into Chinatown in New York, where his fickle fancy is taken by a young Salvation Army woman, Violet Gray. She finds her vocation difficult because, though she tries to persuade men to follow her blameless ways, they persist in following her blameless figure. Ichabod discovers that Violet is the daughter of an old friend and announces his intention to leave his huge fortune to her.

Act 2

Harry has taken a job as a salesman in a candy store on Broadway. Violet and her Salvationist colleagues enter the shop, all decked out in short skirts. She knows that Harry is engaged to Cora and wants the couple to be happy. She tells Harry that she is going to change Ichabod's mind about leaving his money to her. On the beach at Narragansett Casino, she sings a risqué French song, scandalising an audience including Ichabod. The effort of performing the song causes her to faint. Matters are further complicated by the persistent attempts of a German lunatic to kill people, particularly Ichabod, and by the quarrels of Portuguese twins, who keep trying to fight duels with one another. Harry has indeed been much influenced by Violet's virtue and has fallen for her. He explains to his father why Violet has behaved so uncharacteristically, and Ichabod forgives him his earlier sins on condition that he marries Violet, which he is now happy to do.

Roles and cast

According to London press reports, the West End cast (listed below)[10] was identical to the New York original.[2][11]

Musical numbers

J. E. Sullivan as Karl von Pumpernick
Act 1
Act 2

Critical reception

After the New York premiere, The New York Times wrote, "The new burlesque, or extravaganza, at the Casino is as big and showy, as frank and noisy, as highly colored, glittering, and audacious as the best of its predecessors." It found the libretto "with no great attempt at original wit in the prose dialogue, but with a few characteristically happy turns in the lyrics," and the music "reminiscent of Offenbach and Lecocq and Vasseur and Sullivan and David Braham but it is always Kerkeresque."[11]

The London press was welcoming but nonplussed by the piece. The leading theatrical paper The Era wrote, "The Belle of New York is best described as bizarre. It is like nothing we have ever seen here, and it is composed of the oddest incongruities. … The music is decidedly above the average of musical play scores … it is the brightest, smartest, and cleverest entertainment of its kind that has been seen in London for a long time."[10] The Standard also thought the music "much above the average" and "distinctly Offenbachian in melody and orchestration." The paper praised all the performers, particularly "the unctuous humour of Mr. Dan Daly as the elder Bronson, the adroitness of Mr. Harry Davenport as his scapegrace son, the chic of Miss Phyllis Rankin as the Parisian soubrette, and the sweet voice of Miss Edna May as the Salvation maiden."[2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Gillan, Don. Longest running plays in London and New York. Stage Beauty, 2007, accessed 31 March 2011
  2. 1 2 3 The Standard, 13 April 1989, p. 3
  3. 1 2 "Flashes from the Footlights", English Illustrated Magazine, February 1899, p. 509
  4. "Shaftesbury Theatre", Monthly Music Record, May 1898, p. 112
  5. Bond, Ian. "Rarely Produced Shows". St. David's Players, accessed 22 July 2010
  6. Munsey's Magazine, Volume 343 (Google Books)
  7. The Belle of New York, Internet Broadway Database
  8. The Belle of New York (1919) Internet Movie Database
  9. The Belle of New York (1952), Internet Movie Database
  10. 1 2 The Era, 16 April 1898, p. 13
  11. 1 2 "The Belle of New York", The New York Times, 29 September 1897
  12. 1 2 "At Play", Judy, or the London serio-comic journal, April 1899, p. 164

References

External links

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