Zig-Zag!

Zig-Zag!

Creator Albert de Courville
Music Dave Stamper and George M. Cohan
Lyrics Gene Buck and George M. Cohan
Book Albert de Courville, Wal Pink and George Arnold
Productions 1917 West End

Zig-Zag! was a revue staged at the London Hippodrome, London during World War I. It was devised by Albert de Courville, Wal Pink and George Arnold, with music by Dave Stamper (with arrangements and orchestrations by the musical director, Julian Jones), lyrics by Gene Buck, and additional songs by George M. Cohan. The revue opened on 31 January 1917 starring George Robey, Daphne Pollard, Cicely Debenham, Shirley Kellogg, Marie Spink and Bertram Wallis. It ran for 648 performances.[1]

Robey interpolated a sketch into the show based on his music hall character "The Prehistoric Man", with Pollard playing the role of "She of the Tireless Tongue".[2] In another scene, he played a drunken gentleman who had accidentally secured the box at the Savoy Theatre instead of an intended hotel room. The audience appeared unresponsive to the character, so he changed it mid-performance to that of a naive Yorkshire man. The change provoked much amusement, and it became one of the most popular scenes of the show.[3] Zig-Zag ran for 648 performances.[2]

During the later half of the war, revues and musical comedies were in great demand; other London hits running at the same time included The Bing Boys Are Here (also starring Robey, who left that show to join Zig-Zag!), Chu Chin Chow, Theodore & Co, The Happy Day, The Maid of the Mountains, The Boy and Yes, Uncle!. The audiences, which included soldiers on leave, wanted light and uplifting entertainment during the war, and these shows delivered it.[4]

Songs

Notes

  1. "Zig-Zag!", The Guide to Musical Theatre, accessed 2 April 2014
  2. 1 2 Cotes, p. 85.
  3. Stone, p. 27
  4. "The First Musicals: 'Chu Chin Chow'", Victoria and Albert Museum, accessed 2 April 2014

References

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