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A Winsome Widow

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Winsome Widow
Sheet music cover to
Be My Little Baby Bumble Bee
MusicRaymond Hubbell
LyricsUnknown (pastiche)
BookCharles Hale Hoyt
BasisA Trip to Chinatown
by Charles Hale Hoyt
PremiereApril 11, 1912 (1912-04-11): Moulin Rouge
Productions1912 Broadway

A Winsome Widow is a 1912 musical produced by Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr., which was a revised version of Charles Hale Hoyt's 1891 hit, A Trip to Chinatown, with a score by Raymond Hubbell.

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Transcription

History

The show debuted at the Moulin Rouge on April 11, 1912, and ran into September, with a total of 172 performances.[1] (A pre-opening performance was presented at Parson's Theatre in Hartford, Connecticut on April 8, 1912.[2]) The production's sets were designed by Ernest Albert.[3]

One of its featured songs was "Be My Little Baby Bumble Bee" by Stanley Murphy and Henry I. Marshall. The musical was a big hit, and featured a finale with real ice skating.[4]

The large cast featured Emmy Wehlen, Leon Errol, the Dolly Sisters, Elizabeth Brice, Frank Tinney, and Charles King. A young Mae West played a small role, though she quit after five performances.[4][5][6]

Though well received by audiences, the show had mixed reviews. The New York Clipper called it "a spectacle of gayety and gorgeousness", but The New York Times was bored of its "sameness", and critic Sime Silverman of Variety said it was "at least forty minutes too long, draggy with superfluous people."[5][7]

Primary cast (may be incomplete)

Emmy Whelen in Cosmopolitan Magazine, August 1912

References

  1. ^ Boardman, Gerald Martin. American Musical Theatre: A Chronicle, pp. 322-23 (2011 ed.)
  2. ^ (9 April 1912). "A Winsome Widow" Staged, The New York Times
  3. ^ Cynthia Brideson, Sara Brideson (2015). Ziegfeld and His Follies: A Biography of Broadway’s Greatest Producer. University Press of Kentucky. p. 445. ISBN 9780813160900.
  4. ^ a b Mordden, Ethan. Ziegfeld: The Man Who Invented Show Business, p. 123 (2008)
  5. ^ a b Watts, Jill. Mae West: An Icon in Black and White, p. 37 (2001)
  6. ^ Colt, Stanislaus Winsome Emmy Wehlen, Cosmopolitan (magazine), p. 410-411 (August 1912)
  7. ^ (12 April 1912). Now New York Has Its Moulin Rouge, The New York Times

External links

This page was last edited on 30 July 2023, at 19:07
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