Sunday, February 22, 2026

The (rest of the) American musical theatre volume two



Some while ago, I wrote an article about "The (rest of the) American Musical Theatre" featuring a bundle of musical shows of yesteryear that didn't play New York. 

https://kurtofgerolstein.blogspot.com/2023/02/the-rest-of-american-musical-did-you.html

I said, at the time, that I would add to it, from time to time, as further pieces turned up. But I can't. There are too many of them of which music sheets or other ephemera turn up regularly. So I'm going to bundle some of them in here and then, bit by bit, try to find out what and when they were.


NOBODY'S GIRL


A few well-known names on there. Ilse MARVENGA [MERLING, Adele Mary Ilse] (b Bremen 26 February 1896; d 30 September 1997) had been the original Käthe in The Student Prince. Busby Berkeley needs no explanation. John E Young, Gus Kahn ..  but William Ortmann? Friedrich Wilhelm Ortmann or Raumann (b 24 April 1887; New York ) was a Detroit man, son of German immigrants, who had returned to Germany to study music.  Quite where and when he encountered Miss Marvenga, I know not. I mean, he was a married man. She was brought to America to star in his flop Naughty Diana (1923). But they worked and travelled together as soprano and pianist for a considerable period. Anyway, 'Willi-Ortmann' didn't have much success as a musical-theatre composer, Frühling im Herbst (1920), produced in Berlin being his big moment. This one got coverage (three local boys!) at its Detroit production, but doesn't seem to have moved on from there. And who the blazes were 'Adaart'?


WITHIN THE LOOP



produced at the Teck Theater in Buffalo (22 November 1915) in preparation for a run at the American Music Hall in Chicago clearly underwent some heavy rewriting in rehearsals. Originally billed as the work of the multi-talented comedian Joseph Herbert, it dissolved into being credited to lyricist Ballard MacDonald and comedian Dave Lewis. Which seems to indicate that the comic star rewrote his material ....  The Messrs Shubert advertised it at first as a 'musical comedy', then as 'a revue in 7 scenes', then 8 scenes. The bookwriting credit didn't make it to the sheet music.  There were 125 chorines, 34 songs by Harry Carroll and MacDonald (mostly?) endless costumes ... and the whole darn thing -- which actress Anna Wheaton tells us the cast called 'Within the Soup' -- fizzled out in a week of one nighters. After which the scenery went up in flames during the get out. I suppose Mr Shubert lit the match.




PRINCE OF TATTERS

Produced at Oshkosh 24 April 1902, by Charles H Yale and Sidney R Ellis, as a vehicle for Dutch dialect actor/singer Al H Wilson, who had toured for them the previous season in something titled Watch on the Rhine.

 


Wilson played Prince Hugo de Reppert, the title said it all, and the piece -- in which his 'golden voice' was lavishly displayed in a score including a couple of yodel songs -- proved good for a considerable life in mostly minor touring dates. Sounds like John Hansen, no?

LISTEN TO ME

Another one of those meaningless titles of 100 years ago. But this show actually had a life.



Who were these folk? Well, they were actually busy professionals in the 'country' theatre of the early 1900s to 1920s.

Fred E Le COMTE (20 September 1868-25 May 1929) had been an advance agent, would be later manager of the Orpheum in Sioux City and [Benjamin] Frank[lin] FLESHER (5 October 1869- 23 June 1931) was a sometime band-leader. The two came together at the end of the century, running the Morey Stock Company, and moved into touring musicals -- Joe Howard's The Flower of the Ranch, The Prince of Tonight, A Modern Eve, September Morn and, in 1917, an original piece written by a young Mr Charles GEORGE [McGINNISS, Charles George] (b 8 May 1893; d 3 October 1960) from Hagerstown, Maryland. The prolific Mr George (Fifty-Fifty, Oh Dickey, My Once in a While, Go Easy Mabel, A China Doll &c) supplied book, lyrics and music and played the lead role in the cast of 36. The producers must have been pleased, for they followed up with more of Mr George's pieces .. and the team was still together in 1921 when Listen to Me was put out.

Produced at Waukesha 25 August, it was a happy piece of light entertainment of little pretension. The plot, such as it was, had Mr J Lucifer Devil sending the six temptations into the world for the undoing of man and 'opens in hell, jumps to the polar regions, switches to a mythical Candy Land, and winds up on the stage of a New York Theatre' providing thus many a popular scene for comedians Billy Moore and Billy Murphy, soprano Maude Baxter, dancer Barbara Bronell and Ross Robertson as Mr Devil. The show was still on the road in 1923


by which time Miss Bronell has become the main attraction, leading her to have the firm's next and most successful show A China Doll built round her.

THE TWO JANES

If Listen to Me survived through two years, The Two Janes seemingly lasted two weeks.

'


The comments of the Philly press say it all ..



THE MELTING OF MOLLY

Irene Franklin was a very popular and successful performer, but she did get involved with a few odd shows. Within the Loop (see above) was one. This one seems hard to find ...


The title is well-known. It was that of a 1912 novel by Kentucky authoress Maria Thompson Daviess, which became one of the most popular bits of light reading of its time ..

We know that the novel was made into a musical. It was played in New York in 1918 for a dozen weeks under the Shubert management, with a book by Edgar Smith and music by Sigmund Romberg. Isabelle Lowe was Molly, and Charles Purcell was leading man. But this piece of music is dated 1916. and the authorship is credited to Miss Franklin and her pianist husband,

 Burt Green. And yes ...  'a new American comedy with intderpolated songs' book by Mrs Daviess and Miss Franklin .. four new songs .. 'orchestra de luxe' of six string players (harp included) .. produced by Frederic McKay, of The Yankee Girl and The Wall Street Girl, seemingly in Detroit around the beginning of November. The company closed down in December saying that they would re-open in New York in the new year. They didn't. 

DICK WHITTINGTON

was a Shubert import from London's Drury Lane. It seems to have begun at the Boston Majestic, and made it to Philadelphia, but not New York in its some four months of life ...



OUT ON BROADWAY 

was in reality hardly a 'musical comedy', more a vaudeville act. 


It seems to have seen the light of stage in this form at Proctors Fifth Avenue, in December 1913: 'Will J Ward and his matinee girls 'a miniature musical comedy, brimful of comedy, mimic and excellent piano playing. Mr Ward sang several songs in his usual fine singing voice and captured a big hit. Miss [Irene] Martin ... did herself great credit' 'a capable offering'. Ward (b Providence RI 1884; d Brooklyn September 1949) was a headliner on the Keith circuit for 25 years, and later in New York nightclubs.

PRETTY BABY


was, I think, another Keith's offering. This one seemingly from 1919.



Hodges (b 24 May 1885; d 4 April 1971) started out in minstrel shows and progressed through vaudeville, films and every kind of showbusiness ...

THE JAPSKYS


This one -- a product of the Russky-Japsky war of 1904 -- was produced at the New Orpheum in Harlem in September of the year. Six principals 40 chorines, and a swatch of speciality acts, action (centred on a couple of Russian Jewish gents ) set in the Japanese Embassy in Korea ...


It progressed thence to the Columbia Music Hall in Boston, then to Canada, Brooklyn ... became billed as a comic opera .. holding its own with the Weber and Fields burlesque productions .. for several months



This one is definitely from a variety house. Oscar Hammerstein's Paradise Roof Garden above the Victoria Theatre presenting 'a new and unique program of this manager's own invention'. Apart from Emma Carus, the cast featured Eleanor Falk, Betty Youlton, Fred Valentine, and the principal item on the bill was a burlesque of Parsifal and the squabbles over its production outside Europe. Cosima Wagner vs Heinrich Conried. Written, of course, by Mr Hammerstein.


Parsifalia was slammed. Whether any of the numbers listed on this cover was part of it ... perhaps 'Lizzie O'Connor the great prima donna'?

This one puzzled me, until I realised it was a song interpolated into a comedy at Booth's Theater. Another husband and wife job. Successful playwright William Le Baron and his wife Mabel Haydee Hollins 

And to end this little handsful ... a Shubertian mystery

RED ROBIN



Jean Schwartz. I mean, that's a big name. Jack Scholl and Max Rich? They were associated on a short-lived revue at the Forrest Theatere in 1934. Producing Associates? Well, one of them was J J Shubert. And possibly Lee. Producing liaisons were a bit mucky hereabouts. They had been touring operetta (Blossom Time, The Student Prince, The Land of Smiles) around this time. The cover looks rather Austro-alpine ...  Ah! The back of the cover tells us that it is based on Ein Tag in Paradies (sic). Music by Rumshinsky. Joseph Rumshinsky of the Yiddish Folk Theater? Produced at the Grand Theater, Chicago 4 March 1933 ... book by Harry Clark and Kay Kenney ...
Seems rather odd. Why would you make another version of Ein Tag im Paradies when The Blue Paradise had already done well twenty years earlier. 
GOT IT!  It was the Shuberts attempt to make themselves a new Student Prince or Blossom Time, as a vehicle for their 'discovery', tenor Allan Jones. It appears to have lived and died in Chicago.



I seem to have many more of these little-known musicals ...  more later :-)

Monday, February 16, 2026

80th Birthday Album

 

So many (flattering) photos of ME these last days. I can't bear to throw any of them away. So I'm going to store them all here for my own private delectation in whatever years are left to me ...



A horse from Wendy <3

 
Goodbye, Red Tom. I've handed in my license!



Flowers from Czechoslovakia!

Never get photo-ed in profile at 80




That's enough. Onwards and upwards!


Thursday, February 5, 2026

Now we are 80 -- a Botero Birthday!


Yes, next week I shall reach my eightieth birthday. Improbable, unlikely but true. It seems such a short time that I celebrated (if that is the right word!) my seventieth ...

https://kurtofgerolstein.blogspot.com/2016/02/70-boys-70.html

 Big party? inquired folks. No. Wendy and I will share a nice evening bottle of bubbly, quietly, at dear old Gerolstein, and that's all. 

But you must do something! No. And I don't want anyone else to do anything either. No 'surprises'. And above all, no gifts. I am of an age where I am disposing of the accumulated stuff of ages, not accumulating ..  a hug or a message is all I want! On this semi-memorable occasion it is I who should be giving thanks for 80 relatively painless years, and a still lively mind ...

Thought. It is I who should be giving the gifts ....

Flashback ...

Some ten years ago I visited, for the first time, the delightful café called BOTERO in the village of Maclean, NSW. I have visited many, many times since. In fact, on very occasion I have spent time in Australia. Botero blends a particularly delicious coffee which has become my staple. And makes a splendid risotto! It also sells the most delighful hessian shopping bags, hand-made from coffee sacking .. and I couldn't resist a few of those.

Wendy at Botero

I was carrying one, a few weeks ago, when I went shopping at the deli ('Fresca') in Rangiora (we are on the other side of the Tasman now!) and Luna, the lady there, admired it largely. And CLICK! The idea was born ..


I got on Messenger to Australia, and commissioned a dozen bags, suitably inscribed, as gifts for those folk who have helped me get through these last ten years. 

They have gone off to Berlin, California, New York, Leicestershire, Rangiora ...


I am delighted beyond measure ...

My birthday has benefitted Charity, which is never a bad thing. Yes, Myra James, the lady who makes these beautiful bags donates all proceeds to local charities ..



Thank you, Myra. Thank you, Botero ... there will be folks round the globe who will remember my 80th birthday ...

And if anyone is looking for a novel gift ... try these ...



Myra at Botero ...


Betsy and Freddy in California!


Brother John in Billa Barra Leicestershire


Jen in Sefton ..


Renee in Grafton ..


Paulie in the Berlin snows ...



Chloe in Canterbury


Mike and Rebecca in New Jersey




Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Hetty the little dancer from Philly

 

I've been 'visiting' Philadelphia a great deal in my various searches and writings recently. Occasionally I stop and investigate a little more deeply. Today this piece of music caught my eye ..





It is not exactly Mozart or Adolph Adam stuff, is it, but I wondered who was Miss Wilks, 'the American danseuse? So I looked, and .. oh dear ...

Henrietta Margaret Wilks was born in Philadelphia 1 January 1839, the first daughter of an Irish musician, Benjamin G S Wilks (1814-1890), from Dublin, and his American wife Marion Bates Packer.. Benjamin had been a singer and actor in the Philadelphia theatres. He also had something to do with firemen and proffered a song titled 'The Fireman's Barcarolle'. 25 April 1838 he married Maria Bates Parker, who apparently joined the company at the Walnut Street Theatre. Mr Wilks went on to become a company secretary (Hope Hose Company, Philadelphia Brass Band), his wife continued at the Walnut, and in 1855 a sixteen-year-old 'Miss H Wilks' made a first appearance in a pas seul. After that, Miss H featured on many programmes ...


She also featured in the marriage registers when she took to husband her young colleague, Mr Linington Roberts Shewell (17 June 1856). The couple appeared a little while at the Walnut, but ..

Henrietta died, aged just 18, on 15 May 1857. 

Shewell made himself a fair career, remarried ...  Father lived till 1890 



A short story and a sad one. I wonder why I picked that one.