A Tailor-Made Man | |
---|---|
Written by | Harry James Smith |
Date premiered | August 27, 1917 |
Place premiered | Cohan and Harris Theatre |
Setting | 1916, New York City |
A Tailor-Made Man is a 1917 American play by Harry James Smith, which ran for 398 performances at the Cohan and Harris Theatre. It debuted on August 27, 1917, and played through August 1918.[1][2]
The play was adapted from the 1908 Hungarian play A Szerencse Fia ("Son of Luck") by Gábor Drégely. The Playbill and press referred to Dregely's play as The Well-Fitting Dress Coat, which derives from the play's German title (Der gutsitzende Frack), so presumably Smith worked from that translation.
Grant Mitchell starred in the 1917 Broadway production, which was staged by Sam Forrest, and in an October 1929 revival. The play ran for just shy of an entire year at the Cohan and Harris Theatre in New York. The play was Smith's greatest success, but he did not live to see the full run, as he died in a train and automobile accident in March 1918 while working for the Red Cross.[3][4][5][6]
The play later led to a 1922 silent film and 1931 film.
Original Broadway cast
(In order of appearance)
- Mr. Huber ... Gus Weinberg
- Mr. Rowlands ... L.E. Conness
- Peter ... Barlowe Borland
- Dr. Gustavus Sonntag ... Theodore Friebus
- Tanya Huber ... Helen MacKellar
- John Paul Bart ... Grant Mitchell
- Pomeroy ... Rowland Buckstone
- Mrs. Stanlaw ... Minna Gale Haynes
- Mr. Stanlaw ... Harry Harwood
- Corinne Stanlaw ... Mona Kingsley
- Dorothy ... Adrienne Bonnelli
- Bobby Westlake ... Lloyd Carpenter
- Mr. Fleming ... John Wall
- Mr. Crane ... John Maccabee
- Mr. Carroll ... Douglas Farne
- Mrs. Fitzmorris ... Josephine Deffry
- Wheating ... Frank G. Harley
- Mrs. Kittie Dupuy ... Lotta Linthicum
- Bessie Dupuy ... Nancy Power
- Mr. Jellicott ... A.P. Kaye
- Abraham Nathan ... Frank Burbeck
- Miss Shayne ... Gladys Gilbert
- Mr. Grayson ... Leonard White
- Mr. Whitcombe ... Howard Wall
- Mr. Russell (labor delegate) ... John A. Boone
- Mr. Cain (labor delegate) ... J.H. Greene
- Mr. Flynn (labor delegate) ... William C. Hodges
References
- ↑ Bordman, Gerald & Thomas S. Hischak. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre, p. 604 (3d ed. 2004)
- ↑ "A Tailor-Made Man" - The New Comedy of a Dress-Suit Napoleon, Current Opinion, pp. 311-14 (November 1917)
- ↑ Tompkins, Juliet Wilbor, introduction to Letters of Harry James Smith, p. ix (1919)
- ↑ Fisher, James & Felicia Hardison Londre. The A to Z of American Theater: Modernism, p. 465 (2008)
- ↑ Bordman, Gerald. American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama 1914-1930, pp. 65-66 (1995)
- ↑ A Tailor-made Man, Green Book Magazine, pp. 779-80 (November 1917)
External links
- A Tailor-Made Man at the Internet Broadway Database
- A Tailor-Made Man: A Comedy in Four Acts (full play via Google books, published 1919)