Bloomer Girl
Bloomer Girl (1944), a musical comedy by Sig Herzig, Fred Saidy (book), Harold Arlen (music), E. Y. Harburg (lyrics). [ Shubert Theatre, 654 perf.] Evelina Applegate (Celeste Holm), the rebellious daughter of an upstate New York hoopskirt manufacturer, not only refuses to marry the man her father has selected for her but joins her aunt, Dolly Bloomer (Margaret Douglass), in promoting bloomers instead of hoopskirts. Although she is against slavery, she weds Southern slave owner Jeff Calhoun (David Brooks) and convinces her father to manufacture bloomers. Notable songs: The Eagle and Me; Evelina; Right as the Rain; It Was Good Enough for Grandma. One of the earliest musicals to follow in the wake of Oklahoma!, it featured the look back at a bygone America, and marvelous Agnes de Mille ballets (especially one in which the women await their men's return from the war), much as the Rodgers and Hammerstein operetta had. The musical also included some early but potent commentary, in book and score, about civil rights and feminism.



