Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Gay Divorce

 

Gay Divorce (1932), a musical comedy by Dwight Taylor (book), Cole Porter (music, lyrics). [ Ethel Barrymore Theatre, 248 perf.] To give her husband grounds for divorce, Mimi Pratt (Clare Luce) arranges to be caught with the paid corespondent Tonetti (Erik Rhodes). But Guy (Fred Astaire), who has fallen in love with Mimi, manages to get himself confused with the corespondent and uses the confusion to pursue his courtship. Notable songs: Night and Day; After You, Who?; Mister and Missus Fitch. In Astaire's only Broadway appearance without his sister, both he and the show were greeted with a certain indifference at first. However, the popularity of “Night and Day” and Astaire's superb performance, his last on Broadway, turned the Dwight Deere Wiman and Tom Weatherly production into a hit. Hollywood codes forced the film version to be called The Gay Divorcée.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Gay Divorce
Top
Gay Divorce
Music Cole Porter
Lyrics Cole Porter
Book Dwight Taylor
Adapted by: Kenneth Webb and Samuel Hoffenstein
Basis An unproduced play by J. Hartley Manners
Productions 1932 Broadway
1933 West End

Gay Divorce is a musical with music and lyrics by Cole Porter and book by Dwight Taylor, adapted by Kenneth Webb and Samuel Hoffenstein. It was Fred Astaire's last Broadway show and featured the hit song "Night and Day" in which Astaire danced with co-star Claire Luce.

It was made into a musical film by RKO Radio Pictures in 1934, starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, and renamed The Gay Divorcee.

Contents

Plot

Guy Holden, an American writer traveling in England, falls madly in love with a woman named Mimi, who disappears after their first encounter. To take his mind off his lost love, his friend Teddy Egbert, a British attorney, takes him to Brighton Beach, where Egbert has arranged for a "paid co-respondent" to assist his client in obtaining a divorce from her boring, aging, geologist husband Robert. What Holden does not know is that the client is none other than Mimi, who in turn mistakes him — because he is too ashamed of his occupation to say what it is, namely pseudonymously writing cheap "bodice ripper" romance novels — for the paid co-respondent.

At the end, when her husband appears, he is unconvinced by the faked adultery—but is then unwittingly revealed, by the waiter at the resort, to have been genuinely adulterous himself.

Songs

Act I
  • After You, Who?
  • Why Marry Them?
  • Salt Air
  • I Still Love the Red, White and Blue
  • After You, Who? (Reprise)
  • Where Would You Get Your Coat? ‡‡ - Gertrude (from Fifty Million Frenchmen)
  • Night and Day
  • How's Your Romance?
Act II
  • What Will Become of Our England?
  • I've Got You on My Mind
  • Mr. and Mrs. Fitch
  • I Love Only You ‡ - Tonetti
  • You're in Love

‡new song for the London production, ‡‡for London production

Background and productions

Fred Astaire and Claire Luce in Gay Divorce (1932)

Astaire's sister Adele retired from showbusiness and married Lord Charles Cavendish after her last show with Fred, The Band Wagon (1931). When the producers of Gay Divorce asked Fred to star in the show, he deferred an answer until he could spend the summer of 1932 wooing his future wife, Phyllis, in London. He finally agreed, and rehearsals began in September 1932.[1] The show was both Astaire's last Broadway musical (after which he moved to Hollywood) and also his only stage musical without Adele. Also in the cast were Erik Rhodes and Eric Blore who soon became famous in the early 1930s RKO comedies.[2]

Gay Divorce opened in pre-Broadway tryouts at the Wilbur Theatre, Boston on November 7, 1932 and then moved to the Shubert Theatre, New Haven on November 21, 1932. It opened on Broadway at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on November 29, 1932 and transferred to the Shubert Theatre on January 16, 1933 and closed on July 1, 1933 for a total run of 248 performances. Directed by Howard Lindsay with choreography by Barbara Newberry and Carl Randall, and set design by Jo Mielziner, the cast featured Fred Astaire as Guy Holden, Claire Luce as Mimi, Luella Gear as Hortense, G. P. Huntley Jr as Teddy, Betty Starbuck as Barbara Wray, Erik Rhodes as Tonetti, Eric Blore as Waiter, and Roland Bottomley as Pratt.

The show opened in the West End at the Palace Theatre on November 2, 1933 and ran for 180 performances. It was directed by Felix Edwardes with Astaire, Luce, Rhodes and Blore reprising their roles. They were joined by Olive Blakeney as Gertrude Howard, Claud Allister as Teddy, Joan Gardner as Barbara Wray and Fred Hearne as Octavius Mann.

The book is dated, and professional modern productions are rare.[2] Goodspeed Opera House staged the show in 1983 and an adapted version was seen off-Broadway in New York in 1987.[3] A concert version was presented at Carnegie Hall (Weill Recital Hall) in New York City in June 1993 and featured Robert Westenberg as Guy, Rebecca Luker as Mimi, Judy Kaye as Hortense, and Kurt Ollmann as Tonetti.[4] A "Musicals Tonight!" (New York City) concert production ran in March 2004.[5] The regional company 42nd Street Moon produced the piece in San Francisco, California from April 12 - May 6, 2007.[2]

References

  1. ^ Fred Astaire biography at AlsoDances.net
  2. ^ a b c Connema, Richard. "Cole Porter's Very Seldom Seen 1932 musical Gay Divorce", Talkin' Broadway, San Francisco
  3. ^ Gussow, Mel. "Porter Songs in Gay Divorce", The New York Times, February 25, 1987, p. 24
  4. ^ Holland, Bernard."Review/Music; A Neglected Cole Porter Show With an Indestructible Song"The New York Times, June 11, 1993
  5. ^ Gay Divorce listing, 2004 musicalstonight.org, accessed August 26, 2009

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gay Divorce" Read more