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The Front Page

 
American Theater Guide: The Front Page

Front Page, The (1928), a play by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. [Times Square Theatre, 276 perf.] To his fellow newsmen hanging around the press room of Chicago's Criminal Court Building awaiting a murderer's execution, Hildy Johnson (Lee Tracy) announces that he is quitting the Herald Examiner, getting married, and heading for New York. His plans are temporarily stymied when the murderer, Earl Williams (George Leach), escapes, and Hildy phones in a scoop to his paper. Williams suddenly appears in the press room, and Hildy and a prostitute, Molly Malloy (Dorothy Stickney), hide him in a folding desk. Hildy's dapper, devilish editor Walter Burns (Osgood Perkins) appears, prepared to take over. Amid the mayhem that ensues it is discovered that the governor has pardoned Williams. Telling Hildy of his gratitude for the scoop, Burns presents him with a watch, apologizing for the fact that the watch has his own name engraved in it. Hildy and his fiancée head off to catch the train. But Burns really has had no intention of allowing Hildy to go. He sends a wire to the chief of police in La Porte, Indiana, telling him to arrest Hildy: “The son of a bitch stole my watch!” Alison Smith of the World rejoiced, “‘The Front Page,’ with its rowdy virility, its swift percussion of incident, its streaks of Gargantuan derision, is as breath‐taking an event as ever dropped . . . on Broadway.” The play, produced by Jed Harris, while not the first to be set in a press room, remains an exemplar of its kind and has enjoyed numerous revivals, the most notable American one in 1969 with Bert Convy as Hildy and Robert Ryan as Walter Burns. A 1986 revival at Lincoln Center received mixed notices. It has been made into at least three films. In 2003 John Guare rewrote the comedy as His Girl Friday, based on the 1940 film of the same title, and it premiered in London.

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This article refers to the stage play. For other adaptations, see The Front Page (disambiguation)

The Front Page is a hit Broadway comedy, written by one-time Chicago reporters Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur which was first produced in 1928.

Contents

Synopsis

The authors' expert plotting and rapid-fire, streetwise dialogue delighted audiences and made their play an instant classic. Hecht and MacArthur strongly influenced many other American comic writers, especially in Hollywood.

The play's single set is the dingy Press Room of Chicago's Criminal Courts Building, overlooking the gallows behind the Cook County Jail. Reporters from most of the city's newspapers are passing the time with poker and pungent wisecracks about the news of the day. Soon they'll witness the hanging of Earl Williams, a white man and (supposed) Communist revolutionary convicted of killing a black policeman. Hildy Johnson, cocky star reporter for the Examiner, is late. He appears only to say good-bye; he's quitting to get a respectable job and be married. Suddenly the reporters hear that Earl Williams has escaped from the jail. All but Hildy stampede out for more information. As Hildy tries to decide how to react Williams comes in through the window. He tells Hildy he's no revolutionary and shot the police officer by accident. The reporter realizes this bewildered, harmless little man was railroaded — just to help the crooked mayor and sheriff pick up enough black votes to win re-election. It's the story of a lifetime. Hildy helps Williams hide inside a roll-top desk. His daunting challenge now is to get Williams out of the building to a safe place for an interview before rival reporters or trigger-happy policemen discover him. The Examiner managing editor, Walter Burns, is a devious tyrant who would do just about anything to keep Hildy with the paper. Nevertheless, Hildy has no choice but to ask for his help.

For the real-life background to the settings, and for a character, of The Front Page, see City News Bureau of Chicago, where MacArthur had worked, and Chicago's American.

On Broadway

The original production of The Front Page, directed by George S. Kaufman and produced by Jed Harris, opened at the Times Square Theatre on August 14, 1928. It starred Osgood Perkins and Lee Tracy as Burns and Johnson, respectively. The production was a smash hit, running 278 performances before closing in April 1929.[1]

The show was restaged three more times on Broadway: in 1946, 1969-70, and 1986-87. The most successful of these was the 1969-70 revival at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, starring Robert Ryan and Bert Convy as Burns and Johnson, which ran 222 performances.[2]

Adaptations

The Front Page has been adapted to film a number of times:

The 1931 rendition was brought to radio in 1948 by "Academy Award Theater," with Menjou and O'Brien reprising their roles from the film.

His Girl Friday and Switching Channels employed the twist of changing the sex of a character, from a male Hildy Johnson to females Hildegaard 'Hildy' Johnson and Christy Colleran respectively. John Varley's 1991 science fiction novel Steel Beach takes the story — and the change of sex — to another level. In the novel, the plot includes a sex-change by a male reporter named Hildy Johnson.

There have also been four television productions, all under the title The Front Page:

  • 1945, in the US,
  • 1948, in the UK,
  • 1949–1950, in the US as a series,
  • 1970, in the US

The musical Windy City (book and lyrics by Dick Vosburgh, music by Tony Macaulay) was also based on The Front Page. It premiered at the Victoria Palace Theatre, London, England on July 20, 1982 and ran for 250 performances.

See also

References

External links


 
 
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American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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