From Broadway To 52nd Street

Very Warm For May opened at the Alvin Theatre on November 17, 1939. Vincente Minnelli directed the play and the music was scored by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein, producing such favorites at the time as “All In Fun” and “In The Heart Of The Dark” but it was “All The Things You Are” that went on to become a jazz standard. However, the musical that starred June Allyson, Eve Arden and Vera-Ellen ran on Broadway for only two months, received mixed reviews and closed after only 59 performances.

The Story: The plot that had Long Island society girl May Graham fleeing threatening gangsters and hiding out with an avant-garde summer stock troupe in Connecticut. The first version of the show, which opened out of town, received rave reviews and played to sold-out houses. However, producer Max Gordon had been away when the show opened out of town and when he saw it, he hated the gangster subplot and had it removed. This could have been a contributing factor to the mixed reviews and the audience enjoyment.

Broadway History: Broadway was originally the Wickquasgeck Trail, carved into the brush destination of Manhattan by its indigenous Native American inhabitants.This trail originally snaked through swamps and rocks along the length of Manhattan Island.

Upon the arrival of the Dutch, the trail soon became the main road through the island from Nieuw Amsterdam at the southern tip. The Dutch explorer and entrepreneur David de Vries gives the first mention of the trail in his journal for the year 1642, “the Wickquasgeck Road over which the Indians passed daily”. Although current street signs are simply labeled as “Broadway”, in a 1776 map of New York City, Broadway is explicitly labeled “Broadway Street”.In the mid-eighteenth century, part of Broadway in what is now lower Manhattan was known as Great George Street.

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