From Broadway To 52nd Street
Heading into a new era of entertainment as bootleggers came to prominence, more and more New Yorkers patronized the emerging speakeasies due to the ratification of the 18th Amendment and the Volstead Act. However, strict the government became during the thirteen-year period of Prohibition, patrons continued their outings to the theater. On December 12, 1924 the audience filled the Liberty Theatre for the successful opening night of Lady Be Good and the show ran for 330 performances. The show starred brother and sister team, Fred and Adele Astaire, Walter Catlett and Jayne Auburn performing to the music of George and Ira Gershwin, that produced the tune Fascinatin’ Rhythm.
The Story: In this play we follow Dick Trevor rebuffing his landlady, Josephine Vanderwater. She evicts him and his sister Susie from an apartment she owns. By coincidence, both have the same lawyer, Jack Watty. So Dick sets about righting matters and as Watty is in a jam, his fee to the moneyless Trevors is that Susie poses as a Mexican. In the end, Susie marries Jack and Dick ditches Josephine permanently for his true love, Shirley.
Broadway History: As American ventured further into the early 20th century, in 1910, Flo Ziegfeld took one of the greatest gambles of his career and offered a contract to Bert Williams, who became an instant hit in the Follies that year and continued to delight audiences for seven nearly consecutive editions. Bringing an enormous body of comic material to the Follies, Williams separated himself from the plethora of black comedians by bringing a quiet dignity to his characters and to himself, on and off the stage.
Although considered one of the gang by his fellow entertainers, Bert understood the tenor of the country at that time and stipulated in his contract that he would never appear on stage alone with a white woman and in turn Ziegfeld released him from touring the South. It was W. C. Fields who said, “Bert Williams was the funniest man I ever saw and the saddest man I ever knew.”
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