Seven Days (play)

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Seven Days is a three-act play written in 1909 by Avery Hopwood and Mary Roberts Rinehart. It is a farce based on Rinehart's 1908 novella of the same name, which had been expanded into a bestselling 1909 novel titled When a Man Marries. Producers Lincoln Wagenhals and Collin Kemper asked Rinehart to adapt the novella for the stage. Since she had not written a play before, she agreed to work with Avery Hopwood, a young playwright with just one produced play, to create the script. Wagenhals and Kemper staged the play at the Astor Theatre on Broadway, where it premiered on November 10, 1909. The production was a hit that played for 397 performances. The play's success led Hopwood to a highly successful career as an author of comedies [1] and enabled Wagenhals and Kemper to retire. [2]

Rinehart and Hopwood would later collaborate on two other hit plays, Spanish Love and The Bat, [1] [3] both also produced by Wagenhals and Kemper, who came out of retirement. [2]

In 1925 the play was adapted into a silent film of the same name starring Lillian Rich and Creighton Hale.

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Sadie Love is a three-act play written by Avery Hopwood. Producer Oliver Morosco staged it on Broadway, where it opened at the Gaiety Theatre in November 1915. The play is a farce about a widow named Sadie Love, who marries a prince but discovers he still has feelings for a previous girlfriend. The play was adapted as a movie of the same name in 1919.

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The Circular Staircase is a 1915 mystery silent film directed by Edward LeSaint and starring Guy Oliver, Eugenie Besserrer, and Stella Razeto. The film was produced by the Selig Polyscope Company. It is based on the mystery novel of the same name by Mary Roberts Rinehart, which was originally published in five parts starting with the November 1907 issue of All-Story magazine. The film is now lost.

References

  1. 1 2 Sharrar, Jack F. (1998) [1989]. Avery Hopwood: His Life and Plays. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. pp. 38–43. ISBN   0-472-10963-4. OCLC   924828273.
  2. 1 2 "Four "Million-Dollar" Hits Out of One Season's Crop". Variety . July 12, 1923. p. 1. Retrieved April 30, 2018.
  3. Cohn, Jan (1980). Improbable Fiction: The Life of Mary Roberts Rinehart . Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh Press. pp.  48–50. ISBN   0-8229-3401-9. OCLC   464222615.