The Climbers (play)

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The Climbers is an American play in four acts by Clyde Fitch. The play premiered on Broadway at the Bijou Theatre on January 21, 1901. It ran for 163 performances, closing on June 1, 1901. Produced by Amelia Bingham, the production was directed by the playwright. It used scenic designs by Ernest Albert and Joseph A. Physioc. The production starred Bingham as Mrs. Sterling, Frank Worthing as Richard Sterling, Harry Wright as Richard Sterling, Jr., Clara Bloodgood as Miss Godesby, George C. Boniface as Dr. Steinart, Madge Carr Cook as Mrs. Hunter, Minnie Dupree as Clara Hunter, Maude Monroe as Jessica Hunter, Robert Edeson as Edward Warden, Ferdinand Gottschalk as Johnny Trotter, Henry Woodruff as Edward Warden, Thomas F. Fallon as Godesby, and John Flood as Frederick Mason. [1]

The Climbers had its United Kingdom debut on September 5, 1903, at the Comedy Theatre in London's West End. The cast included Sydney Valentine as Richard Sterling, Lottie Venne as Blanche Sterling, Rivers Bertram as Richard Sterling, Jr., H. Reeves-Smith as Edward Warden, Maidie Andrews as Mrs. Hunter, Lily Hanbury as Jessica Hunter, Fannie Ward as Ruth Hunter, J. L. Mackay as Johnny Trotter, G. M. Graham as Dr. Steinart, Howard Sturges as Godesby, and Gertrude Mouillot as Miss Godesby. [1]

The Climbers was revived by Bingham on Broadway at the Princess Theatre in 1904. The play was adapted into a film three times, The Climbers (1915 film), directed by Barry O'Neil; The Climbers (1919 film), directed by Tom Terriss; and The Climbers (1927 film), directed by Paul L. Stein. [2]

The play was parodied in the 1901 Broadway musical The King's Carnival . [3]

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<i>The Kings Carnival</i> 1901 musical burlesque by A. Baldwin Sloane and Sydney Rosenfeld

The King's Carnival is a musical burlesque in two acts with music by A. Baldwin Sloane and both book and lyrics by Sydney Rosenfeld. The musical also included one hit song by the songwriting team of Jean Schwartz and William Jerome, "When Mr. Shakespeare Comes to Town". The musical was a parody of several Broadway shows that dealt with royalty and courtly drama, including targeted spoofs of Paul Kester's When Knighthood Was in Flower, Clyde Fitch's The Climbers, Paul M. Potter's Under Two Flags, and Lorimer Stoddard's In the Palace of the King.

References

  1. 1 2 Dearinger, Kevin Lane (2016). "The Climbers". Clyde Fitch and the American Theatre: An Olive in the Cocktail. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 540. ISBN   9781611479485.
  2. Alan Goble, ed. (2011). "The Climbers, New York, 1901 play". The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Bowker-Saur. p. 158. ISBN   9783110951943.
  3. Dietz, Dan (2019). "The King's Carnival". The Complete Book of 1920s Broadway Musicals. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN   9781442245280.