The Front Page | |
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Written by | |
Date premiered | August 14, 1928 |
Place premiered | Times Square Theater New York City |
Original language | English |
Genre | Comedy |
Setting | The Press Room of the Criminal Courts Building in Chicago, 1928 |
The Front Page is a Broadway comedy about newspaper reporters on the police beat. Written by former Chicago reporters Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, it was first produced in 1928 and has been adapted for the cinema several times. The play entered the public domain in the United States in 2024. [1]
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 will 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 goodbye; he is 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 is no revolutionary, and that he 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 is 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. Hildy has no choice but to ask for help from Walter Burns, managing editor of the Examiner — a devious tyrant who would do just about anything to keep Hildy with the newspaper.
Notable casts
Character | Broadway revival (1928) | Broadway revival (1986) [2] | Broadway revival (2016) [3] |
---|---|---|---|
Walter Burns | Osgood Perkins | John Lithgow | Nathan Lane |
Hildy Johnson | Lee Tracy | Richard Thomas | John Slattery |
Sheriff Hartman | Claude Cooper | Richard B. Shull | John Goodman |
Bensinger | Walter Baldwin | Jeff Weiss | Jefferson Mays |
Mrs. Grant | Violet Barney | Anita Dangler | Holland Taylor |
Mollie Malloy | Dorothy Stickney | Amanda Carlin | Sherie Rene Scott |
Mr. Pincus | Frank Conlan | Patrick Garner | Robert Morse |
McCue | William Foran | Philip LeStrange | Dylan Baker |
Jennie | Carrie Weller | Anita Dangler | Patricia Conolly |
Peggy Grant | Frances Fuller | Amanda Carlin | Halley Feiffer |
The Mayor | George Barbier | Jerome Dempsey | Dann Florek |
Earl Williams | George Leach | Paul Stolarsky | John Magaro |
Diamond Louis | Eduardo Ciannelli | Michael Rothhaar | Danny Mastrogiorgio |
Murphy | Willard Robertson | Ed Lauter | Christopher McDonald |
Schwartz | Tammany Young | Lee Wilkof | David Pittu |
Wilson | Vincent York | Philip Le Strange | Joey Slotnick |
Endicott | Allen Jenkins | Bernie McInerney | Lewis J. Stadlen |
Woodenshoes Eichorn | Jay Wilson | Jack Wallace | Micah Stock |
Kruger | Joseph Calleia | Richard Peterson | Clarke Thorell |
Frank | Gene West | Philip LeStrange | Joe Forbich |
Policeman | Larry Doyle | Patrick Garner | Michael X. Martin |
Second Policeman | George T. Fleming | Richard Peterson | Jonathan Spivey |
Carl | Matthew Crowley | Michael Rothhaar | Tony Ward |
Tony | N/A | Richard Preston | Michael X. Martin |
The Front Page was produced by Jed Harris and directed by George S. Kaufman, with settings by Raymond Sovey. It opened at the Times Square Theatre, New York City, on August 14, 1928, and ran 278 performances before closing in April 1929. [4] [5]
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. In the 1970s, film producer Dore Schary told film historian David Bordwell that The Front Page influenced studio writers and directors in the 1930s. [6] The play popularized the image of American journalists as fast-talking, wisecracking "hard-boiled" types, excessively fond of alcohol and hard living in general, who would go to any lengths to get a story on the front page of their newspapers. [7]
The newspapers are modeled on the City News Bureau of Chicago (where MacArthur had worked), Chicago Daily News (where Hecht was a reporter), and William Randolph Hearst's Chicago's American . The character Earl Williams is loosely based on "Terrible" Tommy O'Connor. [8] The character of Williams also was at least partially based on the case of Thomas Mooney, a radical leftist sentenced to death on the basis of questionable evidence. Walter Burns is a thinly disguised caricature of Hearst editor Walter Howey. [9] The corrupt Mayor of Chicago seems to have been based on William Hale Thompson, who, like the mayor in the play, depended in part upon black voters to stay in office. Commenting on the play's seeming veracity, New York Times theater critic Brooks Atkinson wrote, "The authors and directors have packed an evening with loud, rapid, coarse and unfailing entertainment. No one who has ground his heels in the grime of a police headquarters press room will complain that this argot misrepresents the gentlemen of the press." [10]
The play was restaged four more times on Broadway. The 1969–70 revival was the most successful of these. It was produced at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre and starred Robert Ryan and Bert Convy as Burns and Johnson, running for a total of 222 performances. [11] The 1946 revival was directed by Charles MacArthur and ran for 79 performances. The 1986–87 revival was produced at the Vivian Beaumont at Lincoln Center, directed by Jerry Zaks and starred Richard Thomas as Hildy and John Lithgow as Burns. This production ran for 57 performances. [12]
A Broadway revival opened at the Broadhurst Theatre, in a limited engagement, starting on September 20, 2016, in previews and officially on October 20. Directed by Jack O'Brien, the cast starred Nathan Lane as Walter Burns, John Slattery as Hildy Johnson, John Goodman as Sheriff Hartman, Jefferson Mays as Bensinger, Holland Taylor as Mrs. Grant, Sherie Rene Scott as Mollie Malloy, Robert Morse as Silas Pinkus, and Christopher McDonald as Murphy. The production received generally good notices, especially for Lane, and became the first show of the season to recoup and turn a profit. [13] [14] [15] It received two Tony nominations: Best Featured Actor in a Play (Lane) and Best Scenic Design of a Play (Douglas W. Schmidt). [16]
John Guare's theatrical adaptation of the film His Girl Friday was produced at The La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego, California, in 2013, directed by Christopher Ashley. [17]
The Front Page has been adapted for film and radio a number of times:
His Girl Friday and Switching Channels changed the male lead Hildebrand "Hildy" Johnson to women, Hildegaard "Hildy" Johnson and Christy Colleran respectively. [24] John Varley's 1991 science fiction novel Steel Beach takes the story — and the change of sex — to another level; 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:
The musical Windy City (book and lyrics by Dick Vosburgh, music by Tony Macaulay) was also based on The Front Page. [25] It premiered at the Victoria Palace Theatre, London, England on July 20, 1982 and ran for 250 performances.
Additionally, Hecht and MacArthur's story for the 1939 film Gunga Din recycles their basic plot of trying to dissuade someone from leaving his job, in this case Douglas Fairbanks Jr.'s character attempting to resign his post in the British army and comrades Cary Grant and Victor McLaglen conniving to prevent it.
Film critic Leonard Maltin describes the 1940 film Torrid Zone as a 3.5-out-of-4-star “variation on Front Page”. [26] Set among the highly competitive banana plantations of Central America, it stars James Cagney as the invaluable employee, Pat O'Brien as the amoral boss who will stop at nothing to keep him from leaving, George Tobias as a revolutionary awaiting the firing squad, and Ann Sheridan as love interest, with snappy dialogue provided by Richard Macaulay and Jerry Wald. [27]
The 2013 graphic novel, Nemo: Heart of Ice, by Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill, has a prose afterword purportedly written by Hildy Johnson, who visits Lincoln Island to write about the wedding of Captain Nemo's granddaughter to the son of Robur the Conqueror.
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1928 | Burns Mantle's The Best Plays of 1928–29 | The Front Page | Won | [28] | |
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | Tony Awards | Best Revival | Nominated | ||
Best Scenic Design | Tony Walton | Nominated | |||
Drama Desk Award | Outstanding Set Design | Nominated | [29] | ||
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Tony Awards | Best Featured Actor in a Play | Nathan Lane | Nominated | [30] |
Best Scenic Design of a Play | Douglas W. Schmidt | Nominated | |||
Drama Desk Award | Outstanding Revival of a Play | Nominated | [31] | ||
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play | Nathan Lane | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Scenic Design of a Play | Douglas W. Schmidt | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Costume Design of a Play | Ann Roth | Nominated | |||
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