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Guy Bolton

Guy Reginald Bolton (23 November 1884 – 4 September 1979)[1] was an Anglo-American playwright and writer of musical comedies. Born in England and educated in France and the US, he trained as an architect but turned to writing. Bolton preferred working in collaboration with others, principally the English writers P. G. Wodehouse and Fred Thompson, with whom he wrote 21 and 14 shows respectively, and the American playwright George Middleton, with whom he wrote ten shows. Among his other collaborators in Britain were George Grossmith Jr., Ian Hay and Weston and Lee. In the US, he worked with George and Ira Gershwin, Kalmar and Ruby and Oscar Hammerstein II.

Bolton, centre, with l to r, Morris Gest, P. G. Wodehouse, Ray Comstock and Jerome Kern, c. 1917

Bolton is best known for his early work on the Princess Theatre musicals during the First World War with Wodehouse and the composer Jerome Kern. These shows moved the American musical away from the traditions of European operetta to small scale, intimate productions with what the Oxford Encyclopedia of Popular Music calls "smart and witty integrated books and lyrics, considered to be a watershed in the evolution of the American musical."[2] Among his 50 plays and musicals, most of which were considered "frothy confections", additional hits included Primrose (1924), the Gershwins' Lady, Be Good (1925) and especially Cole Porter's Anything Goes (1934).

Bolton also wrote stage adaptations of novels by Henry James and Somerset Maugham, and wrote three novels on his own and a fourth in collaboration with Bernard Newman. He worked on screenplays for such films as Ambassador Bill (1931) and Easter Parade (1948), and published four novels, Flowers for the Living (with Bernard Newman, 1958), The Olympians (1961), The Enchantress (1964) and Gracious Living (1966). With Wodehouse, he wrote a joint memoir of their Broadway years, entitled Bring on the Girls! (1953).

Biography

Early years

Bolton was born in Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, the elder son of an American engineer, Reginald Pelham Bolton, and his wife Kate (née Behenna).[1][3] His younger brother, Jamie, died young, leaving Guy and his older sister Ivy.[4] The family moved to the US, settling in New York City's Washington Heights.[5] Bolton studied to be an architect, attending the Pratt Institute School of Architecture and Atelier Masqueray, New York.[6] He also studied at the École des Beaux-Arts, Paris.[3]

 
Sheet music from Oh, Boy!, an early hit with Kern and Wodehouse

Bolton made early progress in his profession, engaged by the government for special work on the rebuilding of the United States Military Academy at West Point,[3] and helping to design the Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument and the Ansonia Hotel on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, New York City,[7] but was drawn to writing.

Early writing career

While Bolton was still a student, his stories had been published in magazines. At the age of 26, he wrote his first stage play, The Drone, in collaboration with Douglas J. Wood.[1] His second play, The Rule of Three (1914), was written without a partner, but the following year he embarked on his first musical theatre collaboration, Ninety in the Shade, with music by Jerome Kern, lyrics by Harry B. Smith and book by Bolton, first produced at the Knickerbocker Theatre, New York, on 25 January 1915. The same year, he wrote Hit-the-Trail-Holiday with George M. Cohan. That same year he collaborated with Kern and others on the musicals Nobody Home and the even more successful Very Good Eddie, the first two "Princess Theatre musicals". The latter of the two was also a hit in London.[8]

Bolton quickly became known for his part in moving the American musical away from the European operetta tradition: "No more crown princes masquerading as butlers, no more milkmaids who turn out at the final curtain to be heir to several thrones."[9] Nevertheless, he collaborated with one of operetta's last practitioners, Emmerich Kálmán, in an adaptation of Kálmán's 1915 piece Zsuzsi Kisassony. Miss Springtime, as the American version was called, was produced at the New Amsterdam Theatre in 1916.[10] Bolton wrote the book; the lyrics were by Herbert Reynolds and P. G. Wodehouse, the latter writing with Bolton for the first time in what became a lifelong working partnership and personal friendship. Kern, who already knew Wodehouse, introduced him to Bolton at the premiere of Very Good Eddie. Wodehouse admired Bolton's stagecraft, but thought his lyrics weak, and at Kern's urging they decided to write jointly, Wodehouse concentrating on the lyrics and Bolton on the book.[11]

 
P. G. Wodehouse, Bolton's friend and collaborator

For the Princess Theatre, Bolton and Wodehouse wrote the book and lyrics for Have a Heart (1917), Oh, Boy! (1917), which ran for 463 performances,[12] Leave It to Jane (1917),[13] Oh, Lady! Lady!! (1918), See You Later (1918) and Oh! My Dear (1918).[14] They also collaborated on Miss 1917 (1917) at the Century Theatre, on Bolton's second Kálmán show, The Riviera Girl (1917), and on Kissing Time (1918), the latter two for the New Amsterdam. During these years, Bolton also wrote successful plays with George Middleton and others. But it was the Princess Theatre shows with Kern that made the most impression; some of these shows were so popular that they transferred to the larger Casino Theatre to finish their runs. An anonymous admirer wrote a verse in their praise[15] that begins:

This is the trio of musical fame,
Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern.
Better than anyone else you can name
Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern.[16]

In February 1918, Dorothy Parker wrote in Vanity Fair:

 
Sheet music from Oh, Lady! Lady!! (1918)

Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern have done it again. Every time these three gather together, the Princess Theatre is sold out for months in advance. You can get a seat for Oh, Lady! Lady!! somewhere around the middle of August for just about the price of one on the stock exchange. If you ask me, I will look you fearlessly in the eye and tell you in low, throbbing tones that it has it over any other musical comedy in town. But then Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern are my favorite indoor sport. I like the way they go about a musical comedy. ... I like the way the action slides casually into the songs. ... I like the deft rhyming of the song that is always sung in the last act by two comedians and a comedienne. And oh, how I do like Jerome Kern's music. And all these things are even more so in Oh, Lady! Lady!! than they were in Oh, Boy![17]

Later writing career

Bolton went on to write more than fifty stage works, mainly in collaboration with others. By 1934 he had made twelve shows with Kern and seven with Gershwin.[18] Besides Wodehouse, his frequent writing partners were the American, George Middleton, with whom he wrote ten shows, and the Englishman, Fred Thompson, with whom he wrote fourteen. His collaborations with Middleton were non-musical comic plays, produced with success on both sides of the Atlantic. Their Polly With a Past (1917) was a success in both New York and London, where its cast included Edna Best, Noël Coward, Edith Evans, Claude Rains and C. Aubrey Smith.[19] Their Adam and Eva was another favourite that was adapted for film and frequently revived by smaller theatres. He adapted a French comedy to create the book for The Hotel Mouse in 1922.[20] With Thompson, he wrote the book for early musicals by George and Ira Gershwin, Lady, Be Good (1925) and Tip-Toes (1926).[6] With the Gershwins and Wodehouse, he wrote Oh, Kay! (1926). Among his other collaborators in Britain were George Grossmith Jr., with whom he worked on Primrose (1924), Ian Hay with whom he co-wrote A Song of Sixpence (1930) with Weston and Lee, who joined him for Give Me a Ring (1933). In the US, he worked with Oscar Hammerstein II on Daffy Dill (1922), and with Kalmar and Ruby on The Ramblers (1926) and She's My Baby (1927).[6] He co-wrote the libretto for Kern's Blue Eyes, which played in London in 1928.[21] An occasional collaborator in later years was "Stephen Powys", a pseudonym of Bolton's third wife, Virginia.[1] Girl Crazy (1930) was a musical, with songs by the Gershwins, starring Ginger Rogers and featuring the debut of Ethel Merman. It was later adapted by Ken Ludwig as the sensation Crazy for You.[22]

 
Bolton and Wodehouse wrote the book for Cole Porter's Anything Goes.

During the 1920s and 30s "Bolton worked at a tremendous rate on shows … beautifully constructed, and full of fun and excruciating puns."[2] When the Gershwins began to take a more serious tone, with Of Thee I Sing, Bolton persisted with his "frothy confections" for other composers. He moved to London, where he wrote (or co-wrote, generally with Thompson and sometimes also with Douglas Furber) the book for "a series of highly successful romps" starring London's leading music comedy performers such as Jack Buchanan, Leslie Henson, Bobby Howes, Evelyn Laye and Elsie Randolph, in shows including Song of the Drum (1931), Seeing Stars (1935), At the Silver Swan (1936), This'll Make You Whistle (1935; film version 1936), Swing Along (1936), Going Places (1936), Going Greek (1937), Hide and Seek (1937), The Fleet's Lit Up (1938), Running Riot (1938), Bobby Get Your Gun (1938) and Magyar Melody (1939).[2][6]

Although Bolton worked mostly in the West End in the 1930s, his biggest hit of the decade began on Broadway, a collaboration with his old friend Wodehouse, who had by then largely abandoned the theatre for novel-writing. When Bolton approached him to co-write the book for Cole Porter's Anything Goes (1934), Wodehouse objected, "Cole does his own lyrics ... What pests these lyric-writing composers are! Taking the bread out of a man's mouth". Still, he agreed to join Bolton in writing the book.[23] The show was, in the words of the Oxford Encyclopedia of Popular Music, "a smash hit" in New York and in London.[2]

Bolton returned to the US during the Second World War to write the librettos for Walk With Music, Hold On to Your Hats, Jackpot (with several contributors) and Follow the Girls (with Eddie Davis).[6] Bolton's screen credits include The Love Parade (1929), Ambassador Bill (1931), Waltzes from Vienna (1934), The Murder Man (1935), Angel (1937), Week-End at the Waldorf (1945), Ziegfeld Follies (1945), Till the Clouds Roll By (1946), Easter Parade (1948) and the German adaptation of his play Adorable Julia (1962).[2] In 1952, he moved away from musicals with an English adaptation of Marcelle Maurette's Anastasia.[18] His last book for Broadway was Anya, a 1967 musical adaptation of Anastasia based on his adaptation and the 1956 film.[24]

With Wodehouse, Bolton wrote the semi-autobiographical book Bring on the Girls!, subtitled, "The Improbable Story of Our Life in Musical Comedy" (1954). It is full of anecdotes about the larger-than-life characters who dominated Broadway between 1915 and 1930, but the biographer Frances Donaldson writes that it is to be read as entertainment rather than reliable history: "Guy, having once invented an anecdote, told it so often that it was impossible to know whether in the end he believed it or not."[25] Other collaborations between the two writers were not acknowledged on title pages or in programmes, but were plays by one turned into novels by the other, or vice versa. Bolton's play, Come On, Jeeves centred on one of Wodehouse's best-known characters; Wodehouse later adapted the play as the novel Ring for Jeeves.[26] Wodehouse's novels French Leave, The Small Bachelor and others were adapted from plots by Bolton.[27][28]

In his later years, Bolton wrote four novels, Flowers for the Living (with Bernard Newman, 1958), The Olympians (1961), The Enchantress (1964) and Gracious Living (1966).[6] The Times thought his later non-musical stage work notable, including adaptations of works by Somerset Maugham and Sacha Guitry, and his biographical play The Shelley Story (1947).[1] Another of Bolton's more serious stage works was Child of Fortune (1956), an adaptation of Henry James's The Wings of the Dove.[6]

Personal life

 

Bolton was "a dapper ladies' man, who, having divorced his first wife, became ensnared in a succession of entanglements with chorus girls and singers."[5] He was married four times. With his first wife, Julia, née Currey, whom he married in 1908, he had one son, Richard M. Bolton (1909–1965) and one daughter, Katherine Louisa "Joan" Bolton (1911–1967). With his second wife, opera singer Marguerite Namara, to whom he was married from 1917 to 1926, he had a daughter, Marguerite Pamela "Peggy" Bolton (1916–2003), who was his only child to outlive him. His third wife was a chorus girl, Marion Redford, whom he married in 1926. Redford had already given birth to Bolton's son, Guy Bolton Jr., known as "Guybo" (1925–1961) before his divorce from Namara. Bolton and Redford divorced in 1932. There were no children of his fourth marriage, to the playwright Virginia de Lanty. This marriage lasted from 1939 until her death in 1979.[3][29]

Although born of American parents, Bolton was a British subject until 1956, when he took American citizenship.[1] His roots were not deep in any country: like his father, he had a lifelong taste for travelling,[30] and he settled from time to time in European towns and cities including London, but never Paris, which he loathed.[31] His main residences were on Long Island, New York, including Great Neck (at the time of the Princess Theatre shows),[32] and Remsenburg, where he and his wife lived in the years after the Second World War. In 1952, Wodehouse and his wife bought a house two miles away, and for the rest of Wodehouse's life, he and Bolton would go for a daily walk when the latter was not travelling abroad.[33]

Bolton died on a visit to London in 1979, at the age of 94.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Mr Guy Bolton", obituary, The Times, 23 November 1979, p. 11
  2. ^ a b c d e "Bolton, Guy", Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Oxford Music Online, accessed 7 May 2010 (requires subscription)
  3. ^ a b c d e "Bolton, Guy", Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 7 May 2010 (requires subscription).
  4. ^ Davis, p. 6
  5. ^ a b McCrum, p. 127
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2003, accessed 7 May 2010 (requires subscription).
  7. ^ Jasen, p. 59
  8. ^ The Times, 20 May 1918, p. 9
  9. ^ Green, p. 103
  10. ^ Traubner, p. 265. The show was originally called Little Miss Springtime, but Abe Erlanger, who ran the theatre, "wouldn't have anything little at the New Amsterdam".
  11. ^ Bolton, p. 16
  12. ^ Staged in London as Oh, Joy! in 1919, when it ran for 167 performances: see Jason, p. 279
  13. ^ Leave It to Jane had to run at another theatre because of the success of Oh, Boy! at the Princess
  14. ^ Oh! My Dear! was composed not by Kern but by Louis Hirsch. A flop, Oh! My Dear was the last of the "Princess Theatre musical".
  15. ^ The poem is patterned after "Baseball's Sad Lexicon", about the Chicago Cubs' infield. See Frankos, Laura. "Musical of the Month: Oh, Boy!", New York Public Library, 27 August 2012, accessed 11 September 2015
  16. ^ Steyn, Mark. "Musical debt to a very good Guy", The Times, 28 November 1984, p 12
  17. ^ quoted in Green, p. 110
  18. ^ a b "Obituaries", Variety, September 12, 1979, p. 114
  19. ^ "Polly with a Past. American Comedy at St. James's", The Times, 3 March 1921, p. 8
  20. ^ The New York Times, March 14, 1922, p. 20
  21. ^ Somerville, Matthew. "Blue Eyes", Theatricalia.com. Retrieved 6 October 2022
  22. ^ Morrison, William (1999). Broadway Theatres: History and Architecture. Dover Books on Architecture. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. pp. 154–55. ISBN 978-0-486-40244-4.
  23. ^ Bolton, p. 233
  24. ^ "Guy Bolton: Complete Filmography", TCM.com, accessed April 19, 2019
  25. ^ Donaldson, p. 12
  26. ^ Usborne, pp. 155–56.
  27. ^ McCrum, p. 396
  28. ^ Donaldson, p. 321
  29. ^ Gale, Contemporary Authors Online spells his third wife's name "Mary Radford". The other authorities cited all state that he was married only three times.
  30. ^ McCrum, p. 397
  31. ^ McCrum, p. 223
  32. ^ McCrum, p. 138
  33. ^ McCrum, p. 405

References

  • Bolton, Guy, and P. G. Wodehouse. Bring on the Girls, (originally published 1954) reprinted in Wodehouse on Wodehouse, Hutchinson, London, 1980. ISBN 0-09-143210-3
  • Davis, Lee. Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern – The Men Who Made Musical Comedy, James H. Heineman, New York, 1993. ISBN 0-87008-145-4
  • Donaldson, Frances. P. G. Wodehouse – The Authorized Biography, Futura, London, 1983. ISBN 0-7088-2356-4
  • Green, Benny. P. G. Wodehouse – A Literary Biography, Pavilion Books, London, 1981. ISBN 0-907516-04-1
  • Jasen, David. P. G. Wodehouse – Portrait of a Master, Garnstone Press, London, 1974. ISBN 0-85511-190-9
  • McCrum, Robert. Wodehouse – A Life. Viking Books, London, 2004. ISBN 0-670-89692-6
  • Traubner, Richard. Operetta – A Theatrical History, second edition, Routledge, London, 2003. ISBN 0-415-96641-8
  • Usborne, Richard. Wodehouse at Work to the End, Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, 1978. ISBN 0-14-004564-3

External links

bolton, reginald, bolton, november, 1884, september, 1979, anglo, american, playwright, writer, musical, comedies, born, england, educated, france, trained, architect, turned, writing, bolton, preferred, working, collaboration, with, others, principally, engli. Guy Reginald Bolton 23 November 1884 4 September 1979 1 was an Anglo American playwright and writer of musical comedies Born in England and educated in France and the US he trained as an architect but turned to writing Bolton preferred working in collaboration with others principally the English writers P G Wodehouse and Fred Thompson with whom he wrote 21 and 14 shows respectively and the American playwright George Middleton with whom he wrote ten shows Among his other collaborators in Britain were George Grossmith Jr Ian Hay and Weston and Lee In the US he worked with George and Ira Gershwin Kalmar and Ruby and Oscar Hammerstein II Bolton centre with l to r Morris Gest P G Wodehouse Ray Comstock and Jerome Kern c 1917 Bolton is best known for his early work on the Princess Theatre musicals during the First World War with Wodehouse and the composer Jerome Kern These shows moved the American musical away from the traditions of European operetta to small scale intimate productions with what the Oxford Encyclopedia of Popular Music calls smart and witty integrated books and lyrics considered to be a watershed in the evolution of the American musical 2 Among his 50 plays and musicals most of which were considered frothy confections additional hits included Primrose 1924 the Gershwins Lady Be Good 1925 and especially Cole Porter s Anything Goes 1934 Bolton also wrote stage adaptations of novels by Henry James and Somerset Maugham and wrote three novels on his own and a fourth in collaboration with Bernard Newman He worked on screenplays for such films as Ambassador Bill 1931 and Easter Parade 1948 and published four novels Flowers for the Living with Bernard Newman 1958 The Olympians 1961 The Enchantress 1964 and Gracious Living 1966 With Wodehouse he wrote a joint memoir of their Broadway years entitled Bring on the Girls 1953 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Early writing career 1 3 Later writing career 1 4 Personal life 2 Notes 3 References 4 External linksBiography EditEarly years Edit Bolton was born in Broxbourne Hertfordshire the elder son of an American engineer Reginald Pelham Bolton and his wife Kate nee Behenna 1 3 His younger brother Jamie died young leaving Guy and his older sister Ivy 4 The family moved to the US settling in New York City s Washington Heights 5 Bolton studied to be an architect attending the Pratt Institute School of Architecture and Atelier Masqueray New York 6 He also studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts Paris 3 Sheet music from Oh Boy an early hit with Kern and Wodehouse Bolton made early progress in his profession engaged by the government for special work on the rebuilding of the United States Military Academy at West Point 3 and helping to design the Soldiers and Sailors Monument and the Ansonia Hotel on the Upper West Side of Manhattan New York City 7 but was drawn to writing Early writing career Edit While Bolton was still a student his stories had been published in magazines At the age of 26 he wrote his first stage play The Drone in collaboration with Douglas J Wood 1 His second play The Rule of Three 1914 was written without a partner but the following year he embarked on his first musical theatre collaboration Ninety in the Shade with music by Jerome Kern lyrics by Harry B Smith and book by Bolton first produced at the Knickerbocker Theatre New York on 25 January 1915 The same year he wrote Hit the Trail Holiday with George M Cohan That same year he collaborated with Kern and others on the musicals Nobody Home and the even more successful Very Good Eddie the first two Princess Theatre musicals The latter of the two was also a hit in London 8 Bolton quickly became known for his part in moving the American musical away from the European operetta tradition No more crown princes masquerading as butlers no more milkmaids who turn out at the final curtain to be heir to several thrones 9 Nevertheless he collaborated with one of operetta s last practitioners Emmerich Kalman in an adaptation of Kalman s 1915 piece Zsuzsi Kisassony Miss Springtime as the American version was called was produced at the New Amsterdam Theatre in 1916 10 Bolton wrote the book the lyrics were by Herbert Reynolds and P G Wodehouse the latter writing with Bolton for the first time in what became a lifelong working partnership and personal friendship Kern who already knew Wodehouse introduced him to Bolton at the premiere of Very Good Eddie Wodehouse admired Bolton s stagecraft but thought his lyrics weak and at Kern s urging they decided to write jointly Wodehouse concentrating on the lyrics and Bolton on the book 11 P G Wodehouse Bolton s friend and collaborator For the Princess Theatre Bolton and Wodehouse wrote the book and lyrics for Have a Heart 1917 Oh Boy 1917 which ran for 463 performances 12 Leave It to Jane 1917 13 Oh Lady Lady 1918 See You Later 1918 and Oh My Dear 1918 14 They also collaborated on Miss 1917 1917 at the Century Theatre on Bolton s second Kalman show The Riviera Girl 1917 and on Kissing Time 1918 the latter two for the New Amsterdam During these years Bolton also wrote successful plays with George Middleton and others But it was the Princess Theatre shows with Kern that made the most impression some of these shows were so popular that they transferred to the larger Casino Theatre to finish their runs An anonymous admirer wrote a verse in their praise 15 that begins This is the trio of musical fame Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern Better than anyone else you can name Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern 16 In February 1918 Dorothy Parker wrote in Vanity Fair Sheet music from Oh Lady Lady 1918 Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern have done it again Every time these three gather together the Princess Theatre is sold out for months in advance You can get a seat for Oh Lady Lady somewhere around the middle of August for just about the price of one on the stock exchange If you ask me I will look you fearlessly in the eye and tell you in low throbbing tones that it has it over any other musical comedy in town But then Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern are my favorite indoor sport I like the way they go about a musical comedy I like the way the action slides casually into the songs I like the deft rhyming of the song that is always sung in the last act by two comedians and a comedienne And oh how I do like Jerome Kern s music And all these things are even more so in Oh Lady Lady than they were in Oh Boy 17 Later writing career Edit Bolton went on to write more than fifty stage works mainly in collaboration with others By 1934 he had made twelve shows with Kern and seven with Gershwin 18 Besides Wodehouse his frequent writing partners were the American George Middleton with whom he wrote ten shows and the Englishman Fred Thompson with whom he wrote fourteen His collaborations with Middleton were non musical comic plays produced with success on both sides of the Atlantic Their Polly With a Past 1917 was a success in both New York and London where its cast included Edna Best Noel Coward Edith Evans Claude Rains and C Aubrey Smith 19 Their Adam and Eva was another favourite that was adapted for film and frequently revived by smaller theatres He adapted a French comedy to create the book for The Hotel Mouse in 1922 20 With Thompson he wrote the book for early musicals by George and Ira Gershwin Lady Be Good 1925 and Tip Toes 1926 6 With the Gershwins and Wodehouse he wrote Oh Kay 1926 Among his other collaborators in Britain were George Grossmith Jr with whom he worked on Primrose 1924 Ian Hay with whom he co wrote A Song of Sixpence 1930 with Weston and Lee who joined him for Give Me a Ring 1933 In the US he worked with Oscar Hammerstein II on Daffy Dill 1922 and with Kalmar and Ruby on The Ramblers 1926 and She s My Baby 1927 6 He co wrote the libretto for Kern s Blue Eyes which played in London in 1928 21 An occasional collaborator in later years was Stephen Powys a pseudonym of Bolton s third wife Virginia 1 Girl Crazy 1930 was a musical with songs by the Gershwins starring Ginger Rogers and featuring the debut of Ethel Merman It was later adapted by Ken Ludwig as the sensation Crazy for You 22 Bolton and Wodehouse wrote the book for Cole Porter s Anything Goes During the 1920s and 30s Bolton worked at a tremendous rate on shows beautifully constructed and full of fun and excruciating puns 2 When the Gershwins began to take a more serious tone with Of Thee I Sing Bolton persisted with his frothy confections for other composers He moved to London where he wrote or co wrote generally with Thompson and sometimes also with Douglas Furber the book for a series of highly successful romps starring London s leading music comedy performers such as Jack Buchanan Leslie Henson Bobby Howes Evelyn Laye and Elsie Randolph in shows including Song of the Drum 1931 Seeing Stars 1935 At the Silver Swan 1936 This ll Make You Whistle 1935 film version 1936 Swing Along 1936 Going Places 1936 Going Greek 1937 Hide and Seek 1937 The Fleet s Lit Up 1938 Running Riot 1938 Bobby Get Your Gun 1938 and Magyar Melody 1939 2 6 Although Bolton worked mostly in the West End in the 1930s his biggest hit of the decade began on Broadway a collaboration with his old friend Wodehouse who had by then largely abandoned the theatre for novel writing When Bolton approached him to co write the book for Cole Porter s Anything Goes 1934 Wodehouse objected Cole does his own lyrics What pests these lyric writing composers are Taking the bread out of a man s mouth Still he agreed to join Bolton in writing the book 23 The show was in the words of the Oxford Encyclopedia of Popular Music a smash hit in New York and in London 2 Bolton returned to the US during the Second World War to write the librettos for Walk With Music Hold On to Your Hats Jackpot with several contributors and Follow the Girls with Eddie Davis 6 Bolton s screen credits include The Love Parade 1929 Ambassador Bill 1931 Waltzes from Vienna 1934 The Murder Man 1935 Angel 1937 Week End at the Waldorf 1945 Ziegfeld Follies 1945 Till the Clouds Roll By 1946 Easter Parade 1948 and the German adaptation of his play Adorable Julia 1962 2 In 1952 he moved away from musicals with an English adaptation of Marcelle Maurette s Anastasia 18 His last book for Broadway was Anya a 1967 musical adaptation of Anastasia based on his adaptation and the 1956 film 24 With Wodehouse Bolton wrote the semi autobiographical book Bring on the Girls subtitled The Improbable Story of Our Life in Musical Comedy 1954 It is full of anecdotes about the larger than life characters who dominated Broadway between 1915 and 1930 but the biographer Frances Donaldson writes that it is to be read as entertainment rather than reliable history Guy having once invented an anecdote told it so often that it was impossible to know whether in the end he believed it or not 25 Other collaborations between the two writers were not acknowledged on title pages or in programmes but were plays by one turned into novels by the other or vice versa Bolton s play Come On Jeeves centred on one of Wodehouse s best known characters Wodehouse later adapted the play as the novel Ring for Jeeves 26 Wodehouse s novels French Leave The Small Bachelor and others were adapted from plots by Bolton 27 28 In his later years Bolton wrote four novels Flowers for the Living with Bernard Newman 1958 The Olympians 1961 The Enchantress 1964 and Gracious Living 1966 6 The Times thought his later non musical stage work notable including adaptations of works by Somerset Maugham and Sacha Guitry and his biographical play The Shelley Story 1947 1 Another of Bolton s more serious stage works was Child of Fortune 1956 an adaptation of Henry James s The Wings of the Dove 6 Personal life Edit Bolton was a dapper ladies man who having divorced his first wife became ensnared in a succession of entanglements with chorus girls and singers 5 He was married four times With his first wife Julia nee Currey whom he married in 1908 he had one son Richard M Bolton 1909 1965 and one daughter Katherine Louisa Joan Bolton 1911 1967 With his second wife opera singer Marguerite Namara to whom he was married from 1917 to 1926 he had a daughter Marguerite Pamela Peggy Bolton 1916 2003 who was his only child to outlive him His third wife was a chorus girl Marion Redford whom he married in 1926 Redford had already given birth to Bolton s son Guy Bolton Jr known as Guybo 1925 1961 before his divorce from Namara Bolton and Redford divorced in 1932 There were no children of his fourth marriage to the playwright Virginia de Lanty This marriage lasted from 1939 until her death in 1979 3 29 Although born of American parents Bolton was a British subject until 1956 when he took American citizenship 1 His roots were not deep in any country like his father he had a lifelong taste for travelling 30 and he settled from time to time in European towns and cities including London but never Paris which he loathed 31 His main residences were on Long Island New York including Great Neck at the time of the Princess Theatre shows 32 and Remsenburg where he and his wife lived in the years after the Second World War In 1952 Wodehouse and his wife bought a house two miles away and for the rest of Wodehouse s life he and Bolton would go for a daily walk when the latter was not travelling abroad 33 Bolton died on a visit to London in 1979 at the age of 94 3 Notes Edit a b c d e f Mr Guy Bolton obituary The Times 23 November 1979 p 11 a b c d e Bolton Guy Encyclopedia of Popular Music Oxford Music Online accessed 7 May 2010 requires subscription a b c d e Bolton Guy Who Was Who A amp C Black 1920 2008 online edition Oxford University Press December 2007 accessed 7 May 2010 requires subscription Davis p 6 a b McCrum p 127 a b c d e f g Contemporary Authors Online Gale 2003 accessed 7 May 2010 requires subscription Jasen p 59 The Times 20 May 1918 p 9 Green p 103 Traubner p 265 The show was originally called Little Miss Springtime but Abe Erlanger who ran the theatre wouldn t have anything little at the New Amsterdam Bolton p 16 Staged in London as Oh Joy in 1919 when it ran for 167 performances see Jason p 279 Leave It to Jane had to run at another theatre because of the success of Oh Boy at the Princess Oh My Dear was composed not by Kern but by Louis Hirsch A flop Oh My Dear was the last of the Princess Theatre musical The poem is patterned after Baseball s Sad Lexicon about the Chicago Cubs infield See Frankos Laura Musical of the Month Oh Boy New York Public Library 27 August 2012 accessed 11 September 2015 Steyn Mark Musical debt to a very good Guy The Times 28 November 1984 p 12 quoted in Green p 110 a b Obituaries Variety September 12 1979 p 114 Polly with a Past American Comedy at St James s The Times 3 March 1921 p 8 The New York Times March 14 1922 p 20 Somerville Matthew Blue Eyes Theatricalia com Retrieved 6 October 2022 Morrison William 1999 Broadway Theatres History and Architecture Dover Books on Architecture Mineola New York Dover Publications pp 154 55 ISBN 978 0 486 40244 4 Bolton p 233 Guy Bolton Complete Filmography TCM com accessed April 19 2019 Donaldson p 12 Usborne pp 155 56 McCrum p 396 Donaldson p 321 Gale Contemporary Authors Online spells his third wife s name Mary Radford The other authorities cited all state that he was married only three times McCrum p 397 McCrum p 223 McCrum p 138 McCrum p 405References EditBolton Guy and P G Wodehouse Bring on the Girls originally published 1954 reprinted in Wodehouse on Wodehouse Hutchinson London 1980 ISBN 0 09 143210 3 Davis Lee Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern The Men Who Made Musical Comedy James H Heineman New York 1993 ISBN 0 87008 145 4 Donaldson Frances P G Wodehouse The Authorized Biography Futura London 1983 ISBN 0 7088 2356 4 Green Benny P G Wodehouse A Literary Biography Pavilion Books London 1981 ISBN 0 907516 04 1 Jasen David P G Wodehouse Portrait of a Master Garnstone Press London 1974 ISBN 0 85511 190 9 McCrum Robert Wodehouse A Life Viking Books London 2004 ISBN 0 670 89692 6 Traubner Richard Operetta A Theatrical History second edition Routledge London 2003 ISBN 0 415 96641 8 Usborne Richard Wodehouse at Work to the End Penguin Books Harmondsworth 1978 ISBN 0 14 004564 3External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guy Bolton Guy Bolton at the Internet Broadway Database Guy Bolton at IMDb American Play Company records on Guy Bolton 1911 1965 held by the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guy Bolton amp oldid 1114508168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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