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William B. Friedlander

William Barr Friedlander (12 January 1884 – January 1968) was an American songwriter and theater producer who staged many Broadway shows in the 1920s and 1930s. Most of them were musical comedies. Early successes included Moonlight (1924) and Mercenary Mary (1925). Later productions received mixed reception. His longest-running production was the comedy Separate Rooms, which ran from March 1940 to September 1941.

William Barr Friedlander
Born(1884-01-12)12 January 1884
DiedJanuary 1968 (aged 83)
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Songwriter and theater producer
Known forSeparate Rooms (1940–41)

Early years edit

 
Sheet music for Oh You Wonderful Girls (1917)

William Barr Friedlander was born in 1884. He would become a librettist, composer, producer, director, author and manager.[1] An early example of his work is the 1905 The Man with the Jingle, a song for which Friedlander wrote the lyrics to music by Charles E. Mullen.[2] He wrote the lyrics to My lovin' Henry (1905), music by Terry Sherman.[3]

Friedlander married the Russian-born Nan Halperin, a vaudeville performer, and composed all the songs she used in her act.[4] During the 1910s and 1920s he produced a number of tabloid shows for vaudeville. The Suffragettes was a very successful tab show featuring Nan Halperin.[5] In 1916 W.B. Friedlander Inc. produced Salamander Sallies by Will M. Hough (1882–1962) and Friedlander, The Night Clerk headed by Frank Ellis, The Four Husbands with Howard Burkholder and George W. Jenks, among others. The shows were booked through vaudeville houses. The company said it planned to produce a new revue called the Friedlander Show with seven complete stage settings and 34 people.[6]

First Broadway shows edit

Friedlander wrote the music and lyrics for Frivolities of 1920, a musical review that opened at the 44th Street Theatre on 8 January 1920, produced by G.M. Anderson. The show got poor reviews for its lack of wit and music, but stayed open for seven weeks.[7] Friedlander's musical Pitter Patter was staged at the Longacre Theatre in 1920. The cast included James Cagney, the future film star.[8] Pitter Patter opened at the Longacre on 28 September 1920 and ran for fourteen weeks.[9]

In 1921 Freidlander and L. Lawrence Weber were in partnership to present dramatic, musical and vaudeville attractions at the Longacre on Broadway.[10] In 1924 the Longacre staged the small musical Moonlight, with a score by Con Conrad and Friedlander.[8] Moonlight opened at the Longacre on 30 January 1924. The critics called it tuneful fun. The show ran for 174 performances and then toured successfully.[11] The next year Conrad and Friedlander's musical comedy Mercenary Mary was presented at the Longacre.[8] It was based on the 1923 farce What's Your Wife Doing?. Although the music was weak the cast was strong, and included Allen Kearns. It opened at the Longacre on 13 April 1925 and ran for more than four months.[12] Marion Wightman's The Dagger opened at the Longacre on 9 September 1925, directed by Friedlander. It was panned by the critics.[13]

Friedlander produced and directed the play The Shelf, which opened at the Morisco on 27 September 1926 and ran for 32 performances. The cast, headed by Frances Starr, was excellent. The play was not.[14] Friedlander produced the musical comedy Piggy, which opened at the Royale Theatre on 11 January 1927. The script was weak, but the popular comedian Sam Bernard played the starring role and carried the show for 79 performances. Bernard died soon after the show closed.[15]

Later productions edit

Friedlander produced and directed the musical comedy Jonica, which opened at the Craig Theatre on 7 April 1930. The authors were Dorothy Heyward and Moss Hart with music by Joseph Meyer and lyrics by William Moll. The show, called "odd, unlikely", was a flop.[16] Moss Hart claimed he had little to do with the show. It is possible that Friedlander rewrote it without taking credit. The script appears to have been lost.[17] Friedlander produced Under Glass, starring Ross Alexander. It opened at the Ambassador Theatre on Broadway on 30 October 1933 and ran for just eight performances.[18] Hiram Sherman's farce Too Much Party, directed by William Friedlander, opened at the Theatre Masque on 5 March 1934 and closed after eight performances.[19]

The comedy Separate Rooms opened at the Maxine Elliott Theatre on 23 March 1940, moved to the Mansfield Theatre on 15 April 1940, and then on 10 June 1940 moved to the Plymouth Theatre, where it finally closed on 6 September 1941 after 613 performances. The play was written by Alan Dinehart and Joseph Carole. Friedlander directed and staged it. Stars included Alan Dinehart, Glenda Farrell and Lyle Talbot.[20]

Friedlander's revival of the 1907 musical comedy The Time, The Place and The Girl opened at the Mansfield Theater on 21 October 1942. Eugene Burr's review in Billboard was scathing, calling it "the monstrosity at the Mansfield". He said "Mr. Friedlander has directed all this in the manner of a below-average Burlesque skit. Principals are forlornly stranded in couples near the apron, and called upon to throw the frightful lines back and forth at each other in the manner of discomforted victims trying to pass the buck."[21] Good Morning, Corporal opened at the Playhouse Theater on 8 August 1944, staged and presented by Friedlander. Writing in Billboard, Joseph Koehler said "This can't run—in fact it won't even crawl."[22] The show closed after ten days. It was the last of Friedlander's productions to appear on Broadway.[23]

W.B. Friedlander died in January 1968, aged 83.[24]

Writer edit

Friedlander is credited as a writer for:[25]

  • Frivolities of 1920 (1920) Composer, Lyricist
  • Pitter Patter (1920) Lyricist, Composer
  • Moonlight (1924) Lyricist
  • Mercenary Mary (1925) Composer, Bookwriter, Lyricist
  • The Time, the Place and the Girl (1942) Lyricist

List of Broadway shows edit

 
Cover for sheet music of the musical comedy Pitter-Patter by William B. Friedlander

Broadway shows included:[23]

  • Frivolities of 1920 (Musical, Revue, Original) Music, Lyrics, Staging (January 8, 1920 – February 28, 1920)
  • Pitter Patter (Musical, Comedy, Original) Music, Producer, Lyrics (September 28, 1920 – January 1, 1921)
  • Make It Snappy (Musical, Revue, Original) Additional lyrics and music (April 13, 1922 – July 1, 1922)
  • Moonlight (Musical, Comedy, Original) Staging, Lyrics (January 30, 1924 – June 28, 1924)
  • Mercenary Mary (Musical, Comedy, Original) Music, Staging, Book, Lyrics (April 13, 1925 – August 8, 1925)
  • The Sea Woman (Play, Original) Staging (August 24, 1925 – September 1925)
  • The Dagger (Play, Melodrama, Original) Staging (September 9, 1925 – September 1925)
  • Hush Money (Play, Melodrama, Original) Staging (March 15, 1926 – May 1926)
  • The Shelf (Play, Comedy, Drama, Original) Producer, Staging (September 27, 1926 – October 1926)
  • Piggy (Musical, Comedy, Original) Producer, Director (January 11, 1927 – March 19, 1927)
  • Footlights (Musical, Comedy, Original) Additional numbers (August 19, 1927 – September 24, 1927)
  • Speak Easy (Play, Melodrama, Original) Producer (September 26, 1927 – November 1927)
  • We Never Learn (Play, Original) Producer, Staging (January 23, 1928 – February 1928)
  • Nice Women (Play, Comedy, Original) Director (June 10, 1929 – August 1929)
  • Divided Honors (Play, Drama, Original) Staging (September 30, 1929 – November 1929)
  • Jonica (Musical, Comedy, Original) Producer, Staging (April 7, 1930 – May 10, 1930)
  • She Lived Next to the Firehouse (Play, Farce, Original) Staging (February 10, 1931 – March 1931)
  • Nikki (Musical, Comedy, Original) Staging (September 29, 1931 – October 31, 1931)
  • Before Morning (Play, Melodrama, Original) Staging (February 9, 1933 – March 1933)
  • Under Glass (Play, Comedy, Original) Producer, Staging (October 30, 1933 – November 1933)
  • The Locked Room (Play, Melodrama, Original) Producer, Staging (December 25, 1933 – January 1934)
  • Too Much Party (Play, Comedy, Farce, Original) Staging (March 5, 1934 – March 1934)
  • A Roman Servant (Play, Drama, Original) Staging (December 1, 1934 – December 1934)
  • Cross-town (Play, Comedy, Original) Staging (March 17, 1937 – April 1937)
  • Snookie (Play, Original) Jingles, Staging (June 3, 1941 – June 14, 1941)
  • Separate Rooms (Play, Comedy, Original) Staging (March 23, 1940 – September 6, 1941)
  • The Time, the Place and the Girl (Musical, Comedy, Revival) Director, Lyrics (October 21, 1942 – October 31, 1942)
  • Right Next to Broadway (Play, Original) Staging (February 21, 1944 – March 4, 1944)
  • Good Morning Corporal (Play, Original) Producer, Staging (August 8, 1944 – August 18, 1944)

References edit

Citations

Sources

  • "Announcing L. Lawrence Weber and William B. Friedlander" (PDF). Variety. 9 September 1921. Retrieved 2014-05-12.
  • Bach, Steven (2002). Dazzler: The Life and Times of Moss Hart. Da Capo Press, Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-306-81135-7. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • Bloom, Ken (2007). The Routledge Guide to Broadway. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-97380-9. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
  • Burr, Eugene (7 November 1942). "The Time, The Place, The Girl". Billboard. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
  • Cullen, Frank; Hackman, Florence; McNeilly, Donald (2004). Vaudeville old & new: an encyclopedia of variety performances in America. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-93853-2.
  • "George Alison - Other works". IMDb. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • Hischak, Thomas S. (2009-03-16). Broadway Plays and Musicals: Descriptions and Essential Facts of More Than 14,000 Shows through 2007. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-5309-2. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
  • Koehler, Joseph (19 August 1944). "Good Morning, Corporal". The Billboard. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • Library of Congress Catalog - A Cumulative List of Works - 1955 1959. Vol. 9. Paterson, New Jersey: Pageant Books, Inc. 1960.
  • "Man with the jingle, The". IN Harmony: Sheet Music from Indiana. Indiana University. 2011. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • "My lovin' Henry". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • "Pay Articles from January 1968 Part 5". New York Times. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • Riley, Kathleen (2012-03-01). The Astaires: Fred & Adele. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-973841-0. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • "Separate Rooms". Playbill Vault. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • Slide, Anthony (2012). The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville. Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-61703-250-9. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • "The plans of the W. B. Friedlander, Inc" (PDF). Variety: 35. 1916. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  • "William B. Friedlander". IBDB. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
  • "William B. Friedlander Theatre Credits". Broadway World. Retrieved 2014-05-27.

william, friedlander, william, barr, friedlander, january, 1884, january, 1968, american, songwriter, theater, producer, staged, many, broadway, shows, 1920s, 1930s, most, them, were, musical, comedies, early, successes, included, moonlight, 1924, mercenary, m. William Barr Friedlander 12 January 1884 January 1968 was an American songwriter and theater producer who staged many Broadway shows in the 1920s and 1930s Most of them were musical comedies Early successes included Moonlight 1924 and Mercenary Mary 1925 Later productions received mixed reception His longest running production was the comedy Separate Rooms which ran from March 1940 to September 1941 William Barr FriedlanderBorn 1884 01 12 12 January 1884DiedJanuary 1968 aged 83 NationalityAmericanOccupation s Songwriter and theater producerKnown forSeparate Rooms 1940 41 Contents 1 Early years 2 First Broadway shows 3 Later productions 4 Writer 5 List of Broadway shows 6 ReferencesEarly years edit nbsp Sheet music for Oh You Wonderful Girls 1917 William Barr Friedlander was born in 1884 He would become a librettist composer producer director author and manager 1 An early example of his work is the 1905 The Man with the Jingle a song for which Friedlander wrote the lyrics to music by Charles E Mullen 2 He wrote the lyrics to My lovin Henry 1905 music by Terry Sherman 3 Friedlander married the Russian born Nan Halperin a vaudeville performer and composed all the songs she used in her act 4 During the 1910s and 1920s he produced a number of tabloid shows for vaudeville The Suffragettes was a very successful tab show featuring Nan Halperin 5 In 1916 W B Friedlander Inc produced Salamander Sallies by Will M Hough 1882 1962 and Friedlander The Night Clerk headed by Frank Ellis The Four Husbands with Howard Burkholder and George W Jenks among others The shows were booked through vaudeville houses The company said it planned to produce a new revue called the Friedlander Show with seven complete stage settings and 34 people 6 First Broadway shows editFriedlander wrote the music and lyrics for Frivolities of 1920 a musical review that opened at the 44th Street Theatre on 8 January 1920 produced by G M Anderson The show got poor reviews for its lack of wit and music but stayed open for seven weeks 7 Friedlander s musical Pitter Patter was staged at the Longacre Theatre in 1920 The cast included James Cagney the future film star 8 Pitter Patter opened at the Longacre on 28 September 1920 and ran for fourteen weeks 9 In 1921 Freidlander and L Lawrence Weber were in partnership to present dramatic musical and vaudeville attractions at the Longacre on Broadway 10 In 1924 the Longacre staged the small musical Moonlight with a score by Con Conrad and Friedlander 8 Moonlight opened at the Longacre on 30 January 1924 The critics called it tuneful fun The show ran for 174 performances and then toured successfully 11 The next year Conrad and Friedlander s musical comedy Mercenary Mary was presented at the Longacre 8 It was based on the 1923 farce What s Your Wife Doing Although the music was weak the cast was strong and included Allen Kearns It opened at the Longacre on 13 April 1925 and ran for more than four months 12 Marion Wightman s The Dagger opened at the Longacre on 9 September 1925 directed by Friedlander It was panned by the critics 13 Friedlander produced and directed the play The Shelf which opened at the Morisco on 27 September 1926 and ran for 32 performances The cast headed by Frances Starr was excellent The play was not 14 Friedlander produced the musical comedy Piggy which opened at the Royale Theatre on 11 January 1927 The script was weak but the popular comedian Sam Bernard played the starring role and carried the show for 79 performances Bernard died soon after the show closed 15 Later productions editFriedlander produced and directed the musical comedy Jonica which opened at the Craig Theatre on 7 April 1930 The authors were Dorothy Heyward and Moss Hart with music by Joseph Meyer and lyrics by William Moll The show called odd unlikely was a flop 16 Moss Hart claimed he had little to do with the show It is possible that Friedlander rewrote it without taking credit The script appears to have been lost 17 Friedlander produced Under Glass starring Ross Alexander It opened at the Ambassador Theatre on Broadway on 30 October 1933 and ran for just eight performances 18 Hiram Sherman s farce Too Much Party directed by William Friedlander opened at the Theatre Masque on 5 March 1934 and closed after eight performances 19 The comedy Separate Rooms opened at the Maxine Elliott Theatre on 23 March 1940 moved to the Mansfield Theatre on 15 April 1940 and then on 10 June 1940 moved to the Plymouth Theatre where it finally closed on 6 September 1941 after 613 performances The play was written by Alan Dinehart and Joseph Carole Friedlander directed and staged it Stars included Alan Dinehart Glenda Farrell and Lyle Talbot 20 Friedlander s revival of the 1907 musical comedy The Time The Place and The Girl opened at the Mansfield Theater on 21 October 1942 Eugene Burr s review in Billboard was scathing calling it the monstrosity at the Mansfield He said Mr Friedlander has directed all this in the manner of a below average Burlesque skit Principals are forlornly stranded in couples near the apron and called upon to throw the frightful lines back and forth at each other in the manner of discomforted victims trying to pass the buck 21 Good Morning Corporal opened at the Playhouse Theater on 8 August 1944 staged and presented by Friedlander Writing in Billboard Joseph Koehler said This can t run in fact it won t even crawl 22 The show closed after ten days It was the last of Friedlander s productions to appear on Broadway 23 W B Friedlander died in January 1968 aged 83 24 Writer editFriedlander is credited as a writer for 25 Frivolities of 1920 1920 Composer Lyricist Pitter Patter 1920 Lyricist Composer Moonlight 1924 Lyricist Mercenary Mary 1925 Composer Bookwriter Lyricist The Time the Place and the Girl 1942 LyricistList of Broadway shows edit nbsp Cover for sheet music of the musical comedy Pitter Patter by William B Friedlander Broadway shows included 23 Frivolities of 1920 Musical Revue Original Music Lyrics Staging January 8 1920 February 28 1920 Pitter Patter Musical Comedy Original Music Producer Lyrics September 28 1920 January 1 1921 Make It Snappy Musical Revue Original Additional lyrics and music April 13 1922 July 1 1922 Moonlight Musical Comedy Original Staging Lyrics January 30 1924 June 28 1924 Mercenary Mary Musical Comedy Original Music Staging Book Lyrics April 13 1925 August 8 1925 The Sea Woman Play Original Staging August 24 1925 September 1925 The Dagger Play Melodrama Original Staging September 9 1925 September 1925 Hush Money Play Melodrama Original Staging March 15 1926 May 1926 The Shelf Play Comedy Drama Original Producer Staging September 27 1926 October 1926 Piggy Musical Comedy Original Producer Director January 11 1927 March 19 1927 Footlights Musical Comedy Original Additional numbers August 19 1927 September 24 1927 Speak Easy Play Melodrama Original Producer September 26 1927 November 1927 We Never Learn Play Original Producer Staging January 23 1928 February 1928 Nice Women Play Comedy Original Director June 10 1929 August 1929 Divided Honors Play Drama Original Staging September 30 1929 November 1929 Jonica Musical Comedy Original Producer Staging April 7 1930 May 10 1930 She Lived Next to the Firehouse Play Farce Original Staging February 10 1931 March 1931 Nikki Musical Comedy Original Staging September 29 1931 October 31 1931 Before Morning Play Melodrama Original Staging February 9 1933 March 1933 Under Glass Play Comedy Original Producer Staging October 30 1933 November 1933 The Locked Room Play Melodrama Original Producer Staging December 25 1933 January 1934 Too Much Party Play Comedy Farce Original Staging March 5 1934 March 1934 A Roman Servant Play Drama Original Staging December 1 1934 December 1934 Cross town Play Comedy Original Staging March 17 1937 April 1937 Snookie Play Original Jingles Staging June 3 1941 June 14 1941 Separate Rooms Play Comedy Original Staging March 23 1940 September 6 1941 The Time the Place and the Girl Musical Comedy Revival Director Lyrics October 21 1942 October 31 1942 Right Next to Broadway Play Original Staging February 21 1944 March 4 1944 Good Morning Corporal Play Original Producer Staging August 8 1944 August 18 1944 References editCitations Library of Congress Catalog 1960 p 79 Man with the jingle 2011 My lovin Henry Slide 2012 p 225 Cullen Hackman amp McNeilly 2004 p 474 The plans of the W B Friedlander Variety 1916 Hischak 2009 p 155 a b c Bloom 2007 p 151 Hischak 2009 p 363 Announcing L Lawrence Weber 1921 Hischak 2009 p 309 Hischak 2009 p 294 295 Hischak 2009 p 102 Hischak 2009 p 415 Hischak 2009 p 361 Hischak 2009 p 232 Bach 2002 p 406 Riley 2012 p 226 George Alison Other works IMDb Separate Rooms Playbill Vault Burr 1942 p 9 Koehler 1944 p 23 a b William B Friedlander IBDB Pay Articles from January 1968 NYT William B Friedlander Theatre Credits nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William B Friedlander Sources Announcing L Lawrence Weber and William B Friedlander PDF Variety 9 September 1921 Retrieved 2014 05 12 Bach Steven 2002 Dazzler The Life and Times of Moss Hart Da Capo Press Incorporated ISBN 978 0 306 81135 7 Retrieved 2014 05 27 Bloom Ken 2007 The Routledge Guide to Broadway Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 97380 9 Retrieved 2014 05 26 Burr Eugene 7 November 1942 The Time The Place The Girl Billboard Retrieved 2014 05 26 Cullen Frank Hackman Florence McNeilly Donald 2004 Vaudeville old amp new an encyclopedia of variety performances in America Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 93853 2 George Alison Other works IMDb Retrieved 2014 05 27 Hischak Thomas S 2009 03 16 Broadway Plays and Musicals Descriptions and Essential Facts of More Than 14 000 Shows through 2007 McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 5309 2 Retrieved 2014 05 26 Koehler Joseph 19 August 1944 Good Morning Corporal The Billboard Retrieved 2014 05 27 Library of Congress Catalog A Cumulative List of Works 1955 1959 Vol 9 Paterson New Jersey Pageant Books Inc 1960 Man with the jingle The IN Harmony Sheet Music from Indiana Indiana University 2011 Retrieved 2014 05 27 My lovin Henry National Library of Australia Retrieved 2014 05 27 Pay Articles from January 1968 Part 5 New York Times Retrieved 2014 05 27 Riley Kathleen 2012 03 01 The Astaires Fred amp Adele Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 973841 0 Retrieved 2014 05 27 Separate Rooms Playbill Vault Retrieved 2014 05 27 Slide Anthony 2012 The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 61703 250 9 Retrieved 2014 05 27 The plans of the W B Friedlander Inc PDF Variety 35 1916 Retrieved 2014 05 27 William B Friedlander IBDB Retrieved 2014 05 26 William B Friedlander Theatre Credits Broadway World Retrieved 2014 05 27 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William B Friedlander amp oldid 1119293639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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