A Full House Explained

A Full House is a farce in three acts by Frederick J. Jackson. A comedy of errors, the play centers around the theft of a ruby necklace and relies heavily upon slapstick and physical comedy. It premiered on Broadway at the Longacre Theatre on May 10, 1915.[1] It closed at that theatre in August 1915 after 112 performances.

The production was produced by Harry Frazee, directed by Edward MacGregor, and starred Edgar Norton as Parkes, May Vokes as Susie, Ralph Morgan as Ned Pembroke Jr., Elizabeth Nelson as Ottilie Howell, Maude Turner Gordon as Mrs. Winnecker, Claiborne Foster as Daphne Charters, Herbert Corthell as Nicholas King, George Parsons as George Howell, Bernice Buck as the show girl Vera Venon, and Hugh Cameron as the policeman Jim Mooney.[1]

Adaptations

It was adapted by Henry Blossom and Victor Herbert into the 1919 Broadway musical The Velvet Lady.[2] It was also adapted into a 1920 silent film, A Full House.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: A FULL HOUSE' IS AN AMUSING FARCE; New Entertainment at the Longacre Is Compounded of Cheerful Nonsense. The New York Times. May 11, 1915. 15.
  2. Book: 466–468. The Velvet Lady. Dan Dietz. The Complete Book of 1910s Broadway Musicals. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2021. 9781538150283.
  3. Book: 772. A Full House. 2011. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. 9783110951943. Bowker-Saur. Alan Goble.