Brewster's Millions (play) explained

Brewster's Millions
Place:New Amsterdam Theatre
Orig Lang:English
Genre:Comedy

Brewster's Millions is a play written by Winchell Smith and Byron Ongley, based on the 1902 novel of the same name by George Barr McCutcheon. Producers Frederic Thompson and Elmer "Skip" Dundy staged it on Broadway in 1906. The play is about a young man who must spend a million dollars that he has inherited in order to inherit many millions more.[1]

Broadway production

Thompson and Dundy previewed the play at the Taylor Opera House in Trenton, New Jersey, starting on October 11, 1906.[2] It debuted on Broadway at the New Amsterdam Theatre on December 31, 1906. The production transferred to the Hudson Theatre on February 25, 1907, with the same cast.[3]

The characters and cast from the Broadway production are given below:

Character! scope="col"
Broadway cast
Montgomery Brewster Edward Abeles
Fred Gardner Leslie Bassett
Horace Pettingill Gaston Bell
Trixie Clayton Cecile Breton
Rawles George Clare
Subway Smith Jack Devereaux
Archibald Vanderpool Sumner Gard
Frank Bragdon Willard Howe
Colonel Drew Nestor Lennon
Mrs. Dan De Mille Emily Lytton
Margaret "Peggy" Gray Mary Ryan
Thomas Arthur Morris
Barbara Drew Olive Murray
Janice Armstrong Josephine Park
Nopper Harrison George Probert
Monsieur Bargie Eugene Redding
Mr. Grant Albert Sackett
Joseph MacCloud Joseph Woodburn

Waltz

Australian composer Thomas Bulch published a waltz by the same name to coincide with a 1908 Australian tour of the play.[4] [5]

Notes and References

  1. News: Plays and Players . The Theatre . February 1907 . 7 . 72 . 31–32. Thorold . W. J. . Hornblow Jr. . Arthur . Maxwell . Perriton . Beach . Stewart .
  2. News: Brewster's Millions . The New York Times . October 12, 1906 . 56 . 17,793 . 9.
  3. News: In Manhattan . . February 24, 1907 . 68 . 54 . News Local: 3 . Newspapers.com.
  4. Brewster's millions [music] : waltz / composed by T.E. Bulch ]. Bulch . Thomas Edward . 1908 . Allan & Co .
  5. News: Advertising . . 16,550 . Victoria, Australia . March 28, 1908 . July 14, 2021 . 16 . National Library of Australia.