The Butter and Egg Man explained

The Butter and Egg Man
Setting:Office of Lehmac Productions in New York City; a hotel in Syracuse
Place:Longacre Theatre,
New York City, New York, US
Orig Lang:English

The Butter and Egg Man is a 1925 play by George S. Kaufman, the only play he wrote without collaborating. It was a Broadway hit during the 1925–26 season at the Longacre Theatre. Adapted to film six times, it is still performed on stages today.

Synopsis

A 1920s slang term popularized by Texas Guinan, a butter-and-egg man is a traveling businessman eager to spend large amounts of money in the big city[1] —someone wealthy and unwary.[2] A souvenir booklet for the original production of The Butter and Egg Man devoted an entire page to the various claims of origin for the phrase.[3]

Peter Jones is a young man who arrives on Broadway from Chillicothe, Ohio, hoping to invest $20,000 in a play and turn a profit sufficient to buy a local hotel back home. He is conned by Joe Lehman and Jack McClure into backing their play with a 49-percent stake. The play opens out-of-town in Syracuse and bombs. Lehman and McClure want out, and Jones buys them out, and revamps the play into a huge hit. Jones then sells back to them at a huge profit after learning of claims that the play was stolen, and returns home to get his hotel.[4]

Kaufman's comedy may be seen as a precursor to Mel Brooks' The Producers.[5]

Production

Produced by Crosby Gaige, The Butter and Egg Man opened at the Longacre Theatre on September 23, 1925, and played for 243 performances.[6] James Gleason directed the following cast:[7]

When the Broadway run of the play ended in April 1926, Gregory Kelly starred in its national tour. Kelly had a heart attack in Pittsburgh in February 1927, and the tour was abandoned.[8] Kelly was transferred to a New York City sanitarium by his wife, actress Ruth Gordon, but he was unable to recover and died July 9, 1927, at age 36.[9] [10]

The London premiere of The Butter and Egg Man took place August 27, 1927, at the Garrick Theatre. Presented by an American company, the play was performed 31 times, closing on September 27, 1927. Robert Middlemass reprised his Broadway role as Joe Lehman.[11]

Revivals

Recent stagings of the play include Punch Line Theatre in Manhattan in 1982,[2] and by the Off Broadway Atlantic Theater Company in 2002.[12] [13]

Reception

New York critics were unanimous in their praise for The Butter and Egg Man. In his review of the play's premiere, Gilbert W. Gabriel wrote in The Sun that it was "the wittiest and liveliest jamboree of the behind-the-scenes ever distilled from the atmosphere of Broadway."[14] Walter Winchell wrote that "first nighters roared at the dialogue". "The audience nearly laughed itself to death", wrote John Anderson of The New York Evening Post. Alexander Woollcott called the play "richly and continuously amusing". "If you like smart, funny, sentimental, satirical comedies, here is a chance to enjoy yourself", wrote Percy Hammond of the New York Herald Tribune.[15]

Adaptations

The Butter and Egg Man has been adapted for motion pictures six times:[16]

P. G. Wodehouse adapted the play for his 1952 novel, Barmy in Wonderland.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Allen, Irving Lewis . The City in Slang: New York Life and Popular Speech . 1995 . Oxford University Press . 77 . 0-19-509265-1.
  2. News: Gussow . Mel . December 29, 1982 . Theatre: The Butter and Egg Man . The New York Times . 2018-02-28 .
  3. News: December 10, 1925 . Souvenir Book for 'The Butter and Egg Man' . Long Island News and Owl . 10 . 2018-02-28 .
  4. [Gerald Bordman|Bordman, Gerald]
  5. Web site: The Butter and Egg Man (1925) . George S. Kaufman . 2018-02-28.
  6. Web site: The Butter and Egg Man . . 2018-02-28 .
  7. Book: Kaufman, George S. . 1957 . 1926 . The Butter and Egg Man: A Play in Three Acts . Samuel French . 2 . 9780573606434 . George S. Kaufman.
  8. News: February 27, 1927 . Gregory Kelly Ill; Play Tour Ends . The New York Times . 2018-02-28 .
  9. News: July 10, 1927 . Gregory Kelly, Actor, Dies at 36 . The New York Times . 2018-02-28 .
  10. Web site: Untimely Deaths of Stage Performers . Robinson . Lauren . May 20, 2014 . MCNY Blog: New York Stories . . 2018-03-04.
  11. Wearing, J.P. The London Stage 1920-1929: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel, p. 535 (2014)
  12. Weber, Bruce (4 October 2002). George S. Kaufman's Jet-Paced Solo Flight, The New York Times
  13. Isherwood, Charles. (2 Oct 2002) Review: The Butter and Egg Man, Variety
  14. Gabriel, Gilbert W. (24 Sept 1925). The Drama's Dairy Godfather. Kaufman's "The Butter and Egg Man" Sells a Thousand Laughs at Our Theater's Expense, The Sun, p. 24, col. 1
  15. Crosby Gaige Introduces George S. Kaufman's New Comedy The Butter and Egg Man with Gregory Kelly (1925). Promotional brochure for the original production at the Longacre Theatre, New York City.
  16. Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film, p. 252 (1992) (books lists six films based on the play: The Butter and Egg Man (1928), The Tenderfoot (1932), Hello Sweetheart (1937), Dance Charlie Dance (1937), Angel from Texas (1940), and Three Sailors and a Girl (1953)
  17. Hall, Mordaunt (28 Aug 1928). The Screen: The Worm That Turned, The New York Times
  18. Hall, Mordaunt (23 May 1932). Joe E. Brown in a Boisterous Film Conception of the Stage Comedy, "The Butter and Egg Man.", The New York Times
  19. Crowther, Bosley (10 May 1940). An Angel From Texas (Review), The New York Times