Tim Dunleavy  |  James Marino  |  Matthew Murray  |  Ellis Nassour  |  Michael Portantiere
Blind Item  |  Contact Us  |  Legal  |  ?

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
       

NEW!

BroadwaySpace

TICKETS

Telecharge.com
Ticketmaster.com
Google Broadway

CHAT

All That Chat (Talkin'Broadway)
Finishing The Chat (Sondheim.com)
MusicalFans.net
rec.arts.theatre.musicals
The Stephen Sondheim Society

BROADWAY NEWS

American Theater Web
American Theatre Magazine
Back Stage
Broadway.com
NYTheatre.com
Playbill.com
Show Business Weekly
Talk Entertainment
TheaterMania.com
Time Out New York
Variety

NYC AREA NEWS

NY1
The New York Times
AM New York
Daily News
New York Post
Newsday
Journal News
The Star-Ledger
The Village Voice
The Wall Street Journal

WEST END

Compare Theatre Tickets.co.uk
Theatre.com
Whatsonstage.com [UK]
ATW - London
Musical Stages [UK]
Albemarle of London
Londontheatre.co.uk
Google News

CHICAGO

Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Tribune

LA/SF

Los Angeles Times
San Francisco Chronicle

COLUMNS

Steven M. Alper
Army Archerd
Peter Bart
Michael Buckley
Andrew Cohen
Corine Cohen
Ken Davenport
Peter Filichia
Michael Fleming
Andrew Gans
Ernio Hernandez (Playbill Archives)
Ernio Hernandez (Cue & A)
Harry Haun
Joel Markowitz
Michael Musto
Ellis Nassour
Tom Nondorf
Richard Ouzounian
Rex Reed
Frank Rizzo
Richard Seff
Mark Shenton
The Siegel Column
John Simon
Robert Simonson (Week in Review)
Robert Simonson (Brief Encounter)
Steven Suskin
Terry Teachout
Theater Corps
Matt Windman
Linda Winer
Matt Wolf

PODCAST

AP on Broadway
DC Theatre Scene

MUSIC

150 Music
2die4 Music
Bayview Records
Columbia Broadway
Decca Broadway
Dink Records
DRG Records
First Night Records
Fynsworth Alley
Harbinger Records
Jay Records
LML Music
Must Close Saturday
Original Cast Records
PS Classics
Sh-K-Boom
TVT Records

Talkin'Broadway's List of Upcoming CD Releases

RADIO

Radio Playbill
Say It With Music
Old is New
Broadway's Biggest Hits

TV

Theater Talk
BlueGobo.com
Classic Arts Showcase
American Theatre Wing Seminars
Women in Theatre

AWARDS

Tony Central
Oscar Central
Tony Awards
Drama Desk Awards
The Drama League Awards
Lortel Awards
Academy Awards
Emmy Awards
Grammy Awards

GoldDerby

DATABASE

Internet Broadway Database
Internet Off-Broadway Database
Internet Movie Database
Internet Theatre Database
Musical Cast Album Database
[CastAlbums.org]
Show Music on Record Database (LOC)
CurtainUp Master Index of Reviews
Musical Heaven
FlyRope
StageSpecs.org

ROAD HOUSES

Gammage [AZ]
Golden Gate [CA]
Curran [CA]
Orpheum [CA]
Community Center [CA]
Civic [CA]
Ahmanson [CA]
Pantages [CA]
Temple Hoyne Buell [CO]
Palace [CT]
Rich Forum [CT]
Shubert [CT]
Bushnell [CT]
Chevrolet [CT]
Broward Center [FL]
Jackie Gleason [FL]
Fox [GA]
Civic Center [IA]
Cadillac Palace [IL]
Ford Center/Oriental [IL]
Shubert [IL]
Auditorium [IL]
Kentucky Center [KY]
France-Merrick [MD]
Colonial [MA]
Wilbur [MA]
Charles [MA]
Wang [MA]
Wharton Center [MI]
Whiting [MI]
Fisher [MI]
Masonic Temple [MI]
Orpheum, State, and Pantages [MN]
Fabulous Fox [MO]
New Jersey PAC [NJ]
Auditorium Center [NY]
Shea's PAC [NY]
BTI Center [NC]
Blumenthal PAC [NC]
Schuster PAC [OH]
Playhouse Square [OH]
Aronoff Center [OH]
Ohio [OH]
Victoria Theatre [OH]
Birmingham Jefferson [OH]
Merriam Theater [PA]
Academy of Music [PA]
Benedum Center [PA]
Providence PAC [RI]
Orpheum [TN]
Hobby Center [TX]
Music Hall [TX]
Bass Hall [TX]
Paramount [WA]
Fox Cities PAC [WI]
Marcus Center [WI]
Weidner Center [WI]

This list is compiled from various sources. If you have additions or corrections to the Road Houses list, please contact us.

REVIEWS

The New York Times
Variety
New York Post
The New York Times
NY1
Aisle Say
CurtainUp
DC Theatre Scene
Stage and Cinema
TotalTheater.com
Off-Off Broadway Review
TheaterOnline.com
TheaterScene.net
TheaterNewsOnline.com

FESTIVALS

The New York International Fringe Festival
The American Living Room Festival
Summer Play Festival
The New York Musical Theatre Festival
Adirondack Theatre Festival
NAMT: Festival of New Musicals

SPECIAL

BC/EFA: Broadway Cares / Equity Fights AIDS
The Actors' Fund
Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation

EDUCATION

Google Shakespeare
Actor Tips
AACT
ArtSearch
Broadway Classroom
Broadway Educational Alliance
Camp Broadway
Great Groups - New York Actors
Theatre Communications Group (TCG)
Theatre Development Fund (TDF)
Off-Broadway Theater Information Center

UNIONS/TRADE

AEA
SAG
AFTRA
AGMA
The League
Local 1
ATPAM
IATSE
AFM
AFM - Local 802
DGA
Dramatists Guild
USA 829
WGA, East
WGA, West
SSD&C
AFL-CIO
League of Professional Theatre Women
Live Broadway
OffBroadway.com

NYC NON-PROFITS

Cherry Lane Theatre
City Center
Drama Dept.
Ensemble Studio Theater
Jean Cocteau Rep.
Lark
Lincoln Center Theater
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Lucille Lortel Foundation
Manhattan Theatre Club
MCC
Mint
Pearl Theatre Company
Public Theater
Roundabout
Second Stage
Signature
The York Theatre Company

REGIONAL

Actors Theatre
Alabama Shakespeare Festival
Alley Theatre
ACT
American Musical Theatre in San Jose
American Repertory
Arena Stage
Barrington Stage Company
Bay Street Theatre
Berkeley Rep
Casa Manana
Chicago Shakespeare Theater
Cincinnati Playhouse
CTC
Dallas Summer Musicals
Dallas Theater Center
Denver Center
George Street
Goodman
Guthrie
Goodspeed
Hartford Stage
Hudson Stage Company
Theatre de la Jeune Lune
Kennedy Center
La Jolla
Long Wharf
Lyric Stage
Mark Taper Forum
McCarter
New Jersey Rep
North Shore
Old Globe
Ordway
Oregon Shakespeare
Paper Mill
Prince Music Theater
The Rep (St. Louis)
Sacramento Music Circus
San Francisco Mime Troupe
Seattle Rep
Shakespeare Theatre Co. (DC)
The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
South Coast Rep
Steppenwolf
Theater of the Stars (GA)
Theater Under the Stars (TX)
Trinity Rep
Two River Theater Company
Utah
Victory Gardens
Westport
Williamstown
Yale Rep

KEWL

Broadway Abridged
HopStop
Epenthesis
Bradlands
The Smoking Gun
Seating Charts
Entertainment Link
Mermaniac.com
BreakupGirl!
The Onion
Bored.com
Dead People Server

 
 




FORGOTTEN NAMESAKE, REMEMBERED:
THE ANNUAL TONY AWARDS ARE NAMED FOR ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

by ELLIS NASSOUR

The Tony Award is theater's most prestigious and coveted prize. The 2003 Tonys, the 57th annual presentations, are Sunday, June 8, live from Radio City Music Hall in a three-hour telecast on CBS. �Tony is a strange name for a theater honor,� is a statement you�ve probably heard many time. So who was this Tony? And why is this Tony important in the annals of theater?

Tony, actually, Toni, was the nickname of beautiful Denver actress Antoinette Perry, who, after several years playing ing�nues on Broadway, turned to producing and directing in an era when women in the theater were relegated to acting, costume design, or choreography. Today, she�s, sadly, all but forgotten. But, in her prime, she showed innovative theatrical instincts and scored an enviable roster of hits. Amazingly, even well into the 1970s, she was the only woman director with a track record of hits.

Her route to New York was circuitous � touring Shakespeare in her late teens � but, once here, she came to the attention of two very important theater figures: David Warfield, a popular actor, and his frequent producing partner, David Belasco. She was cast in featured, then leading roles. Her fast-track career rise was interrupted in 1909 when she began starring in the arms of Frank Frueauff, an old Denver beau who made a fortune in gas and electric utilities � companies that eventually became Cities Service [now CITGO]. They lived the type of life Noel Coward wrote and sang of: traveling the fabled steam liners to Europe and, on their infrequent stays in New York, entertaining in robber baron style at their Fifth Avenue apartment and home in Newport, R.I.

Miss Perry up theater to become a full-time wife, mother and hostess. But theater�s siren call entranched her again in 1920 when she became the silent partner of Brock Pemberton, a flamboyant press agent turned producer, in his production of Zona Gale's comedy Miss Lulu Bett. There was a gigantic pay-off. It won the Pulitzer Prize.

Following stress-related heart problems, Frueauff died in 1922 and left a massive estate: in excess of $13-million. Think about it. That�s $13-million in 20s dollars. Unfortunately, he left no will. And Mrs. Frueauff was left in limbo. Bitter court battles ensued, but finally his widow was awarded nine million dollars.

"Mother generously lent money," recalled the couple�s daughter Margaret Perry [who took her mother�s maiden name for her acting career]. "There was plenty of money and Mother was a sucker for any hard luck story, especially if she heard them from actors and playwrights. She bailed quite a few out of financial hell. Mother also enjoyed the extravagant life.�

One vivid example was the summer of 1923, when Mrs. Frueauff took Margaret and her sister Elaine [an actress, stage manager, and producer/director who died in 1986], their governess, �Uncle� Brock, as the girls were instructed to call him, his wife Margaret and ten others to Europe for seven weeks. On coming home, Mrs. Frueauff, 34, soon became bored leading what she termed an unfulfilling social whirling dervish. "Life was downright dull,� she said. �I need a change � something vital. Should I go on playing bridge and dining, going in the same old monotonous circle? It's easy that way, but it's suicide, too.�

Under her maiden name, she returned to the boards, starring in broad spectrum of roles in ten plays by Kaufman, Ferber and William S. Gilbert [of Gilbert and Sullivan]. In 1927, she suffered a stroke which left a side of her face paralyzed, she fell into a great depression and left theater. But theater was still in her blood. Inspired by actress/playwright Rachel Crothers, who directed her own plays, Perry decided she wanted to direct. She and Pemberton joined forces � not only as co-producers and director but also romantically.

In 1929, they struck paydirt with Preston Sturges' Strictly Dishonorable, a cynical play about virtue and Prohibition. A critic praised Perry "for doing a man's job" as director. Movie rights were sold. A month later, the stock market crashed. "Mother awoke two million dollars in debt," recalls Margaret Perry. "It took seven years to recover."

Perry and Pemberton shared an office in a theater [adjacent to the Imperial, on the site of the parking lot] and lunched daily at Sardi�s, where Toni, which she was nicknamed, and Brock fueled tons of theatrical gossip. However, at the end of their business day, she'd go home to her daughters and he to his wife, one of Miss Perry�s closest friends. "After the stroke,� reports Margaret, �Mother tired easily. She came home, ate, read scripts and saw we did our schoolwork. Promptly at nine, Brock would phone and they'd talk for hours.�

In the late 40s, a new product became the female rave: Toni Home Permanent products, which promised to end hair torment and give even the straightest hair a luscious wave. Toni-sponsored print ads and radio variety shows were everywhere. Then came sisters Marge and Norma [Babcock], identical twins and a massive ad campaign: Which Twin Has the Toni? As beauty operators feared the ether-based Toni solution would ruin their business, Miss Perry decided it was time for a cosmetic change, too. She discreetly changed her �i� to a �y.�

She remained strongly focused as a director. In one month in 1937, she directed (and co-produced) three Pemberton productions, "sometimes rehearsing in our living room,� says Margaret, �once while peeling peaches for preserves."

Of the team's 17 plays in 13 years, there were impressive hits, among them: Personal Appearance (1934) and Claire Boothe's Kiss the Boys Goodbye (1938), a spoof of the search for Scarlett O'Hara. The latter had a stellar cast, including Helen Claire and Benay Venuta.

Miss Venuta [who died in 1995] spoke of working with Miss Perry. �I was a tall, brash blonde, a big band vocalist who'd never read for a play, and I got the part of this gal attempting to get the role of Scarlett by sleeping with all the men involved with the film. The show was a smash. Helen wore a hoop skirt and pretended to be from the South with this accent that dripped magnolias.�

Miss Venuta, noting that Miss Perry didn�t mind ruffling feathers, reported a pre-Broadway situation in Washington involving black actor Frank Wilson, who played a butler in Kiss the Boys. "We rehearsed at the very first-class Willard Hotel, right across from the White House. When Frank arrived, the doorman directed him to the trades entrance. We found that disgusting. Tony raised a ruckus, stating that Frank could either enter through front doors or the company would check out. With reporters and photographers present, the hotel backed down."

Miss Perry, said Miss Venuta, may have had a deep affection for actors, but not for all playwrights � especially if not of her political thinking. �Tony despised � no, hated Clare Booth! She was a Democrat with a capital D and Tony a staunch Republican. She�d do anything to avoid her!" She said that, when it came to acting, �Tony was a perfectionist with the philosophy that a director should work closely with everyone from the crew to the lowest actor on the totem. She felt a responsibility to audiences. Once, she said, �Benay, do you realize that a theatrical performance is one of the few things which the public is willing to pay for in advance, sight unseen?�

�She was a good communicator and wonderful at teaching timing,� continued Miss Venuta. �I didn't know anything about acting technique. Tony taught me. She was tough and didn't mind screaming at me or the other actors. She wasn�t one for overplaying a role! She told me, 'Don't go for every laugh. It's better to ride over the little laughs and go for the big one. Another time, at rehearsal, she yelled `Benay, what the hell are you doing?' I replied, 'I was taking a breath.' She said, 'No! If you hold your breath, the audience's going to hold its breath. Act out that pause.'"

But, Miss Venuta observed, �Working with Miss Perry could be frustrating. She'd have us learn pages and pages of dialogue, then say, 'I'm cutting this, this, and this.' We asked why. 'Now you know what's essential,� she replied. And when we did the streamlined version, there was a bigger payoff.� Interestingly, in that era of theatrical male power brokers, Miss Venuta said, "I never heard her criticized on the basis of being a woman.�

Tony�s deft hand with comedy paid off co-producing and directing Mary Chase's Harvey (1944). It won the Pulitzer Prize over The Glass Menagerie and became a long-running smash with Hollywood begging for the rights.

Daughter Margaret confided that her mother was an inveterate gambler. "The seed money for many a Wing activity or show investment came from her track winnings. Even during Wing board meetings, mother played the horses. She'd have her secretary tip toe in to give her the odds, then place a wager with a bookie."

Ironically, in spite of her theatrical credentials, today Miss Perry is best remembered for her generosity and leadership in World War II as a co-founder of the Theatre Wing of Allied Relief, subsequently, the American Theatre Wing. The Wing operated the famed Stage Door Canteen in the basement of the (now razed) 44th Street Theatre, where stars worked as dishwashers, waiters, waitresses, and entertainers for the armed forces. Miss Perry was also president of the National Experimental Theatre and financed, with Actors Equity and the Dramatists Guild, the work of new playwrights. During and after the war, she underwrote auditions for 7,000 hopefuls. Her dream of a national actor's school was realized in 1946.

"That year, Mother developed heart problems," Margaret explained, "but, as a devout Christian Scientist, she refused to see a doctor. Her dedication to the work of the Wing took a terrible toll. Often, the only thing that alleviated her intense physical pain was Brock�s nightly call."

On June 28, 1946, as Margaret and Elaine made plans for their mother's 58th birthday the next day, Miss Perry had a fatal heart attack. Margaret reports that she was $300,000 in debt and living on $800 a week from her Harvey royalties.

A reporter once questioned Miss Perry�s donation of so much of her money and time to �thankless theatrical activities." She replied, "Thankless? They're anything but that. I'm just a fool for the theater." And, said Margaret, �Theater was what Mother lived and breathed. If you were an actor, you were on that pedestal of pedestals."

Pemberton proposed an award for distinguished stage acting and technical achievement be named in her honor. At the initial event in 1947, as he handed out an award, he called it a Tony. The name stuck.


Published on BroadwayStars.com on Friday, May 30, 2003
[Link to this Feature]



Ellis Nassour is an international media journalist, and author of Honky Tonk Angel: The Intimate Story of Patsy Cline, which he has adapted into a musical for the stage. Visit www.patsyclinehta.com.
For a listing of all features written by Ellis, click here.


     
BROADWAYSTAR'S FIVE DAY FORECAST


2007-08
Broadway Season

June 28 - Old Acquaintance (AA)

July 10 - Xanadu (Hayes) [Robert Ahrens, Dan Vickery, Tara Smith/B. Swibel and Sarah Murchison/Dale Smith]

Aug 19 - Grease (Atkinson)

Oct 4 - Mauritius (Biltmore) [MTC]

Oct 11 - The Ritz (54)

Oct 18 - Pygmalion (AA)

Oct 25 - A Bronx Tale (Kerr)

Nov 1 - Cyrano de Bergerac (Rodgers)

Nov 4 - Rock 'N' Roll (Jacobs)

Nov 8 - Young Frankenstein (Hilton)

Nov 9 - Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (St. James)

Nov 10: Local One Strike Begins

Nov 28: Local One Strike Ends

Dec 2 - Cymbeline (Beaumont)

Dec 3 - The Farnsworth Invention (Music Box) [Dodger Properties with Steven Spielberg, Dan Cap Productions, Fred Zollo, Latitude Link and the Pelican Group]

Dec 4 - August: Osage County (Imperial) [Jeffrey Richards, Jean Doumanian, Steve Traxler, Jerry Frankel, Steppenwolf]

Dec 6 - The Seafarer (Booth)

Dec 9 - Is He Dead? (Lyceum)

Dec 16 - The Homecoming (Cort) [Richards, Frankel]

Jan 10 - The Little Mermaid (Lunt)

Jan 15 - The 39 Steps (AA)

Jan 17 - November (Barrymore)

Jan 24 - Come Back, Little Sheba (Biltmore)

Feb 21 - Sunday In The Park With George (54)

Feb 28 - Passing Strange (Belasco)

Mar 6 - Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Broadhurst) [Stephen C. Byrd]

Mar 9 - In The Heights (Rodgers)

Mar 27 - Gypsy (St. James)

Mar 29 - Macbeth (Lyceum)

Apr 3 - South Pacific (Beaumont)

Apr 17 - A Catered Affair (Kerr) [Jujamcyn Theaters, Jordan Roth, Harvey Entertainment / Ron Fierstein, Richie Jackson and Daryl Roth]

Apr 24 - Cry Baby (Marquis)

Apr 27 - The Country Girl (Jacobs)

Apr 30 - Thurgood (Booth)

May 1 - Les Liaisons Dangereuses (AA)

May 4 - Boeing-Boeing (Longacre)

May 7 - Top Girls (Biltmore)

TBA - Godspell

2008-09
Broadway Season

Oct 16 - Billy Elliot (Imperial)

Nov 08 - Dividing the Estate (a Shubert theater)

Dec 14 - Shrek: The Musical (Broadway) [DreamWorks]

Talked About
Not Scheduled Yet

TBA - 50 Words

TBA - Addams Family (Elephant Eye)

TBA - American Buffalo

TBA - An American Vaudeville [Farrell, Perloff]

TBA - The Beard of Avon [NYTW]

TBA - Being There [Permut]

TBA - Benny & Joon [MGM]

TBA - Billy Elliot

TBA - Brave New World [Rachunow]

TBA - Breath of Life [Fox]

TBA - Busker Alley [Margot Astrachan, Robert Blume, Kristine Lewis, Jamie Fox, Joanna Kerry & Heather Duke]

TBA - Broomhilda

TBA - Bye Bye Birdie [Niko]

TBA - Camille Claudel [Wildhorn]

TBA - Camelot

TBA - Carmen [Robin DeLevita and The Firm]

TBA - Catch Me If You Can

TBA - Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon [Bob and Harvey Weinstein]

TBA - Cry Baby [Grazer, Gordon, McAllister, Epstein]

TBA - Designing Women [Alexis]

TBA - Don Juan DeMarco [New Line]

TBA - Dreamgirls [Creative Battery]

TBA - Duet

TBA - Equus

TBA - Ever After [Adam Epstein]

TBA - Fallen Angels (Shubert) [Kenwright]

TBA - Farragut North [Richards]

TBA - Father of the Bride

TBA - The Female Of The Species (TBA)

TBA - Fool For Love (AA) [Roundabout]

TBA - Girl Group Time Travelers

TBA - Golden Boy

TBA - Harmony [Guiles, Karslake, Smith, Fishman]

TBA - Hitchcock Blonde

TBA - The Importance Of Being Earnest

TBA - Jerry Springer: The Opera! [Thoday, McKeown]

TBA - Jesus Hopped The 'A' Train (Circle)

TBA - Josephine [Waissman]

TBA - Leap of Faith

TBA - A Little Princess [Ettinger, Dodger]

TBA - Midnight Cowboy [MGM]

TBA - The Minstrel Show - Kander and Ebb and Stroman

TBA - Moonstruck [Pittelman, Azenberg]

TBA - Mourning Becomes Electra [Haber, Boyett]

TBA - Monsoon Wedding

TBA - The Night of the Hunter

TBA - The Opposite of Sex [Namco]

TBA - Orphans

TBA - Pal Joey [Platt]

TBA - Paper Doll

TBA - The Paris Letter

TBA - The Philadelphia Story

TBA - Peter Pan

TBA - Porgy and Bess [Frankel, Viertel, Baruch, Routh, Panter, Tulchin/Bartner]

TBA - The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert

TBA - The Princess Bride

TBA - Princesses [Lane, Comley]

TBA - Poe the Musical

TBA - Rain Man [MGM]

TBA - Robin Hood

TBA - Secondhand Lions

TBA - South Pacific

TBA - Speed-the-Plow

TBA - Stalag 17

TBA - Starry Messenger

TBA - Syncopation

TBA - A Tale Of Two Cities

TBA - Torch Song Trilogy

TBA - Turn of the Century

TBA - West Side Story

TBA - The Wall [Weinstein, Mottola, Waters]

TBA - Will Rogers Follies [Cossette]

TBA - The Wiz [Dodger]

TBA - Zanna [Dalgleish]

This list is compiled from various sources. If you have corrections to the Broadway Season, please contact us.

 
   


Tim Dunleavy  |  James Marino  |  Matthew Murray  |  Ellis Nassour  |  Michael Portantiere
Blind Item  |  Contact Us  |  Legal  |  ?



© 1997 - 2010 2die4 Productions, Inc.


https://broadwaystars.com/ellis/2003_05_30_ellisarchive.shtml  |   172.69.59.61