Droll Not Dull

According to a popular Broadway anecdote, Noel Coward didn’t like Anton Chekhov as a playwright, and really didn’t appreciate Chekhov’s The Sea Gull. When Alfred Lunt and Lynne Fontanne opened in a 1938 production of the play, Lunt, upon seeing the set, quoted his witty friend. “I hate plays,” Coward…

A Man of the People

In 1959 Robert Penn Warren’s play, All The King’s Men (based on his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel) opened off-Broadway, and asked a relevant question: Is it possible for a corrupt politician to be a man of the people? Do true statesmen exist any more? Have they ever? The premise is a…

When a Woman Loves a Man

Bessie Smith earned the right to sing the blues. Her first husband died soon after the wedding; the second one cheated on her regularly, and kidnapped their adopted son and placed him in a foster home. Bessie herself died in an auto accident, but not before making more than 50…