The Dollar Princess
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The Dollar Princess | |
Lily Elsie as Alice | |
---|---|
Music | Leo Fall Jerome Kern |
Lyrics | Adrian Ross George Grossmith, Jr. |
Book | A.M. Willner Fritz Grünbaum Basil Hood George Grossmith, Jr. |
Based upon | German operetta Die Dollarprinzessin |
Productions | 1909 West End 1909 Broadway |
The Dollar Princess is a musical in three acts by A.M. Willner and Fritz Grünbaum (after a comedy by Gatti-Trotha), adapted into English by Basil Hood (from the 1907 Die Dollarprinzessin), with music by Leo Fall and lyrics by Adrian Ross. It opened in London at Daly's Theatre on 25 September 1909, running for 428 performances. The London production starred Lily Elsie, Joseph Coyne and Gabrielle Ray.
It also had a very successful run on Broadway, with a new book and lyrics by George Grossmith, Jr. and additional numbers by Jerome Kern, opening on 6 September 1909 and running for 288 performances. Valli Valli, Adrienne Augarde and Louie Pounds starred in the New York production.
In late Victorian and Edwardian Britain, "Dollar Princess" was the nickname given to American heiresses. Playgoer and Society Illustrated wrote, "To the average playgoer there is something very attractive in watching the antics of the vulgar when surrounded by the refinement of art which he can neither understand nor appreciate.... Miss Lily Elsie, as Alice, shows even an improvement on her performance in The Merry Widow. The inimitable Mr. Joseph Coyne has put a lot more into his part than was possible on the first night.... He is great! His American accent is a thing to listen to...."[1]
Contents |
[edit] Roles
- John Couder, president of a coal combine
- Alice Conder, his daughter
- Dick, his nephew
- Daisy Gray, his niece
- Fredy Wehrburg
- Hans Freiherr von Schlick
- Olga Labinska, a cabaret singer
- Tom, Couder's brother
- Miss Thompson, a housekeeper
- James, Couder's valet
- Bill, a chauffeur
- Typists, cabaret singers, guests, servants, porters
[edit] Synopsis
- English version
A young American oil tycoon, when recruiting domestic staff, takes on a succession of impoverished members of the European aristocracy. But the servants he selects are all very well connected. "Tho' we came here in the steerage, all are members of the peerage." His sister, who has money, later follows the course of true love and takes a job in another household pretending to be impoverished.
- American version
Three plots take place concurrently: First, an American girl, the daughter of the President of the Coal Trust (the Dollar Princess), falls in love with a young Englishman and tries to win his heart. Meanwhile, the millionaire father has an affair with a supposed Countess, who turns out to be a lion tamer, and his niece, Daisy, marries a young Marquis, but she refuses to be anything but his friend.
[edit] Musical numbers
- A Boat Sails On Wednesday
- The Dollar Princess
- Hip, Hip, Hurrah!
- I can Say Truly Rural
- Inspection
- Lady Fortune
- Love! Love! Love!
- Love's A Race
- The Marquis of Jolifontaine
- My Dream Of Love
- Not Here! Not Here!
- Reminiscence
- The Riding Lesson
- A Self Made Maiden
- Tennis
- Then You Go?
- Typewriting
[edit] See also
Die Dollarprinzessin, the original work.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Playgoer and Society Illustrated, Vol I No 2, November 1909
- List of roles, list of songs and other information
- Description of the show
- From StageBeauty.net; includes a review of the New York production by the New York Times, dated 7th July, 1909