Hassard Short | |
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Short in the 1905 Broadway play The Toast of the Town |
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Born | Hubert Edward Hassard Short October 15, 1877 Edlington, Lincolnshire, UK |
Died | October 9, 1956 Nice, France |
(aged 78)
Occupation | Stage director, set designer, lighting designer, actor |
Years active | 1895–1953[1] |
Partner | Billy Ladd |
Hubert Edward Hassard Short (1877–1956), usually known as Hassard Short, was an actor, stage director, set designer and lighting designer in musical theatre[2] who directed over 50 Broadway and West End shows between 1920 and 1953.[3][4] He has been described as "one of Broadway's greatest directors and lighting designers" by theatre historian Ken Bloom,[5] and as a "groundbreaking director and choreographer" by John Kenrick.[6]
After 25 years acting on stage and in films, Short turned to directing and designing in 1920. He made many innovations in stage lighting and design, including the first permanent lighting bridge (Music Box Revue, 1921) and first the use of a revolving stage in a Broadway musical (The Band Wagon, 1931).[3][7] He continued to direct until 1952.
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Short was born in Edlington, Lincolnshire into the English landed gentry, the elder son of Edward Hassard Short and Geraldine Rachel Blagrave.[8] He began his theatrical career as an actor in England in 1895 before moving to New York City in 1901, where he continued to appear on stage until 1919.[9] He also acted in five films between 1917 and 1921, the last being Woman's Place.[1]
Short decided to give up acting in favour of directing and stagecraft around 1920; a short piece in The New York Times in July that year announced "his intention of becoming a vaudeville impresario on a large scale", as well as his appointment by producer Joseph Weber as director of the operetta Honeydew.[10] In this production an electrician operated overhead spotlights above the stage from a bosun's chair, the first of Short's many innovations in stage lighting.[3]
His first major hits as a stage director came with the series of Music Box Revues from 1921–23, which showcased Irving Berlin's songs.[1] As well as innovative lighting, he included mechanical effects such as moving stages and elevators, though these were not received with universal approval: the critic Gilbert Seldes complained that "Hassard Short, confusing the dynamics of the theatre with mere hoisting power, moves everything that can be moved except the audience."[11]
Short adapted well to the more limited budgets of the 1930s by staging revues, including many collaborations with producer Max Gordon and choreographer Albertina Rasch.[4] In Three's a Crowd (1930), he dispensed with footlights for the first time on the New York stage by attaching lights to the balcony railing.[12] He staged the groundbreaking 1931 revue The Band Wagon on double revolving turntables, allowing rapid scene changes.[6] His opulent staging of The Great Waltz (1934), financed by John D. Rockefeller, was an exception to the tightened purse-strings of the time and confounded many critics by becoming a hit in both New York and London.[2][6]
His wartime hits included Lady in the Dark (1941), Something for the Boys (1943) and Carmen Jones (1943). Short continued to work into his seventies: he staged a successful revival of Show Boat in 1948, and the last show he worked on was My Darlin' Aida, which opened in 1952.[2][4][9]
A homosexual in a closeted era, Short enjoyed a long-lasting relationship with Billy Ladd, a former chorus dancer.[2][13]
Among the more notable productions that Short staged are the following (original productions unless stated otherwise):[4]
Title | Opened in |
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Music Box Revue | 1921 |
Sunny | 1925 |
The Band Wagon | 1931 |
As Thousands Cheer | 1933 |
The Great Waltz | 1934 |
Jubilee | 1935 |
Between the Devil | 1937 |
The Hot Mikado | 1939 |
Lady in the Dark | 1941 |
Banjo Eyes | 1941 |
Something for the Boys | 1943 |
Carmen Jones | 1943 |
Mexican Hayride | 1944 |
Marinka | 1945 |
Show Boat (revival) | 1946 |