Criss Cross (musical)

Criss Cross

Sheet Music Cover
Music Jerome Kern
Lyrics Otto Harbach and Anne Caldwell
Book Otto Harbach and Anne Caldwell

Criss Cross is a musical comedy in two acts and prologue, with book and lyrics by Otto Harbach and Anne Caldwell and music by Jerome Kern. The show was produced by Charles Dillingham at the Globe Theatre, and opened October 12, 1926.[1]

The musical director was Victor Baravalle and the music was orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett and Maurice DePackh. The show was staged by R. H. Burnside and choreographed by Dave Bennett. Scenic design and costume design by James Reynolds. It ran for 210 performances, closing on April 9, 1927.[2]

The cast headlined Fred Stone (Christopher Cross) and Dorothy Stone (Dolly Day) and included Roy Hoyer (Captain Carleton) and Oscar Ragland (IIphrahim Benani).[3]

The plot concerns a successful aviator, Christopher Cross (Fred Stone) who manages to help Captain Carleton (Roy Hoyer) save Dolly Day (Dorothy Stone) from the designing schemes of IIphrahim Benani (Oscar Ragland) to rob her of her birthright and a considerable fortune.[4]

As well stated by Gerald Bordman, “From the start Criss Cross was rarely perceived as a Kern show. [Fred] Stone dominated any of his vehicles with his homey clowning and live acrobatics. . . . Kern and his associates hardly ever received more than a perfunctory mention."[5]

On October 23, 1927, Criss Cross came to Philadelphia where it was the inaugural show at the magnificent new Erlanger. [6]


Songs

Prologue

  • “Indignation Meeting”
  • “Hydrophobia Blues”
  • “Cinderella Girl”
  • “Cinderella’s Ride”
  • “She’s on Her Way”

Act 1

  • “Flap-aDoodle”
  • “Leaders of the Modern Regime”
  • “You Will – Won’t You?”
  • “In Araby With You”
  • “Travelogue”

Act 2

  • “Dear Algerian Land”
  • “Dreaming of Allah”
  • “The Dancers of the Café Kaboul”
  • “The Rose of Delight”
  • “The Golden Sprite”
  • “Dance of the Camel Boys”
  • “I Love My Little Susie”
  • “The Ali Baba Babies”
  • “The Four Leaf Clovers”
  • “Portrait Parade”

References

  1. Mantle, Burns, Editor, "The Best Plays of 1926–1927", Dodd, Mead & Company, p. 400.
  2. http://ibdb.com/production.php?id=7866
  3. http://ibdb.com/production.php?id=7866
  4. Mantle, Burns, Editor, "The Best Plays of 1926–1927", Dodd, Mead & Company, pp. 401.
  5. Boardman, Gerald, “Jerome Kern: His Life and Music,” Oxford University Press, New York, 1980, p. 271.
  6. Boardman, Gerald, “Jerome Kern: His Life and Music,” Oxford University Press, New York, 1980, p. 271.
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