Three Little Maids

This article is about the 1902 Paul Rubens musical. For the Gilbert and Sullivan song, see The Mikado. For the 1930's WLS-am National Barn Dance trio, see Judy Martin (singer).
Contemporary cartoon of Three Little Maids

Three Little Maids is an English musical by Paul Rubens with additional songs by Percy Greenbank and Howard Talbot. The story concerns three simple curate's daughters who go to London to earn their livings serving tea in a Bond Street tea shop. They become the romantic rivals of three ladies of fashion but succeed because of their freshness.

The musical opened at the Apollo Theatre in London on 10 May 1902 and later transferred to the Prince of Wales Theatre, running for a total of 348 performances. Edna May, Delia Mason and Lily Elsie (on tour) each starred as Edna Branscombe. Ada Reeve was a replacement as Ada Branscombe. Choreography was by Willie Warde, scenery by Hawes Craven and Joseph Harker, and costumes by C. Wilhelm.

There were also a Broadway production in 1903 and international tours. The New York Times gave the show a rave review after its opening night in New York: "It is just possible that there have been better musical comedies ... but if there have, nobody in the audience could think of them at the end of the evening.... It was the marvel of ... good looks, good dancing, and good acting working together for the common weal."[1] The paper particularly praised the humour of G P Huntley and Maurice Farkoa. The title characters were played in New York by Maggie May, Madge Crichton, and Delia Mason.[1] Another rave review was published in the New York Dramatic Mirror.[2]

Synopsis

Act I

The Branscombe girls are three simple curate's daughters from the countryside, not far from London. They meet Lady St. Mallory (proprietress of a fashionable tea shop) and her friends from London, including three young gentlemen to whom they immediately are attracted. The girls happily accept Lady St. Mallory's offer to go to London to work as waitresses serving tea in her Bond Street tea shop.

Act II

The three men, Lord Cheyne, Brian Molyneux and Monsieur de Lorme flirt with the girls at the tea shop, not recognizing them from the earlier out-of-town meeting, as the girls' serving uniform is the costume of Holland. Each of the men also has a London girlfriend of position in London society who becomes jealous of the Branscombe sisters. The society girls decide to disguise themselves as waitresses to meet their rivals on their own ground. The three men prefer the Branscombe girls and invite them to a dance at Lady St. Mallory's country house.

Act III

At the country house, the three girls charm the men and defeat their rivals, who are, fortunately, philosophical about their loss.

Roles

De L'Orme and Hilda

Musical numbers

ACT I - Golf Links at Market Mallory

ACT II - A Bond Street Tea Shop

ACT III - Lady St. Mallory's Drawing-room at Market Mallory

Addendum

References

  1. 1 2 "Three Little Maids; A Masterpiece of Musical Comedy at Daly's". The New York Times, 2 September 1903, p. 3.
  2. "Daly's – Three Little Maids". The New York Dramatic Mirror, 12 September 1903, p. 14, accessed 27 July 2011.
  3. Hilda Moody profile

External links

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