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Ramshackle Inn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Play by George Batson
Ramshackle Inn
1944 edition
Written byGeorge Batson
Directed byArthur Sircom
Date premieredJanuary 5, 1944 (1944-01-05)
Place premieredRoyale Theatre,
New York City
Original languageEnglish
SubjectMelodramatic farce about a spinster foiling aRum Running gang.
GenreComedy
SettingLobby of Ye Olde Colonial Inn during a stormy evening.

Ramshackle Inn is a three-act play, written by George Batson, revised byOwen Davis, and staged by Arthur Sircom.[1][2] It is acomedy, amelodramaticfarce,[3] with a medium-sized cast, moderate pacing, and only one setting. The action takes place during two hours of a stormy evening in the lobby of a dilapidated inn along the seacoast nearGloucester, Massachusetts.[4]

The play was produced by Robert Reud; settings were by Frederick Fox and costumes by Peggy Clark.[1] Despite much critical skepticism,[4][5][1] it was a moderatebox office success on Broadway, running for 216 performances during early 1944.[6] It then went on tour,[6] and was played incommunity andregional theater during the 1950s,[7] but has not had a Broadway revival.

Characters

[edit]

Characters are listed in order of appearance within their scope.

Leads

  • Patton is the sinister manager and handyman at the Inn.
  • Joyce Rogers is the undercover name for female FBI agent Matilda Janeway.
  • Mame Phillips is a hard-drinking middle-aged woman, the previous owner of the Inn.
  • Belinda Pryde is a Vermont librarian, middle-aged and a spinster.

Supporting

  • Constable Small is an electedconstable, honest but pompous and unobservent.
  • Bill Phillips is Mame's handsome twenty-five-year-old son, a former bank teller falsely convicted of theft.
  • Mary Temple is a pretty twenty-two year old local girl. She and Bill were a couple before his arrest.

Featured

  • Arbothnot is an undercover FBI agent who quickly becomes a very mobile corpse.
  • Lucius Towser Belinda's beau for twenty years; he is styled "Commodore", but just owns a smallcoaster.
  • Dr. Russell is a slick young physician.
  • Alice Fisher is a beautiful young blonde whom the Russells bring into the Inn.
  • Gail Russell is supposedly the young wife of Dr. Russell.
  • Mr. Temple is a middle-aged banker, former employer of Bill Phillips, whom Mary Temple calls "Uncle Thad".
  • Gilhooley is a local police sergeant, assisting Constable Small.
  • Fred Porter is the local chief of police.

Synopsis

[edit]

The Philadelphia Inquirer critic Linton Martin noted "'Ramshackle Inn' is the cluttered and confusing kind of play that would be difficult and dangerous to describe in detail".[8] Reviewer Bill Hill stated "To reduce to sentence form any of the action of this play would be pointless".[9]

Belinda Pryde, having readGrand Hotel, longs to own a similar rendezvous for interesting people. She settles for buying, sight unseen, Ye Olde Colonial Inn on the New England seacoast from its perpetually inebriated owner. It turns out to be a rundown, vermin-infested shambles, tenented by a murderous liquor-cutting gang, kidnappers, undercover FBI agents and soon after her arrival, a growing number of corpses. Sinister folks, some toting bodies, sidle in and out of the lobby's ten doorways, while Miss Pryde stalks and is stalked. By play's end she has captured all the crooks still living and proved the innocence of the unjustly accused son of the previous owner so he can marry his sweetheart.

Original production

[edit]

Background

[edit]

George Batson, a formerautomatbusboy then serving in theUS Army Signal Corps, wrote the play in 1942 expressly forZaSu Pitts.[10] Robert Reud announced on October 21, 1943, that he would produce and Arthur Sircom direct ZaSu Pitts in the play.[3]

By October 29, 1943, Frederick Fox had been signed to design the sets.[11] Producer Reud started rehearsals at theRitz Theater on November 2, 1943,[12] though casting was still ongoing.[13] Corporal Batson, stationed atFort Monmouth, had to apply for a pass from his commanding officer to attend the tryout.[14]

Cast

[edit]
Cast during tryouts in Boston, Philadelphia, Norfolk, Richmond, and the original Broadway run
RoleActorDatesNotes
PattonPaul HuberNov 22, 1943 - Dec 18, 1943Huber was replaced after the Philadelphia tryout.[15][16]
Joe DowningDec 27, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944Downing came into the cast with the Norfolk tryout.[17][6]
Joyce RogersDorothy MackaillNov 22, 1943 - Dec 18, 1943Mackaill left after the Philadelphia tryout.[15][16]
Ruth HoldenDec 27, 1943 - Feb 13, 1944Holden joined the cast with the Norfolk tryout.[17][18]
Margaret CallahanFeb 15, 1944 - Jul 08, 1944[18][6]
Mame PhillipsLuella GearNov 22, 1943 - Dec 29, 1944Gear, heavily promoted in ads, chose to leave after the Norfolk tryout.[15]
Ruth GatesDec 31, 1943 - Feb 13, 1944Gates joined the cast in Richmond with just 24 hours notice.[19][18]
Cora WitherspoonFeb 15, 1944 - Jul 08, 1944[18][6]
Belinda PrydeZaSu PittsNov 22, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944This was her first stage role on the East Coast and Broadway.[15][6]
Constable SmallHarlan BriggsNov 22, 1943 - Mar 04, 1944[15][20]
Will H. PhilbrickMar 06, 1944 - Mar 24, 1944[20][21]
William NunnMar 26, 1944 - Apr 23, 1944[21][22]
Harlan BriggsApr 25, 1944 - Jul 08, 1944[22][6]
Bill PhillipsWilliam BarrettNov 22, 1943 - Dec 18, 1943[15][16]
William BleesDec 27, 1943 - Mar 24, 1944[17][21]
Richard BasehartMar 26, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[21][6]
Mary TempleMary BarthelmessNov 22, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944She was the daughter of actorRichard Barthelmess.[15][6]
Mr. CosgroveJohn SoutherNov 22, 1943 - Dec 18, 1943This character was dropped after the Philadelphia tryout, and Souther left the cast.[15][16]
ArbothnotGeorge SpelvinDec 27, 1943 - Dec 29, 1944This character was added with the Norfolk tryout, but Spelvin only lasted until the Richmond tryout.[17]
Mason CurryDec 31, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944Curry became "the most mobile corpse on Broadway2 with this part.[19][6]
Lucius TowserWatson WhiteNov 22, 1943 - Dec 18, 1943[15][16]
Ralph TheadoreDec 27, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[17][6]
Dr. RussellHall SheltonNov 22, 1943 - Dec 18, 1943[15][16]
Richard RoberDec 27, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[17][6]
Gail RussellHelene HeighNov 22, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[15][6]
Alice FisherMaurine AlexanderNov 22, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[15][6]
Mr. TempleRoyal Dana TracyNov 22, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[15][6]
GilhooleyRobert TomsNov 22, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[15][6]
Fred PorterJohn LorenzNov 22, 1943 - Jul 08, 1944[15][6]

Tryouts

[edit]

The first tryout opened in Boston at theWilbur Theatre on November 22, 1943.[15] The local reviewer noted the audience's enthusiasm for a work that was neither original nor brilliant; its familiarity and stock characters seemed to be what they wanted.[15] After two weeks in Boston, the production moved to Philadelphia, where it opened at the Walnut Theatre on December 6, 1943.[8] The reviewer here was more critical of the play: "'Ramshackle Inn' is a rather ramshackle play, with its crazy quilt plot a farrago of odds and ends of wild melodrama and dizzy farce".[8] The author "has hit upon a few amusing wisecracks. But they are not sufficient to make the play.... hang together or give it the sustained excitement and tension necessary".[8]

After two weeks in Philadelphia, producer Reud announced the production would take a week off to rehearse new material provided byOwen Davis.[2] The revised play replaced the original Nazi spies and saboteurs with a black market liquour-cutting racket. It also dropped one featured character, Mr. Cosgrove, and introduced another, Arbothnot. Six members of the cast were replaced with new actors at this time. The producer then took the unusual step of having the revised production do a four-day tryout at Blair Junior High School auditorium inNorfolk, Virginia.[23] This surprisingly large facility held an audience of up to nine hundred when the revised play debuted there on December 27, 1943.[17] Local reviewer Warner Twyford was kind with the actors, but said of the play: "It is not funny enough to be crackerjack comedy, it is not scary enough to be exciting melodrama, it is not mysterious enough to be a mystery".[17]

The production then went toRichmond for two more days of tryouts, having shed and acquired a supporting actor along the way.[19] Once there, lead actressLuella Gear chose to depart, necessitating replacement Ruth Gates to go on with 24 hours notice.[24] Both local reviewers felt the acting and direction were ok, that star ZaSu Pitts provided sufficient drawing power, but the play itself was flawed.[19][24]

Premiere

[edit]

The play had its premiere at theRoyale Theatre on January 5, 1944.[4] According to a columnist, there was some talk aboutMax Gordon scheduling his premiere ofRuth Gordon'sOver 21 on the same date Reud had reserved forRamshackle Inn,[25] but Reud later revealed he was a follower ofEvangeline Adams and had chosen the date according to astrological principles.[fn 1][26]

Reception

[edit]

Critical reception of the play was unanimous that ZaSu Pitts performed very well in a losing effort, the work itself being fatally flawed. Arthur Pollock ofThe Brooklyn Eagle said of ZaSu Pitts and the play that it was "no pearl of the comic spirit, but she is a charming buffoon and there are many people who will find the thing funny with her in it".[5] He also credited Pitts with carrying the whole show: "The dialogue has no spring in it whatever. Take away Miss Pitts and there is nothing".[5] Lewis Nichols ofThe New York Times expressed the hope Miss Pitts might have a better vehicle in her next Broadway appearance.[1] According to Nichols, "'Ramshackle Inn' quite often succeeds in being only sleepy when it means to be hair-raising, and silly when it means to be funny".[1]

John Chapman in theDaily News concurred with other reviewers that Miss Pitts' performance was the main draw, but also mentioned some able support from Joe Downing, Richard Rober, and Harlan Briggs.[4] He calledRamshackle Inn a "tumbledown play" and noted that the audience could only have "a merely mildly exciting time as the plot unfolded like one of Miss Pitts' knee joints".[4] However, there is nothing harder for critics to predict than the popular appeal of a comic farce. By the end of March 1944,Ramshackle Inn had reached its 100th performance, paid off all its production and tryout costs, and was still raking in between twelve and eighteen thousand dollars a week.[27]

Closing

[edit]

The original Broadway run closed at the Royale on July 8, 1944, after 216 performances.[6] Columnist Jack O'Brien ascribed the Broadway closing to "torridity".[28]

National tour

[edit]

As soon as the production closed in New York, it moved to Washington, D.C. for one week at theNational Theatre starting July 10, 1944.[9] This was an unusual summer opening at a time when most theaters had no air-conditioning. It then went to Chicago where it opened on July 17, 1944, at the Selwyn Theater.[29]

Cast

[edit]
Cast at the start of the national tour after Broadway closing
RoleActorDatesNotes
PattonJoe DowningJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Joyce RogersMargaret CallahanJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Mame PhillipsCora WitherspoonJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Belinda PrydeZaSu PittsJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Constable SmallHarlan BriggsJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Bill PhillipsJack RuthJul 10, 1944 - Jul 15, 1944Ruth was used just for the Washington D.C. performances.[9][29]
Richard BasehartJul 17, 1944 -[29]
Mary TempleMary BarthelmessJul 10, 1944 -[9]
ArbothnotMason CurryJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Lucius TowserRalph TheadoreJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Dr. RussellLucian SelfJul 10, 1944 - Jul 15, 1944[9][29]
Joseph DraperJul 17, 1944 -[29]
Gail RussellHelene HeighJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Alice FisherDelma ByronJul 10, 1944 - Jul 15, 1944[9][29]
Dorothy BensonJul 17, 1944 -[29]
Mr. TempleRoyal Dana TracyJul 10, 1944 - Jul 15, 1944Tracy committed to Washington D.C. but no farther on the national tour.[9][29]
Arthur GriffinJul 17, 1944 -[29]
GilhooleyRobert TomsJul 10, 1944 -[9]
Fred PorterJohn LorenzJul 10, 1944 -[9]

Adaptions

[edit]

Television

[edit]

Ramshackle Inn was adapted to an hour-long teleplay forThe Philco Television Playhouse, with ZaSu Pitts, Joe Downing, Ralph Theadore, and Robert Toms reprising their roles.[30] It was broadcast live on January 2, 1949,[31] and featuredNancy Davis as Mary Temple,Vivian Vance as Joyce Rogers, Gordon Peters as Constable Small, with Lewis Charles, Richard Bishop, Michael Lawson, Joseph Sweeny, and Don De Leo.[32][33] Recorded on kinescope, it was later rebroadcast on local television stations.[34]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Both shows opened and closed on the same dates.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeNichols, Lewis (January 6, 1944). "The Play".The New York Times. New York, New York. p. 17 – viaNYTimes.com.
  2. ^abCohen, Harold V. (December 16, 1943). "The Drama Desk".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. p. 26 – viaNewspapers.com.
  3. ^ab"ZaSu Pitts Has Lead In Thriller".Daily News. New York, New York. October 22, 1943. p. 639 – viaNewspapers.com.
  4. ^abcdeChapman, John (January 6, 1944). "ZaSu Pitts Proves A Big Help To A Rickety 'Ramshackle Inn'".Daily News. New York, New York. p. 443 – viaNewspapers.com.
  5. ^abcPollock, Arthur (January 6, 1944). "The Theater".The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, New York. p. 9 – viaNewspapers.com.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrZolotow, Sam (July 4, 1944). "Three More Shows To Close Saturday".The New York Times. New York, New York. p. 25 – viaNYTimes.com.
  7. ^"Murder, Comedy, and Zasu Blend Into Fun".The Arizona Republic. Phoenix, Arizona. March 12, 1952. p. 8 – viaNewspapers.com.
  8. ^abcdMartin, Linton (December 7, 1943). "'Ramshackle Inn' Opens On Stage At Walnut".The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. p. 20 – viaNewspapers.com.
  9. ^abcdefghijklmnopqHill, Bill (July 11, 1944). "Zasu Pitts Makes Like Crazy In a Zany 'Ramshackle Inn'".Evening Star. Washington, D.C. p. 12 – viaNewspapers.com.
  10. ^"Play Written Expressly for ZaSu Pitts".Richmond News-Leader. Richmond, Virginia. December 28, 1943. p. 17 – viaNewspapers.com.
  11. ^"Stella Adler In Hecht Skit; Drama Notes".Daily News. New York, New York. October 29, 1943. p. 373 – viaNewspapers.com.
  12. ^"She Will Do an Armstrong Play".The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, New York. November 3, 1943. p. 13 – viaNewspapers.com.
  13. ^"Dorothy Mackaill Gets Stage Role".Daily News. New York, New York. November 5, 1943. p. 679 – viaNewspapers.com.
  14. ^"Author Gets Pass To See Premiere".The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. November 20, 1943. p. 4 – viaNewspapers.com.
  15. ^abcdefghijklmnopqAdams, Marjory L. (November 23, 1943). "The Stage".The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. p. 8 – viaNewspapers.com.
  16. ^abcdef"Amusement Guide".The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. December 18, 1943. p. 12 – viaNewspapers.com.
  17. ^abcdefghTwyford, Warner (December 28, 1943). "'Ramshackle Inn', 'Tis ZaSu Pitts Who Registers".Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Norfolk, Virginia. p. 11 – viaNewspapers.com.
  18. ^abcdZolotow, Sam (February 15, 1944). "Williams Slated To Leave 'Harriet'".The New York Times. New York, New York. p. 14 – viaNYTimes.com.
  19. ^abcd"Poor Script Slows Play Opened Here".The Richmond News Leader. Richmond, Virginia. January 1, 1944. p. 12 – viaNewspapers.com.
  20. ^abCohen, Harold V. (March 2, 1944). "The Drama Desk".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. p. 22 – viaNewspapers.com.
  21. ^abcd"Fisher To Produce Comedy On Racing".The New York Times. New York, New York. March 25, 1944. p. 12 – viaNYTimes.com.
  22. ^ab"Tour Considered For Negro Actors".The New York Times. New York, New York. April 14, 1944. p. 25 – viaNYTimes.com.
  23. ^"ZaSu Pitts Show Here Four Days Late This Month".Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Norfolk, Virginia. December 17, 1943. p. 10 – viaNewspapers.com.
  24. ^ab"ZaSu Pitts Is Fun".Richmond Times Dispatch. Richmond, Virginia. January 2, 1944. p. 30 – viaNewspapers.com.
  25. ^Walker, Danton (December 31, 1943). "New York Letter".The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. p. 13 – viaNewspapers.com.
  26. ^Maney, Richard (April 2, 1944). "Seeing Stars With Robert Reud".The New York Times. New York, New York. p. 148 – viaNYTimes.com.
  27. ^Zolotow, Sam (March 31, 1944). "Zoe Akins' Comedy To Arrive Tonight".The New York Times. New York, New York. p. 27 – viaNYTimes.com.
  28. ^O'Brien, Jack (July 16, 1944). "The Theater".The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. p. 24 – viaNewspapers.com.
  29. ^abcdefghiCassidy, Claudia (July 18, 1944). "Plot Is Leaky, But Miss Pitts' Play Is Creepy".Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. p. 13 – viaNewspapers.com.
  30. ^"ZaSu Pitts Is The Star".The Commercial Appeal. Memphis, Tennessee. January 16, 1949. p. 55 – viaNewspapers.com.
  31. ^"Philco Television Playhouse (ad)".Daily News. New York, New York. January 2, 1949. p. 404 – viaNewspapers.com.
  32. ^"KSD-TV Adds 14 Network Shows".St. Louis Post-Dispatch. St. Louis, Missouri. January 16, 1949. p. 66 – viaNewspapers.com.
  33. ^Offineer, Bee (January 16, 1949). "Hard To Keep Up With Tele".Akron Beacon Journal. Akron, Ohio. p. 12 – viaNewspapers.com.
  34. ^"NBC To Open Television Station On Jan. 16".Metropolitan Pasadena Star-News. Pasadena, California. January 3, 1949. p. 15 – viaNewspapers.com.
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