The Drunkard

The Drunkard; or, The Fallen Saved is an American temperance play first performed on February 12, 1844.[1][2] A drama in five acts, it was perhaps the most popular play produced in the United States until the dramatization of Uncle Tom's Cabin [3] premiered in 1853. In New York City, P.T. Barnum presented it at his American Museum in a run of over 100 performances.[4] It was among the first of the American temperance plays, and remained the most popular of them until it was eclipsed in 1858 by T. S. Arthur's Ten Nights in a Bar-Room.[3]

Poster for a 1938 production by the Federal Theatre Project

The primary writer of the play was William Henry Smith (1806–1872), who also directed and starred in the original production in Boston in the 184445 season.[1][3] Smith was the stage manager at Moses Kimball's Boston Museum, where the play was originally produced.[3] An anonymous collaborator co-wrote the script. A commonly held theory identifies Unitarian minister John Pierpont as the unnamed collaborator. Pierpont's motive to remain anonymous may have been rooted in the desire to avoid affiliation with the theatre, which was considered a taboo subject in the Christian community.[3]

The play ran for an unprecedented 140 performances in the Boston Museum's 1844–45 season, sometimes running three times a day. This was astonishing at the time. The success of the play led to the beginning of the temperance movement's success.

Revival

Cast of The Drunkard, 1938

A production of The Drunkard opened at the Theatre Mart in Los Angeles in 1933 and ran continuously until 1959. At one point, Boris Karloff suggested adding an olio, a musical number following the performance, played in front of an olio drop.[5]

The 1933 mounting of The Drunkard was presented as an audience-participation show, with the audience urged to hiss the villain and cheer the hero. The play became a popular attraction for movie people, including W. C. Fields, who loved the show and wanted to make a film version. He arranged for Paramount Pictures to hire many members of the Los Angeles stage company, and cast himself as the villainous Squire Cribbs (replacing Henry Brandon of the stage company) in The Old Fashioned Way (1934).[6] The following year, James Murray and Clara Kimball Young starred in a low-budget feature, The Drunkard; the play is presented as part of the film's plot, in which two theatrical producers cast their needy relatives in the show.[7][8] This 1935 version of The Drunkard was condensed to a two-reel short subject in 1945, and was incorporated into the nostalgic anthology feature Gaslight Follies (1945). In 1940, Alan Mowbray, Richard Cromwell, Anita Louise, and Buster Keaton starred in another film parody, The Villain Still Pursued Her,[9] with Billy Gilbert in a spoken prologue, urging the movie audience to hiss the villain and cheer the hero in the tradition of the stage revival.

Later stage adaptations

A musical adaptation of the play by the British writer Brian J. Burton, The Drunkard or Down With the Demon Drink, was published in 1968 and has been performed several times since.[10][11]

Another version of the play, adapted by Richard Mansfield Dickinson, has been performed every Saturday night beginning on November 14, 1953[12] at the Tulsa Spotlight Theatre, located in Tulsa, Oklahoma; the company claims that this is the longest-running stage production in the world,[13][14] although the run of The Mousetrap at the Theatre Royal, Nottingham in London has been running since October 6, 1952. Because of the show's longevity, the Tulsa Spotlight Theatre was placed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 2001.[15]

An Off-Broadway run of the play was produced at the Metropolitan Playhouse in New York City in 2010.[16]

Plot

Act 1 opens on a lovely rural cottage occupied by the tenants Mrs. Wilson and her daughter Mary. They are terrified of losing the cottage because they are unable to make regular payments and they are speaking to Lawyer Cribbs who insists they will because the new landlord, Edward Middleton, is not as generous as his father was. Cribbs is lying to them because he is managing the estate of Edward's late father and has an opportunity to sell the cottage and land for quite a healthy sum. However, when Edward meets Mary he falls in love with her and they get married. Also in act 1 there is a scene between Edward's foster brother William and Miss Spindle who is in love with Edward.

Act 2 begins with a furious Cribbs trying to get revenge on Edward for thwarting his sale by testing the jealous Miss Spindle to see if she might have a case against Edward. Upon discovering she has nothing of substance he switches tactics and decides that since Edward has been known to drink some in the past, perhaps he can be made to drink too much. Edward and Mary have a daughter now, young Julia, but that doesn't stop Cribbs. He convinces Edward to drink too much brandy at the local tavern and then spreads the rumor that Edward has fallen and is a no-good drunk. On the night that Edward first returns to the cottage drunk, Mrs. Wilson is found dead and Edward blames himself. He flees the cottage and runs to Boston (New York in later scripts).

Act 3 Starts with Cribbs finding Edward in the city to gloat and enact another money making scheme. Cribbs wants the fallen Edward to forge the name of one Arden Rencelaw, a wealthy philanthropist, in exchange for money to fuel his drinking habits. Showing goodness still, Edward refuses, but goes off to continue drinking in the city. In desperate search for William, Mary and Julia have also gone to the city. They are starving and cold when Cribbs stumbles upon them and tries to have his way with Mary. Luckily, William shows up at the perfect time to stop the assault, and then he swears to help find his foster brother.

William finds Edward at the top of Act 4 and along with Arden Rencelaw's help he convinces Edward to return to his family and stop wallowing in self pity. There is a happy family reunion for the Middletons. Before this happens, though, another complication arises as it is discovered that Cribbs forged Mr. Rencelaw's signature himself and is skipping town with $5,000 of his money.

Act 5 begins with a return to the village as Cribbs attempts to gather up incriminating evidence before making his escape. The real will of Edward's father which does not name Cribbs as the caretaker of the estate is hidden back at the cottage. The Middletons, Mr. Rencelaw, and William have figured this out, however, and they head him off at the cottage with the will in their possession. Lawyer Cribbs is promptly arrested. The final scene of the play is a picturesque, dialogue free scene in the interior of the cottage with everyone gathered around as a big happy family.

Characters and 1844 cast

Another poster for the Federal Theatre Project production
  • Edward Middleton played by Mr. W. H. Smith
  • Lawyer Cribbs played by Mr. G. H. Wyatt
  • William Dowton played by Mr. C. W. Hunt
  • Farmer Gates played by Mr. C. H. Saunders
  • Farmer Stevens played by Mr. G. Howard
  • Old Johnson played by Mr. G. E. Locke
  • Sam played by Mr. S. Adams
  • First Loafer played by Mr. J. Adams
  • Second Loafer played by Mr. Thompson
  • Mr. Rencelaw played by Mr. G. C. Germon
  • Landlord played by Mr. Harris
  • Bar Keeper played by Mr. Willard
  • Watchman played by Mr. Coad
  • Mary Wilson played by Mrs. G. C. Germon
  • Agnes Dowton, a Maniac played by Mrs. Thoman
  • Mrs. Wilson played by Mrs. Woodward
  • Patience played by Mrs. C. W. Hunt
  • Julia played by Miss A. Phillips
  • Villagers, Loafers, Watchmen, &c.

See also

References

Notes

  1. "The Drunkard: Author's preface (1850 edition) in Uncle Tom's Cabin & American Culture: A Multi-media Archive on the University of Virginia website
  2. Smith, William. The Drunkard. Literature House/Gregg Press, 1972.
  3. "The Drunkard" in Uncle Tom's Cabin & American Culture: A Multi-media Archive on the University of Virginia website
  4. Burrows, Edwin G. and Wallace, Mike (1999). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-195-11634-8. p.815
  5. Counter, B. "The Drunkard at Theatre Mart" on the Los Angeles Theatres website
  6. The Old Fashioned Way at IMDb
  7. Boxoffice, June 8, 1935: p. 29 seen at issuu.com
  8. The Drunkard (1935) at IMDb
  9. Mitchell, C. (2004). Filmography of Social Issues: A Reference Guide. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-32037-3. p. 4.
  10. "Brian J. Burton" Archived 2013-05-13 at the Wayback Machine on doolee.com
  11. The Drunkard, Music Theatre International, accessed July 31, 2013
  12. "Tulsa Spotlight Theater". Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-17.
  13. "History of the building" Archived 2011-01-19 at the Wayback Machine on the Tulsa Spotlight Theatre website
  14. Regan Henson, "In On The Act", Oklahoma Magazine, January 2012.
  15. Tulsa A to Z
  16. Hampton, Wilborn (Oct 4, 2010). "Saved, Before Alcoholics Anonymous". Retrieved May 1, 2023 via NYTimes.com.

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