The Garden of Allah (play)
The Garden of Allah is a play written by Robert Hichens and Mary Anderson.[1] It was based on Hichens 1904 novel of the same name. It consists of four acts and an epilogue, with a medium-sized speaking cast and slow pacing.[2] The play is concerned with the romance between a wealthy young Englishwoman and a half-Russian, half-English man of mysterious background. The settings are various locales in French Algeria and French Tunis around 1900, particularly the oasis town of Beni-Mora, a fictional name for Biskra. The title stems from an Arabic saying that the desert is the Garden of Allah. The play was a commercial success,[3] famed for its spectacle, with large numbers of authentic Algerian people, live animals, and complex set designs and effects.[4] However, it was not a dramatic success; several reviewers expressed surprise that a book with so much dramatic potential was winnowed down to a few disjointed scenes.[4][2][5] Despite the lack of drama, over 375,000 people saw it during the Broadway run (Oct 1911-May 1912), more than any single play to that date.[6] CharactersLeads
Supporting
Featured
SynopsisSeveral of the play's nine scenes had no spoken lines as such, but were moving tableaux of life in the desert and the oasis town of Beni-Mora. The play was never published; sources for the synopsis are newspaper reviews.[4][2][5][7][8][9][10]
Original productionBackgroundFour months after the original novel's publication in October 1904,[11] newspapers reported the stage rights for both the US and UK had been secured by David Belasco.[12] However, the reports were premature; Hichens was initially opposed to seeing this work on the stage.[13] By June 1910 he had reconsidered and was reportedly working on a dramatization.[13] This was done with "an anonymous collaborator" and finished by January 1911.[14] The collaborator was the long-retired actress Mary Anderson, who convinced Hichens to allow George C. Tyler to buy the dramatic rights for Liebler & Company.[fn 2][15] Liebler & Company leased the New Theater building on Central Park West in March 1911, in order to stage large-scale productions, the first of which would be The Garden of Allah.[16] The lease agreement included a provision for renaming the theater, as the owners wanted to reuse the "New Theater" name.[16] Tyler selected "Century Theatre" as the new name.[17] Tyler, with stage director Hugh Ford and set designer Edward A. Morange, met Hichens in Biskra, Algeria during April 1911.[18] They visited the real locales that inspired Hichens, collected material for use in the production,[17] and recruited inhabitants of the area as performers.[19] Liebler & Company stage craftsmen began modifications to the Century theater for handling large productions, which included a massive revolving stage on which two different settings could be placed.[20] Tryouts and revisionsThere were no out-of-town tryouts, as the production was too complex for easy transportation and required a very large stage area. Instead, the producer Tyler mounted six dress rehearsals/previews at the Century Theatre prior to the premiere.[3] The only documented revision to the production was the decision to raise the curtain earlier, at 8:00 pm, since with set changes the play took over four hours to perform.[21] Within a few weeks after the premiere, the stage crew was able to reduce set change times by forty minutes.[22] The only music heard during the play came from the Arab performers on stage.[23] CastThe complete cast for the play numbered 255, of which 55 were of Arabic or Berber ethnic origin.[24] Many of the remainder were colonial French. They provided atmosphere and handled the menagerie of animals: camels, horses, goats, and donkeys, which were housed in the large basement of the Century Theatre.[24] The named characters below were the only credited performers.
PremiereThe public premiere of the production occurred at the Century Theatre with a Saturday matinee on October 21, 1911.[9] Every seat was filled, many with socially prominent people, and speculators were openly selling their tickets despite a recent New York law prohibiting re-sales.[9] Hundreds of people waited outside in the rain, hoping to get tickets.[10] The performance ran from shortly after 2pm to well after 6pm.[9] There were long waits for scene changes, with the curtains remaining down,[10] and quite a few people left early. The crowd was disappointed that neither author appeared on stage to take a bow (both Hitchens and Anderson were backstage) but were gratified that Lewis Waller spoke in their place.[7] When the first act desert tableau had successfully finished, producer Tyler went backstage and handed out $1000 cash to the crew chiefs for divving up among the carpenters, electricians, and propertymen, an unprecedented act in the theatre.[3] ReceptionReviewers were almost unanimous in labelling The Garden of Allah as a picture play or spectacle rather than a true drama.[8][5] They were full of praise for the settings, effects, and direction of the tableaux scenes, and the much heralded sandstorm in Act III.[5] There was also consensus in regarding Lewis Waller as having played the Boris Androvsky role moderately well, while expressing some disappointment with Mary Mannering as Domini Enfilden.[7][4][8][5] Some critics mentioned Ebon Plympton forgetting his lines as Count Anteoni.[8][10] Opinions on the other performers varied, with only the young unknown José Ruben drawing praise from multiple critics as the poetic guide Batouch.[10][9][8][7] ClosingThe Broadway run ended on May 18, 1912, by which date the show had been seen by 375,000 people paying over $500,000.[6] National tourTransporting the production required the lease of a special train.[32] When it left Lehigh Station in Jersey City on August 23, 1912, it carried a message in electric lights along the length of the rail cars, spelling out "'The Garden of Allah' Special".[33] Because the play required a very large stage, only six cities were deemed to have suitable venues. These were the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago, the Cincinnati Music Hall, the Hippodrome Theater (Cleveland, Ohio), the Nixon Theater in Pittsburgh, the original Forrest Theatre in Philadelphia, and the Boston Theatre.[34] However, as the tour wound down from March thru May 1913, the stage crew was able to adjust to some smaller venues. The Liebler Company's tour kicked off in Chicago on August 31, 1912, at the Auditorium. For the tour, a new scene was inserted between scenes 1 and 2 of Act I; it showed the road from the El-Largani monastery, with Boris Androvsky as Father Antoine speaking to his brother, Dr. Peter Androvsky (this was a new character).[35] Certain credited parts from the original run (the Sheik, Mueddin, Garcon) were now uncredited.[36] There was no specific announcement of these changes; they simply popped up in reviews of the tour and the program guide. Cast
AdaptionsStageA revival of the Hichens and Anderson stage treatment was performed at the Manhattan Opera House during February–March 1918.[38] This followed the touring company storyline, rather than the original Broadway version. It lasted for only 24 performances. There was another, more successful revival of the Hichens and Anderson treatment, produced by Arthur Collins at the Drury Lane theatre in London, opening June 24, 1920.[39] This followed the original Broadway version rather than the touring company story, in that there was no scene at the El-Largani Monastery nor character of Dr. Androvsky in Act I.[39] But it also excised the epilogue and the opening tableux scene of Act I, launching directly into the Hôtel du Désert veranda scene.[39] It starred Godfrey Tearle, Madge Titheradge, and Basil Gill, with Arthur Lewis reprising his role from the Broadway run. FilmThough several American films were made of The Garden of Allah, they all drew on the novel as the basis for their screenplays. Notes
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