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- Florenz Ziegfeld
-
-
- (MAY 14, 1928)
-
- Probably the most spectacular feature of a successful theatre
- season in Manhattan has been the gigantic and prolonged good
- fortune of that wise and prolific producer of plays, Florenz
- Ziegfeld. Three (Rosalie, The Three Musketeers, Show Boat) of
- the five shows which he has sponsored since the autumn were
- playing last week to capacity houses. With the possible
- exception of The Theatre Guild, no other producer has scored so
- heavily this winter. Without exception, no other producer has
- ever enjoyed such consistently large revenues from his
- theatrical ventures.
-
- In 1907, sick of the sweet and dreary musical comedies which
- littered Broadway, he produced The Follies, a revue which took
- its name from the Parisian Folies Bergeres and duplicated its
- gay and daring make-up. New Yorkers, at this time innocent of
- the malpractice which has since become famous as the "buttock
- and leg show," danced with frantic eagerness to see what Ziggy
- had done. They discovered over the door the legend which,
- however inaccurate or uncomplimentary it may have seemed,
- described its author's business in terms that have been
- remembered. "Glorifying the American Girl" was the legend.
-
- Since that time Ziggy has produced a new edition of The
- Follies every year as well as an enormous number of variegated
- musical shows, each devised, with unerring accuracy, to suit the
- taste of the season.
-
- He employs at present no less than 800 glorified girls in his
- various chori. Half of these are blonde, half brunette; all of
- them were chosen by Ziegfeld himself in person, with great
- labor, from an annual crowd of applicants numbering at least
- 15,000. For the six shows which he contemplates producing next
- year, Maestro Ziegfeld will be able to draw upon a large reserve
- of chorines whose names, measurements and telephone numbers he
- keeps on record; others he will select himself, by a process of
- elimination, from determined battalions that assemble for his
- inspection, at a whispered word.
-
- Ziegfeld is explicit when he explains the formula for his
- box-office batting average. There are, he thinks, three themes
- for musical shows: Sex, Adventure, Romance. Right now, he thinks
- Romance is the winner and builds his plays accordingly. Soon Sex
- will have its turn again.
-
- He thinks that the personal contribution which he makes to all
- his shows can be best described by the three words "Splendor
- and Intelligence." This is because he is proud of what he has
- done, not because he is conceited about what he is. Ziggy has
- never appeared upon the stage, except when pushed there after
- an opening performance.
-
-