Louder, Please

Louder, Please is a play by Norman Krasna, the first of Krasna's plays to be produced on Broadway. It was heavily influenced by The Front Page and also Five Star Final. He wrote it while working as a press agent at Warner Bros. and many of the characters were rumored to be based on real people.[1] Krasna admitted the lead was based on publicity man Hubert Voight and other characters were based on Warners cameraman Buddy Longworth, Bernie Williams and Jack Warner.[2]

Louder, Please
Written byNorman Krasna
Date premiered12 November 1931
Place premieredNew York
Original languageEnglish
Subjectcomedy
SettingPublicity Offices of Criterion Pictures, Hollywood

The original production was directed by George Abbott and starred Lee Tracy.[3][4]

The New York Times said "the entertainment spurts out of the direction rather than the play.[5]

It was successful enough for Krasna to be hired as a writer for Columbia Pictures.[6] That studio bought the film rights by March 1932.[7] The film was never made. In March 1962 Edward Buzzell bought the film rights. Again it was not made.[8]

Plot

Publicity men fake the disappearance of a film star.

gollark: I mean, maybe esolangs which work by character and ignore invalid ones, sort of thing.
gollark: Seriously. I don't think that's valid syntax in *any programming language at all*.
gollark: That would literally work in no programming languages.
gollark: <@630513495003103242> It's true. Abigail multiplexed your online CSS transistor, which obviously overrode your primary TCP antennas, so now you're almost entirely disconnected to the internet. And there's nothing you can do about it.
gollark: Because this discord contains 1337 h4xx0rs who are secretly sabotaging his internet connection to stop him finding the best CC OS!

References

  1. MUSICAL TO OPEN TODAY AT WARNERS: Los Angeles Times 28 Sep 1933: 11
  2. Characters From Real Life Basis for "Louder Please" Los Angeles Times 15 Oct 1933: A7.
  3. BROUN PLANS TO GIVE NEW INTIMATE REVUE New York Times 25 Sep 1931: 34.
  4. THE THEATRE: Hollywood Satire Wall Street Journal 19 Nov 1931: 4.
  5. THE PLAY: Slandering the Movies Again. Pasquinade of Opera. By J. BROOKS ATKINSON. New York Times 13 Nov 1931: 26.
  6. Patrick McGilligan, "Norman Krasna", Backstory: Interviews with Screenwriters of Hollywood's Golden Age, California Press p 217
  7. Political Satires Newest Plan of Hollywood Film Producers Los Angeles Times 16 Mar 1932: A9.
  8. Rights Secured Los Angeles Times (1 Mar 1963: C13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.