David Belasco
David Belasco was an American theatrical producer, impresario, director, and playwright. He was the first writer to adapt the short story Madame Butterfly for the stage. He launched the theatrical career of many actors, including James O'Neill, Mary Pickford, Lenore Ulric, and Barbara Stanwyck. Belasco pioneered many innovative new forms of stage lighting and special effects in order to create realism and naturalism.
Early years
David Belasco was born in 1853 in San Francisco, California, the son of Abraham H. Belasco and Reyna Belasco, Sephardic Jews who had immigrated to the United States from London's Spanish and Portuguese Jewish community during the California gold rush. He began working as a youth in a San Francisco theater doing a variety of routine jobs, such as call boy, script copier, or as an extra in small parts. He received his first experience as a stage manager while on the road. He said, "We used to play in any place we could hire or get intoa hall, a big dining room, an empty barn; any place that would take us."From late 1873 to early 1874, he worked as an actor, director, and secretary at Piper's Opera House in Virginia City, Nevada, where he found "more reckless women and desperadoes to the square foot…than anywhere else in the world". His developmental years as a supporting player in Virginia City colored his thoughts and eventually helped him to conceive realistic stage settings. He said that while working there, seeing "people die under such peculiar circumstances" made him
"all the more particular in regard to the psychology of dying on the stage. I think I was one of the first to bring naturalness to bear in death scenes, and my varied Virginia City experiences did much to help me toward this. Later I was to go deeper into such studies."His recollections of that time were published in Hearst's Magazine in 1914.
By March 1874, he was back at work in San Francisco, eventually managing Thomas Maguire's Baldwin Theater. When Maguire lost the theater in 1882, Belasco relocated to the East Coast, bringing his practical western experiences with him. The West allowed him to develop his talents as not only a performer, but in progressive production design and execution.
A gifted playwright, Belasco went to New York City in 1882. He worked as stage manager for the Madison Square Theatre, and then the old Lyceum Theatre, while also writing original plays. By 1895, he was so successful that he was considered America's most distinguished playwright and producer.
Career
During his long creative career, stretching between 1884 and 1930, Belasco either wrote, directed, or produced more than 100 Broadway plays, including Hearts of Oak, The [Heart of Maryland (play)|The Heart of Maryland], and Du Barry, making him the most powerful personality on the New York City theater scene. He also helped establish careers for dozens of notable stage performers, many of whom went on to work in films.Among them were Leslie Carter, dubbed "The American Sarah Bernhardt," whose association with Belasco skyrocketed her to theatrical fame after her roles in Zaza and Madame Du Barry. Ina Claire's lead in Polly with a Past and [The Gold Diggers (1919 play)|The Gold Diggers] similarly propelled her career. Belasco wrote a lead part for 18-year-old Maude Adams in his new play Men and Women, which ran for 200 performances.
Other stars whose careers he helped launch included Jeanne Eagels, who would later achieve immortality as Sadie Thompson in Rain, which played for 340 performances. Belasco discovered and managed the careers of Lenore Ulric and David Warfield, both of whom became major stars on Broadway. He launched the career of Barbara Stanwyck, and was responsible for changing her name.
Belasco is perhaps most famous for two works that were adapted as highly popular operas. He adapted the short story Madame Butterfly as a play with the same name. He also wrote the play The [Girl of the Golden West (play)|The Girl of the Golden West]. Both of these works were adapted as operas by Italian composer Giacomo Puccini and La fanciulla del West.
In other adaptations, more than forty motion pictures have been made from the many plays that Belasco wrote.
Many prominent performers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries sought the opportunity to work with Belasco; among them were D. W. Griffith, Helen Hayes, Lillian Gish, Mary Pickford and Cecil B. DeMille. DeMille's father had been close friends with Belasco. After DeMille graduated from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, he began his stage career under Belasco's guidance. DeMille's later methods of handling actors, using dramatic lighting and directing films, were modeled after Belasco's staging techniques.
Pickford appeared in his plays The Warrens of Virginia at the first Belasco Theatre in 1907 and A Good Little Devil in 1913. The two remained in touch after Pickford began working in Hollywood; Belasco appeared with her in the 1914 film adaptation of A Good Little Devil. He is credited as giving Pickford her stage name as well. He also worked with Lionel Barrymore, who starred in his play Laugh, Clown, Laugh opposite Lucille Kahn, whose Broadway career Belasco launched. Belasco was a member of The Lambs from 1893 to 1931.
Marriage
David Belasco was married to Cecilia Loverich for over fifty years. They had two daughters, Reina and Augusta.Death
Belasco died on May 14, 1931, at the age of 77 in Manhattan. His funeral was held at Central Synagogue, Manhattan. He was interred in the Linden Hill Jewish Cemetery on Metropolitan Avenue in Ridgewood, Queens.Influence on American theatre
Belasco demanded a natural acting style, and to complement that, he developed stage settings with authentic lighting effects to enhance his plays. His productions inspired several generations of theatre lighting designers.Belasco's contributions to modern stage and lighting techniques were originally not appreciated as much as those of his European counterparts, such as André Antoine and Constantin Stanislavski. But today he is regarded as "one of the first significant directorial figures in the history of the American theatre," writes theatre historian Lise-Lone Marker.
[Image:David_Belasco_Monogram.jpg|thumb|Belasco's monogram]
He brought a new standard of naturalism to the American stage as the first to develop modern stage lighting, along with the use of colored lights, via motorized color changing wheels, to evoke mood and setting. America's earliest stage lighting manufacturer, Kliegl Brothers, began by serving the specialized needs of producers and directors such as Belasco and Florenz Ziegfeld. With regard to these modern lighting effects, Belasco is best remembered for his production of Girl of the Golden West, with the play opening to a spectacular sunset that lasted five minutes before any dialogue started.
Belasco became one of the first directors to eschew the use of traditional footlights in favor of lights concealed below floor level, thereby hidden from the audience. His lighting assistant, Louis Hartmann, realized Belasco's design ideas. He also used 'follow spots' to further create realism and often tailored his lighting configurations to complement the complexions and hair color of the actors. He ordered a specially made 1000-watt lamp developed just for his own productions. He was the only director to have one for the first two years after its introduction.
In his own theatres, the dressing rooms were equipped with lamps of several colors, allowing the performers to see how their makeup looked under different lighting conditions.
Belasco was said to put appropriate scents to set scenes in the ventilation systems of the theaters, while his sets were highly detailed and sometimes spilled out into the audience area. In one play, for instance, an operational laundromat was built onstage. The Governor's Lady had a reproduction of a Childs Restaurant kitchen, where actors cooked and prepared food during the play. In his 1919 book The Theatre through Its Stage Door, Belasco relates the following incident:
When I produced The Easiest Way I found myself in a dilemma. I planned one of its scenes to be an exact counterpart of a little hall bedroom in a cheap theatrical boarding-house in New York. We tried to build the scene in my shops, but, somehow, we could not make it look shabby enough. So I went to the meanest theatrical lodging-house I could find in the Tenderloin district and bought the entire interior of one of its most dilapidated rooms—patched furniture, threadbare carpet, tarnished and broken gas fixtures, tumble-down cupboards, dingy doors and window-casings, and even the faded paper on the walls.
Belasco's original scripts were often filled with long, specific descriptions of props and set dressings. He has not been noted for producing unusually naturalistic scenarios.
Belasco both embraced existing theatre technology and sought to expand on it. Both of Belasco's New York theatres were built on the cutting edge of their era's technology. When Belasco took over the Republic Theatre, he drilled a new basement level to accommodate his machinery. He had the Stuyvesant Theatre specially constructed with great amounts of flyspace, hydraulics systems and lighting rigs. The basement of the Stuyvesant contained a working machine shop, where Belasco and his team experimented with lighting and other special effects. Many of the innovations developed in the Belasco shop were sold to other producers.
F. Scott Fitzgerald refers to Belasco's reputation for realism in his novel The Great Gatsby. A drunken visitor in the library of Gatsby's mansion exclaims in amazement that the books are genuine: "See!" he cried triumphantly. "It's a bona-fide piece of printed matter. It fooled me. This fella's a regular Belasco. It's a triumph. What thoroughness! What realism! Knew when to stop, too—didn't cut the pages."
Theatres
New York
New York's first Belasco Theatre was originally the Republic Theatre, located at 229 West 42nd Street, between 7th and 8th Avenues, in Manhattan's Theater District. Belasco took over the theater and remodeled it in 1902, two years after it was constructed by Oscar Hammerstein. Belasco gave up the theater in 1910, after which it was renamed the Republic. The theater then went through a tumultuous period as a burlesque venue, then a second-run and later pornographic movie theater. It was rehabilitated and reopened as New Victory Theater in 1995.New York's second Belasco Theatre is located at 111 West 44th Street, between 6th and 7th Avenues, a few blocks from the original New York Belasco. This theater, originally Stuyvesant Theatre, was constructed in 1907 and renamed Belasco in 1910. The theater was built to Belasco's wishes, with Tiffany lighting and ceiling panels, rich woodwork, and murals. Belasco's office and private apartment were also housed in the building. The Belasco is still in operation as a Broadway venue with much of the original decor intact.
Other cities
Belasco Theatres also existed in several other cities.In Los Angeles, the first Belasco Theatre was located at 337 S. Main Street. This theater, which hosted the Belasco Stock Company, opened in 1904 and was operated by David Belasco's brother, Frederick. The theater was renamed twice: as the Republic and as the Follies. The theater was used for burlesque in the 1940s, after which it fell into sharp decline. It was demolished in May 1974.
The second Belasco Theater in Los Angeles is located at 1050 South Hill Street). This theatre, built by Morgan, Walls & Clements and opened in 1926, was managed by another of David's brothers: Edward. Many Hollywood stars with theatrical roots as well as Broadway stars visiting the West Coast appeared in this theatre. However, the theater declined after Edward's death in 1937 and closed in the early 1950s. The building was then used as a church for several decades, and underwent an extensive restoration from 2010 to 2011. It is currently in use as a nightclub and convention venue.
Shubert-Belasco Theatre, located at 717 Madison Place, across from the White House in Washington, D.C., was purchased by Belasco in September 1905. Originally built in 1895 as the Lafayette Square Opera House, the theater was razed in 1962 and replaced by the U.S. Court of Claims building.
Selected plays
- Hearts of Oak, by James A. Herne and David Belasco
- La Belle Russe, by David Belasco
- May Blossom, by David Belasco
- Lord Chumley, by Henry Churchill de Mille and David Belasco
- Men and Women, by Henry Churchill de Mille and David Belasco
- The Girl I Left Behind Me, by Franklin Fyles and David Belasco
- Pawn Ticket No. 210, by Clay M. Greene and David Belasco
- The Heart of Maryland, by David Belasco
- Zaza, by David Belasco
- Madame Butterfly, by David Belasco
- Du Barry, by David Belasco
- The Auctioneer
- Sweet Kitty Bellairs, by David Belasco
- The Music Master, by Charles Klein
- Adrea, by David Belasco and John Luther Long
- The Girl of the Golden West, by David Belasco
- Rose of the Rancho, by Richard Walton Tully and David Belasco
- The Warrens of Virginia, by William C. deMille
- A Grand Army Man
- The Fighting Hope, by William J. Hurlbut
- The Easiest Way, by Eugene Walter
- The Lily, by David Belasco
- Just a Wife, by Eugene Walter
- The Woman, by William C. deMille
- The Return of Peter Grimm, by David Belasco
- The Governor's Lady, by Alice Bradley
- The Case of Becky, by Edward Locke
- A Good Little Devil, by Austin Strong
- The Temperamental Journey, by Leo Ditrichstein
- Seven Chances, by Roi Cooper Megrue
- Tiger Rose, by Willard Mack
- The Gold Diggers, by Avery Hopwood
- The Son-Daughter, by George Scarborough and David Belasco
- Kiki, by David Belasco with music by Zoel Parenteau
- Shore Leave, by Hubert Osborne
- Laugh, Clown, Laugh, by Tom Cushing and David Belasco
- Ladies of the Evening, by Milton Herbert Gropper
- The Dove, by Willard Mack
- Lulu Belle, by Charles MacArthur and Edward Sheldon
- Tonight or Never, by Fanny Hatton and Frederic Hatton
Filmography
- Lord Chumley, directed by James Kirkwood
- ', directed by William J. Hanley
- Men and Women, directed by James Kirkwood
- Rose of the Rancho, directed by Cecil B. DeMille
- The Girl of the Golden West, directed by Cecil B. DeMille
- ', directed by Lloyd B. Carleton
- DuBarry, directed by Edoardo Bencivenga
- The Heart of Maryland, directed by Herbert Brenon
- May Blossom, directed by Allan Dwan
- The Case of Becky, directed by Frank Reicher
- Madame Butterfly, directed by Sidney Olcott
- Zaza, directed by Edwin S. Porter and Hugh Ford
- Sweet Kitty Bellairs, directed by James Young
- La Belle Russe, directed by Charles Brabin
- Harakiri, directed by Fritz Lang
- The Heart of Maryland, directed by Tom Terriss
- The Case of Becky, directed by Chester M. Franklin
- Pawn Ticket 210, directed by Scott R. Dunlap
- The Girl of the Golden West, directed by Edwin Carewe
- Zaza, directed by Allan Dwan
- Tiger Rose, directed by Sidney Franklin
- Forty Winks, directed by Paul Iribe and Frank Urson
- Seven Chances, directed by Buster Keaton
- Men and Women, directed by William C. deMille
- Kiki, directed by Clarence Brown
- The Lily, directed by Victor Schertzinger
- The Return of Peter Grimm, directed by Victor Schertzinger
- The Music Master, directed by Allan Dwan
- The Heart of Maryland, directed by Lloyd Bacon
- Laugh, Clown, Laugh, directed by Herbert Brenon
- Ladies of Leisure, directed by Frank Capra
- Sweet Kitty Bellairs, directed by Alfred E. Green
- Du Barry, Woman of Passion, directed by Sam Taylor
- The Girl of the Golden West, directed by John Francis Dillon
- Kiki, directed by Sam Taylor
- Tonight or Never, directed by Mervyn LeRoy
- Girl of the Rio, directed by Herbert Brenon
- The Hatchet Man, directed by William A. Wellman
- The Son-Daughter, directed by Clarence Brown
- Madame Butterfly, directed by Marion Gering
- The Return of Peter Grimm, directed by George Nicholls Jr.
- Rose of the Rancho, directed by Marion Gering
- Follow the Fleet, directed by Mark Sandrich
- The Girl of the Golden West, directed by Robert Z. Leonard
- Zaza, directed by George Cukor
- Lulu Belle, directed by Leslie Fenton
- Madame Butterfly, directed by Carmine Gallone
- Madame Butterfly, directed by Frédéric Mitterrand
Producer
- A Good Little Devil, directed by Edwin S. Porter
- Rose of the Rancho, directed by Cecil B. DeMille
- The Girl of the Golden West, directed by Cecil B. DeMille
- The Warrens of Virginia, directed by Cecil B. DeMille
- The Governor's Lady, directed by George Melford
- The Woman, directed by George Melford
- The Fighting Hope, directed by George Melford
- The Case of Becky, directed by Frank Reicher
- Her Accidental Husband, directed by Dallas M. Fitzgerald
- The Gold Diggers, directed by Harry Beaumont
- Tiger Rose, directed by Sidney Franklin
- Welcome Stranger, directed by James Young
- Friendly Enemies, directed by George Melford
- Fifth Avenue, directed by Robert G. Vignola
- The Prince of Pilsen, directed by Paul Powell
Films about David Belasco
- Lady with Red Hair, directed by Curtis Bernhardt, with Claude Rains as David Belasco