Ziegfeld Follies
The Ziegfeld Follies was a series of elaborate theatrical revue productions on Broadway in New York City from 1907 to 1931, with renewals in 1934 and 1936. They became a radio program in 1932 and 1936 as The Ziegfeld Follies of the Air.
Founding and history
Inspired by the Folies Bergère of Paris, the Ziegfeld Follies were conceived and mounted by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr., reportedly at the suggestion of his then-wife, the stage actress and singer Anna Held. The shows' producers were turn-of-the-twentieth-century producing titans Klaw & Erlanger.The Follies were a series of lavish revues, something between later Broadway shows and the more elaborate high class vaudeville and variety show. The first Follies was produced in 1907 at the roof theatre Jardin de Paris.
During the Follies era, many of the top entertainers, including W. C. Fields, Eddie Cantor, Josephine Baker, Fanny Brice, Ann Pennington, Bert Williams, Eva Tanguay, Bob Hope, Will Rogers, Ruth Etting, Ray Bolger, Helen Morgan, Louise Brooks, Marilyn Miller, Ed Wynn, Gilda Gray, Nora Bayes and Sophie Tucker appeared in the shows.
The Ziegfeld Follies were also famous for their display of many beautiful chorus girls, commonly known as Ziegfeld Girls, who "paraded up and down flights of stairs as anything from birds to battleships." They usually wore elaborate costumes by designers such as Erté, Lady Duff Gordon and Ben Ali Haggin.
The "tableaux vivants" were designed by Ben Ali Haggin from 1917 to 1925. Joseph Urban was the scenic designer for the Follies shows starting in 1915.
After Ziegfeld's death his widow, actress Billie Burke, authorized use of his name for Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 to Jake Shubert, who then produced the Follies. The name was later used by other promoters in New York City, Philadelphia, and again on Broadway, with less connection to the original Follies. These later efforts failed miserably. When the show toured, the 1934 edition was recorded in its entirety, from the overture to play-out music, on a series of 78 rpm discs, which were edited by the record producer David Cunard to form an album of the highlights of the production and which was released as a CD in 1997.
Films based on the Ziegfeld Follies
In 1937, at the 9th Academy Awards, the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film, The Great Ziegfeld produced the previous year won the Best Picture, starring William Powell as Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr. and co-starring Myrna Loy, Luise Rainer, and Frank Morgan as Jack Billings. Featuring numbers by Ray Bolger, Dennis Morgan, Virginia Bruce, and Harriet Hoctor, the film gave a glimpse into what the Follies were really like. The show-stopper was the Irving Berlin-composed "A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody", which, by itself, cost more to produce than one of Ziegfeld's entire stage shows.In 1941 MGM released Ziegfeld Girl, starring Judy Garland, Lana Turner, Hedy Lamarr, James Stewart and Tony Martin. The film was set in the 1920s. Celebrated numbers from Ziegfeld Revues were recreated, including the famed "Wedding Cake" set which had been used for Metro's earlier film, The Great Ziegfeld. Judy Garland was filmed on the top of the cake. Charles Winninger, who had performed in the Follies of 1920, appeared as "Ed Gallagher" with Gallagher's real-life partner, Al Shean to recreate the duo's famous song "Mister Gallagher and Mister Shean". According to modern sources, Turner's character was modeled after Ziegfeld Girl Lillian Lorraine, who suffered a drunken fall into the orchestra pit during an extravagant number.
In 1946 MGM released a third feature film based on Ziegfeld's shows titled Ziegfeld Follies with Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, Lena Horne, William Powell, Gene Kelly, Fanny Brice, Red Skelton, Esther Williams, Cyd Charisse, Lucille Ball, Kathryn Grayson, and others performing songs and sketches similar to those from the original Follies. Ziegfeld Follies was awarded the "Grand Prix de la Comedie Musicale" at the Cannes Film Festival in 1947, and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration.
The 1964 stage musical Funny Girl, starring Barbra Streisand as Fanny Brice, depicts Fanny Brice's success with the Follies. The 1968 Columbia Pictures film of Funny Girl also starred Barbra Streisand as Brice and Walter Pidgeon as Florenz Ziegfeld.
The Follies
- Follies of 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910 at the Jardin de Paris
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1911 at the Jardin de Paris
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1912 at the Moulin Rouge
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1913, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920 at the New Amsterdam Theatre
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1921 at the Globe Theatre
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1927 at the New Amsterdam Theatre
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1931 at the Ziegfeld Theatre
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1934 at the Winter Garden Theatre
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1936 at the Winter Garden Theatre
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1943, 1957 at the Winter Garden Theatre
Performers: year-by-year
- Nora Bayes
- Helen Broderick
- Emma Carus
- Mlle. Dazie
- Grace La Rue
- Edna Luby
- Harry Watson Jr.
- Nora Bayes
- Mlle. Dazie
- Grace La Rue
- Harry Watson Jr.
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Marjorie Bonner
- Nora Bayes
- Bessie Clayton
- Lillian Lorraine
- Jack Norworth
- Sophie Tucker
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Fanny Brice
- Anna Held
- Lillian Lorraine
- Bert Williams
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Bobby North
- Fanny Brice
- Bert Williams
- The Dolly Sisters
- Leon Errol
- Lillian Lorraine
- Vera Maxwell
- Bessie McCoy
- Bert Williams
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Bernard Granville
- Leon Errol
- Lillian Lorraine
- Josie Sadler
- Rae Samuels
- Harry Watson Jr.
- Bert Williams
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Elizabeth Brice
- Leon Errol
- Jose Collins
- Ann Pennington
- Frank Tinney
- Nat M. Wills
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Leon Errol
- Annette Kellermann
- Vera Maxwell
- Vera Michelena
- Ann Pennington
- Bert Williams
- Ed Wynn
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Bernard Granville
- Ina Claire
- Leon Errol
- W. C. Fields
- Justine Johnstone
- Mae Murray
- Ann Pennington
- Ed Wynn
- Bert Williams
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Fanny Brice
- Ina Claire
- W. C. Fields
- Allyn King
- Bird Millman
- Ann Pennington
- Will Rogers
- Bert Williams
- Marion Davies
- Bernard Granville
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Diana Allen
- Elvira Amazar
- Fanny Brice
- Eddie Cantor
- Dolores
- The Fairbanks Twins
- Allyn King
- William E. Ritchie
- Will Rogers
- Lilyan Tashman
- Bert Williams
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Jay Brennan
- Eddie Cantor
- Frank Carter
- The Fairbanks Twins
- W. C. Fields
- Joe Frisco
- Pauline Hall
- Kay Laurell
- Lillian Lorraine
- Allyn King
- Marilyn Miller
- Ann Pennington
- Bert Savoy
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Eddie Cantor
- DeLyle Alda
- Johnny and Ray Dooley
- Eddie Dowling
- The Fairbanks Twins
- Margaret Fitzgerald
- Allyn King
- Bette Morton
- Marilyn Miller
- Van and Schenck
- John Steel
- Bert Williams
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Fanny Brice
- DeLyle Alda
- Eddie Cantor
- Jack Donahue
- Ray Dooley
- Mary Eaton
- W. C. Fields
- Bernard Granville
- Art Hickman's Orchestra
- Allyn King
- Moran and Mack
- Van and Schenck
- Charles Winninger
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Fanny Brice
- Mary Eaton
- W. C. Fields
- Raymond Hitchcock
- Vera Michelena
- Van and Schenck
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Germaine Mitti and Eugene Tillio
- Mary Eaton
- Gallagher and Shean
- Gilda Gray
- Nervo and Knox
- Olsen and Johnson
- Will Rogers
- Jack Whiting
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Fanny Brice
- James J. Corbett
- Ann Pennington
- Bert & Betty Wheeler
- Paul Whiteman
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Billie Burke
- Ray Dooley
- W. C. Fields
- Lupino Lane
- Ann Pennington
- Will Rogers
- Vivienne Segal
- Ethel Shutta
- Frank Tinney
- Dorothy Wegman
- Blanche Satchel
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Eddie Cantor
- Cliff Edwards
- Ruth Etting
- Frances Upton
- The Brox Sisters
- Claire Luce
- Dorothy Wegman
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Faith Bacon
- Buck & Bubbles
- Albert Carroll
- Dorothy Dell
- Pearl E'doire
- Ruth Etting
- Helen Morgan
- Agatha Hoff
- Hal Le Roy
- Mitzi Mayfair
- Ernest McChesney
- Jack Pearl
- Harry Richman
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Eve Arden
- Fanny Brice
- Robert Cummings
- Buddy and Vilma Ebsen
- Jane Froman
- Agatha Hoff
- Willie and Eugene Howard
- Everett Marshall
- June and Cherry Preisser
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Eve Arden
- Fanny Brice
- Josephine Baker
- Judy Canova
- Bobby Clark
- George Church
- Cass Daley
- Harriet Hoctor
- Bob Hope
- Gypsy Rose Lee
- The Nicholas Brothers
- Gertrude Niesen
- June and Cherry Preisser
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Bil and Cora Baird
- Milton Berle
- Eric Blore
- Jack Carter
- Jack Cole
- Howard Jackson
- Ilona Massey
- Dean Murphy
- Arthur Treacher
- Tommy Wonder
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Bea Arthur
- Tallulah Bankhead
- Carol Haney
- Julie Newmar
- The Ziegfeld Girls
- Billy DeWolfe
- Harold Lang
- Carol Lawrence
- Beatrice Lillie
- Jane Morgan
- The Ziegfeld Girls
Ziegfeld girls
Adaptations / In popular culture
The 1912 version of the Ziegfeld Follies included a song entitled Row, Row, Row, which has been adapted by two football clubs in two different codes as its club song.In 1962, cabaret singer Jack Malcolmson, who was performing at the Richmond Football Club Social Club in Richmond, Melbourne, adapted the song into the Tigers' new club song, We're From Tigerland, at the request of Richmond committee member Alf Barnett. In 2014, Melbourne's Herald Sun ranked We're From Tigerland as the best club song of any Australian Football League team. Official versions of the song include a 1972 recording by the Fable Singers, who recorded most AFL club songs, and a 2018 recording including Richmond legends Matthew Richardson and Kevin Bartlett.
Row, Row, Row has also been adapted by America Football Club in Rio de Janeiro as its anthem, the Hino do America, with America supporter and famous Brazilian composer Lamartine Babo helping adapt the song.
The 1971 Stephen Sondheim musical Follies takes place at a reunion of showgirls from the Weissman Follies, a fictional revue inspired by the Ziegfeld Follies. In addition to featuring "ghosts" of statuesque showgirls from the heyday of the revues, the musical includes many songs and production numbers that are intended to evoke the types of entertainment typically featured in the Ziegfeld Follies and other revues of the period. Examples include parade of showgirls ; a torch song ; a baggy pants comic song ; and a novelty song.
In The Drowsy Chaperone there is a character by the name of Victor Feldzieg, the producer of Feldzieg's Follies, a parody of Ziegfeld Follies.