Sweet Nell of Old Drury was a revival of a play by Paul Kester that first premiered on Broadway in 1901. The four-act farce ran for 35 performances at the 48th Street Theatre. It was produced by the Equity Players and J. Hartley Manners.Â
This production was a benefit for Equity Players. Star Laurette Taylor was allowed to pick the play. Â
The play concerns the relationship between actress Nell Gwynn (Sweet Nell aka Little Nell) and King Charles II. The role of Nell was originally played by Ada Rehan on Broadway, and Julia Neilson in the West End. In this revival Laurette Taylor played opposite Alfred Lunt, two of the most respected actors on stage. Luntâs wife of one year, Lynn Fontanne, was also in the play.Â
There was a silent film version in 1911 that was shot in Australia and starred Nellie Stewart, who had played the role on the Australian stage. It was the first time an internationally famous Australian actress had been recorded on celluloid. The film was retitled Nell Gwynn in the USA. It is now considered lost. Julie Neilson, star of the UK production, also did a silent short (2 minutes!) based on the play in 1900.
The character of Nell Gwynn also appeared in other films, not based on the Kester playscript: Mary Pickford (1915), Dorothy Gish (1926), Gracie Fields (1934), Anna Nagle (1934 and 1954), Virginia Field (1941), Margaret Lockwood (1949), Teresa Codling (1983), Lucy Speed (1995), Emma Pierson (2003), Zoe Tapper (2004),Â
Coincidentally, two days before this revival opened on Broadway, Londonâs West End produced a play titled Ned Kean of Old Drury. The two plays had nothing in common except the title.Â
~ Theatre Magazine, Volumes 37-38
Paul Kester (1870-1933) made his Broadway debut with the original production of Sweet Nell of Old Drury. Many of his plays were revived over his 30 years on Broadway. He also penned dramatic versions of classic novels like Don Quixote and Tom Sawyer.Â
Laurette Taylor (1883-1946) made her Broadway debut in The Great John Ganton in 1908 and appeared in 30 other stage productions until the year before her death.  Her biggest hit was Peg oâ My Heart, written for her by her husband Manners. It ran on Broadway from December 20, 1912 to May 1914, setting a new Broadway dramatic-play run record of 607 performances. The play made Taylor âthe most generally worshiped [theatrical] star of her time,â and cemented her reputation as a skilled actress. After it closed on Broadway, Taylor starred in the London production until 1915. Taylor toured the US with a revival of Peg oâ My Heart, which reopened on Broadway at the Cort Theater on February 14, 1921, and ran for another 692 performances. She recreated her role in the 1922 (silent) film version. Despite her great stage success, she only did three films and never did a talkie. Her final role on Broadway was in the original production of The Glass Menagerie in 1945. Â
Taylorâs previous Broadway production was Humoresque at the Vanderbilt Theatre.Â
Alfred Lunt (1892-1977) was one of 20th century Broadway's leading male stars. He married actress Lynn Fontanne (1887-1983) on May 26, 1922. They became the pre-eminent acting couple in Broadway history. Secure in their public image as a happily married couple, they played adulterers, as in Robert Sherwood's Reunion in Vienna, or as part of a menage a trois in NoĂŤl Coward's Design for Living, a play written expressly for the Lunts. The couples appeared together in more than twenty plays. Despite not playing opposite one another, this was their first Broadway collaboration. In 1958, the former Globe Theatre was renovated and re-named The Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in their honor. It is still in operation under that name today.Â
48th Street Theatre (157 West 48th Street; 970 seats) was built by producer William A. Brady in 1912. In the 1920s, Actorsâ Equity leased the space for its Equity Players, producers of Roger Bloomer. Renamed the Windsor in 1937 and leased to Labor Stage (the culture wing of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union). It reverted back to its original name in 1943 to avoid confusion with a similarly named theatre in the Bronx. On August 24, 1955, a water tower collapsed and destroyed the theatre. The owners opted to sell the land rather than repair the damage.
The most successful play in the theatreâs history was Harvey (1944) by Mary Chase which ran for 1775 performances, won Chase the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and was adapted into a 1950 film. Another success at the theatre was Stalag 17 (1951), which was also made into a successful 1953 film.
Previously in 1923, the 48th Street Theatre housed Roger Bloomer, Anathema, and The Inspector General.Â