HELLO LOLA
1925
Hello Lola is a three act musical by William B. Kernell (music) and Dorothy Donnelly (book and lyrics), based on the novel Seventeen by Booth Tarkington and the 1918 stage adaptation Seventeen by Hugh Stanislaus Stange and Stannard Mears.Â
The musical takes place at the Baxter and Parcher homes in Indianapolis in 1900.In the story, Willie Baxter becomes infatuated with a Lola, a shallow, baby-talking minx visiting for the summer. The local girls see through her. When her visit is over, Willie is devastated, but his handyman Genesis convinces him that life goes on.Â
The original production was produced by Lee and J.J. Shubert. It opened on Broadway at the Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre on January 12, 1926. On February 8th it moved to Maxine Elliottâs Theatre on 39th Street. The musical closed on February 20, 1926 after just 47 performances.
To say that Lolaâs road to Broadway was a bumpy ride would be an understatement. Even once at its destination, the musical didnât settle down.Â
The first performance was held at the Broad Street Theatre in Newark, New Jersey, on November 16, 1925. It stayed there for a week before moving south to Nixonâs Apollo Theatre in Atlantic City. It made one more stop in Washington DC before the Shuberts decided that the show would take a break for the holidays.Â
Although initial out-of-town notices were kind, problems were apparent from the beginning. Although Lawrence Marston was credited as director on the road, his name was curiously absent once the show arrived in New York. Even the Shuberts left their name off the title page, a stunning âno confidenceâ vote by Lolaâs godfathers. This was painfully apparent by their choice of venue. A Shubert musical was unlikely to be plugged into the more intimate Eltinge. They quickly were shuffled off to 39th Streetâs to die. With its out-of-the-way location and low patron cap, the Maxine Elliott was Lolaâs hospice. Â
The title role was initially played by Madeline Fairbanks, but she was fired on the road and replaced with Edythe Baker (above). Bakerâs specialty was playing the piano, so the the score integrated a piano solo for her. This required the production to justify why thereâs a piano on the lawn! Â
âShe can play the piano, but she canât play Lola.â ~ BURNS MANTLE
The New York critics were not kind to Baker (one calling her âa total lossâ) and she left the show a few days in. She was replaced by her understudy, who was playing May Parcher. When Baker went, so did her grass-side piano solos.Â
Baker wasnât the only one maligned by the punters. Marjorie White, who played Willieâs sweet younger sister Jane, was called ââa miniature Texas Guinanâ and compared to Sophie Tucker. The best the crix could say about her was that she was âvociferousâ.Â
The New York Times called the casting âa weirdly assembled collection of principalsâ. The score, while not offensive, was not memorable. Except for âMy Baby-Talk Ladyâ which was sung no less than four times in the evening. Thatâs one more time than standard advertising messages.Â
The other complaint was that the teenagers of the story (remembering the title of the source material) were mostly played by adults. White Way wags dubbed the show Booth Tarkingtonâs âThirty-Sevenâ. The press urged Tarkingtonâs friends to keep him away. [Note: The above blind item about a raid by the Gerry Society (aka New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children founded by Elbridge T. Gerry), may have been facetiously apocryphal.]Â
Apocryphal or not, at the beginning of February the production reacted by doing a chorus swap.Â
After saying goodbye Broadway, Hello Lola said hello Brooklyn, decompressing at the Majestic, but not venturing any further.Â
Possibly the only cast member to be the right age was seventeen year-old Margaret Brooke Sullavan, who made her Broadway debut as Miss Boke. To get her âbig breakâ she lied about her age, telling producers she was a few years older than she actually was. During her career, she preferred stage to screen, but in 1939 she was nominated for an Oscar for Three Comrades. Her husbands included Henry Fonda, William Wyler, and Leland Hayward.Â
Ensemble member Sylvia Carol was depicted in several provocative photos subtitled âRelaxing on the set of âHello Lolaââ. Â
In an attempt to right the sinking SS Lola, two popular songs were interpolated into the score: âHas Anybody Seen My Gal?â and âThat Certain Party,â both sung by Jay C. Flippen as Genesis, the Baxterâs caretaker. In 1925, this was a âburnt cork partâ (aka blackface). Flippen had been discovered by famed African-American comedian Bert Williams, and also served as his replacement in a previous show. Flippen went on to a prolific career in films and television.Â
Despite the failure of Hello Lola, the source material still had life in it. In 1940 there was a feature film starring Jackie Cooper and Betty Field.Â
In 1951, the Shuberts tried again with a new musical version of Seventeen starring Kenneth Nelson and Ann Crowley. It was adapted by Sally Benson (Junior Miss) with music by Walter Kent and lyrics by Kim Gannon. It bested its predecessorâs run by 135 performances.Â
Booth Tarkington died in 1946, so he was spared a second failed musical of Seventeen, which was also (as of this writing) the last Broadway credit with his name attached. His greatest success on stage was 1918â˛s Clarence, which ran 300 performances and started in Atlantic City! But thatâs another blog.Â
















