Tom Cushing

Charles Cyprian Strong Cushing (October 27, 1879 – March 6, 1941)[1] was an American playwright who wrote under the name Tom Cushing.

Biography

Cushing was born in New Haven, Connecticut, the son of William Lee Cushing, founder and headmaster of the Westminster School in Simsbury, Connecticut, and Mary Lewis Strong Cushing. He attended Westminster and later Yale University, where he was a member of Skull and Bones. He graduated in 1902. He was a tutor in the English Sudan in 1903 and a teacher of English and Greek at Westminster from 1909 to 1917.[1] During World War II, he served in France in the entertainment division of the YMCA.[1][2] Cushing died at Baker Memorial Hospital in Boston following an operation for a brain tumor.[2]

Professional career

He made his Broadway in 1912 debut authoring the musical comedy Sari, an English language adaptation of the operetta Der Zigeunerprimas.[2] Cushing complained to P. G. Wodehouse that he was only paid $500 for the play.[3]

In 1921, his play Thank You, co-written with Winchell Smith, debuted at the Longacre Theatre.[4]:458 Dorothy Parker wrote that it was "deftly done..and gently amusing. The small-town characters are not so obtrusively comic as they might be, and you can guess what a relief that is. If ever a play ended at the second act, Thank You is that very play, but there is, of course, a third act, so that the dress suits can be brought in, and the audience can feel that it has had its money's worth."[5]

Another 1921 premiere, at the Empire Theatre, was Blood and Sand, his adaptation of the Vicente Blasco Ibáñez novel Sangre y arena (1908). Otis Skinner starred as the toreador Juan Gallardo, and while his performance was acclaimed, critics thought he was too old for the part. Cushing's play was its adapted into a 1922 silent film version starring Rudolph Valentino.[4]:48[6]

In 1923, his play Laugh, Clown, Laugh, co-written with David Belasco, debuted at the Belasco Theatre. It was adapted from the Italian play Ridi, Pagliaccio by Fausto Martini. Lionel Barrymore starred as the depressed clown Tito Beppi.[4]:251 Lon Cheney played the role in a 1928 silent film adaptation.

Out O'Luck, a comedy about doughboys in France, was performed by the Yale Dramatic Association in 1925 and later went on tour. Yale alumni Cole Porter contributed three songs to the play and its success provided him with badly needed confidence at a time when he considered abandoning songwriting.[7]

Cushing's 1926 play The Devil in the Cheese premiered at the Charles Hopkins Theatre. In it, an American couple, played by (Robert McWade and Catherine Calhoun Doucet) and their daughter (Linda Watkins) visit Meteora, where they are held for ransom by a Greek bandit posing as a priest and archaeologist (Bela Lugosi) and later rescued by the daughter's boyfriend (Fredric March). The second act takes place within the daughter's imagination, and includes adventurous travels in the South Seas and on a desert island, domestic life, and her becoming First Lady. After her father eats a piece of mummified cheese he is made privy to his daughter's daydreams thanks to the Egyptian god Min. The New York Times wrote of Lugosi's performance that he "acts with an authority and cadence worthy of better things".[8]

La Gringa (1928) premiered at the Little Theatre, starring Claudette Colbert.[4]:369 It was adapted as the now lost film South Sea Rose (1929).

Barely Proper was a 1929 play that went unperformed on Broadway during his lifetime – Cushing subtitled it An Unplayable Play – but it was published. The play about a family of nudists was finally performed in 1970 at the Belasco by Ken McGuire to very poor reviews.[4]:369 Clive Barnes wrote in the New York Times that it was "making teensy-weensy headlines as being the first Broadway nudist play. It should probably be the last".[9]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "OBITUARY RECORD OF GRADUATES OF YALE UNIVERSITY DECEASED DURING THE YEAR 1940–1941" (PDF). Yale University. January 1, 1942. pp. 100–101. Retrieved March 26, 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 "Tom Cushing, 61, Playwright, Dies". New York Times. 7 Mar 1941. p. 21.
  3. Wodehouse, P. G.; Bolton, Guy (1953). Bring on the Girls!: The Improbable Story of Our Life in Musical Comedy, With Pictures To Prove It. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 31–33.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Thomas S. Hischak (16 March 2009). Broadway Plays and Musicals: Descriptions and Essential Facts of More Than 14,000 Shows through 2007. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-5309-2.
  5. Dorothy Parker & Kevin C. Fitzpatrick (1 April 2014). Dorothy Parker: Complete Broadway, 1918–1923. iUniverse. pp. 260–61. ISBN 978-1-4917-2265-7.
  6. Gerald Bordman (1995). American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama 1914–1930. Oxford University Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-19-509078-9.
  7. Kimball, Robert (November 1992). "Cole Porter, College Man". Yale Alumni Magazine.
  8. Arthur Lennig (18 July 2013). The Immortal Count: The Life and Films of Bela Lugosi. University Press of Kentucky. p. 37. ISBN 0-8131-4376-4.
  9. Barnes, Clive (17 Mar 1970). "Theater: 'Grin and Bare It!' Arrives: Nudist Comedy Tackles a Promising Theme". p. 36.

External links

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