Hassard Short(1877-1956)
- Actor
He was one of the giants of the American Theatre in the first half of
the 20th Century. Born in England, Hubert Hassard Short began his
theatrical career there in 1895 and ventured to America six years
later. He initially found work touring as a member and choreographer of
John Drew's company, working his way onto Broadway as an actor up until
the 1919-20 season. He dabbled as an actor in five films shot in New
York but oddly, movies never enthralled him. His scant film resume
coincides with him losing interest in acting altogether by his early
40's in favor of directing for the stage, beginning with "Honeydew" in
1920. Unlike others who used Broadway as a springboard for a career in
Hollywood (which he could have easily conquered as a director,
choreographer or even a producer), Short was wholly committed to
Broadway and was an enthusiastic New York transplant. His first major
hit (or rather hits) came from staging the enormously popular series of
Music Box Revues from 1921-23, showcasing Irving Berlin's popular songs.
Short quickly gained a reputation of being able to stretch the buffalo
on even the tightest producer's nickel by pulling double duty as an
innovative behind-the-scene lighting designer and effects wizard. Short
is credited with introducing moving stages, perfume (think: theatrical
smell-o-vision), elevators, and the abandonment of footlights in favor
of modern lighting techniques. As a director, almost anyone and
everyone connected with musicals and musical-comedies from 1920-53
crossed his stages. He was a consistent hit maker during the bleak
years of the Great Depression with productions such as 1930's "Three's
a Crowd," (the huge money spinner, featuring a fine score by Howard Dietz
and Arthur Schwartz, highlighted by Libby Holman's trademark torchy rendition of
"Body and Soul," was the first Broadway production to use modern
floodlights), 1931's "The Band Wagon" (marking the final pairing of
Adele and Fred Astaire atop an innovative double turntable stage), 1932's
"Face the Music" (featuring an even more spectacular double turntable
set), 1933's "As Thousands Cheer," and working uncredited on 1933's
"Roberta" as a production doctor. Short's reputation amongst theatrical
producers grew exponentially when he salvaged the John D.
Rockefeller-financed 1934 production of "The Great Waltz" which ran for
over 340 performances over two seasons with it's cast of 180(!), a
53-piece orchestra and hydraulically-driven sets. He stretched this
record helming 1935's "Jubilee." He then fell into a bit of a slump on
his next three productions before directing a series of eye-popping
spectacles, beginning with 1939's "The American Way." Short rode the
wave of WW2's box-office boon to Broadway with 1942's "Star and
Garter," and ---remarkably--- productions of "Carmen Jones" (an
especially daring all-Black production, produced by 'Billy Rose'), "Mexican
Hayride," and "Seven Lively Arts" which ran simultaneously during the
1944-45 season. He continued to dazzle postwar audiences with an
impressive 1946 revival of "Show Boat" that defied the then-prevailing
notion that revivals were doomed to failure. Now in his late 60's,
Short capped off his last decade of work with the 1948-49 hit
production of "Make Mine Manhattan," which would be his last bona fide
hit. Short would retire after work on 1953's "My Darlin' Aida." He died
at age 78 in France on October 7, 1956.