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Dates and events are frequently useful scholarly pigeonholes into which may be neatly tucked whole periods of literature or significant literary trends. The scholar knows them to be oversimplifications, but so long as their limitations are recognized, they remain useful tools for teaching, talking, and writing. Occasionally, however, history is hung from a date so unreliable and so unjustified that delineation of material is blurred rather than clarified, traditions are obscured rather than illuminated, and fields of research are closed rather than opened. American theatre history affords a perfect example of the misused common reference point. The year 1866, with its production of The Black Crook, has been accepted as the landmark indicating the beginnings of American musical comedy. Cecil Smith, in Musical Comedy in America, says, “For all important purposes, the history of musical comedy in America starts with The Black Crook, as everyone has always said it did.”
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- Copyright © American Society for Theatre Research 1966
References
NOTES
1 Smith, Cecil, Musical Comedy in America, New York, 1950, p. viii.Google Scholar
2 Eweti, David, Complete Book of the American Musical Theatre, New York, 1958, p. vii.Google Scholar
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4 The libretto for The Black Crook was not published; the following outline of the plot is taken from Charles M. Barras's original manuscript in the Harvard University Theatre Collection and the prompt copy in the Players Club, New York.
5 September 17, 1866; The Tribune review is contained in Freedley, George, “The Black Crook and the White Fawn,” Chronicles of the American Dance, ed. Magriel, Paul, New York, 1948, pp. 69–71.Google Scholar
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19 Mates, p. 172.
20 Quoted in Marks, p. 1.
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35 Cited in Marks, p. 7.
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37 Available in N.Y.P.L.
38 Available in N.Y.P.L.
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