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A British musical saluting Hollywood's glorious era of silent pictures. Parading
the movies' earliest heroes, heroines and clowns, it takes a refreshing look at
the birth of the "flickers" and that memorable age of stardust and stars, of
tinsel glamour and scandals, of sky-rocketing salaries and tremendous vitality.
It is a nostalgic reminiscence of the silent movies seen through the eyes of
four famous figures: Mary Pickford and Lillian Gish, both of them great silent
film stars; David Wark Griffith, the most famous of all the American silent
directors and Adolph Zukor, one of the studio bosses who laid the foundations of
the movie industry we know today.
Act 1
Opens in New York City in 1912.
We are in a nickelodeon watching a one-reel movie made by the American Mutoscope
and Biograph Company. Among the audience are Mrs Mary Robinson Gish and her
daughters, Lillian and Dorothy. They see their old friend Gladys Smith on the
screen and go to the headquarters of the Biograph Company to find her. There
they learn that Gladys has changed her name to Mary Pickford and is known as
"The Biograph Girl". They watch her working for director D.W. Griffith whose
busy staff take the pressure off the creative artist. But creative work at the
studio is constantly interrupted by agents from the combine which owns the basic
patents for film making and is trying to put the Biograph Company out of
business. To get away from this harassment, Griffith moves his studio to the
West Coast and takes Mary with him together with Lillian and Dorothy who, by
this time, have become film actresses. Lillian is deeply under the spell of
Griffith's creative genius but has sympathy to spare for the young comic who
fails his audition. Lillian appears in Griffith's great film Birth of a Nation,
while Mary advances her career and leaving Griffith and working for Adolph Zukor
at a hugely increased salary. However, the price of this success is that she has
to hide her increasing sophistication behind the facade of childish innocence
which is her public image. For Griffith, the penalty of success is that Birth of
a Nation causes race riots and brings demands for censorship. He is determined
to protest by making one epic film which will speak to people around the world
of peace and universal tolerance.
Act 2
Opens at the premiere of Griffith's movie Intolerance.
It is an artistic triumph by a financial disaster. Mary advises Lillian to leave
Griffith and pursue her career elsewhere but Lillian is still artistically bound
to him. As Griffith's financial troubles increase Zukor thinks that he is
finished; but Mary decides to leave Zukor and form a new company in partnership
with Griffith, Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks. Zukor is dismayed but
congratulates her on her understanding of the movie business. However, even with
his new partners, Griffith still fails to make money and tells Lillian to leave
his studio and accept one of the better offers from his rivals. Reluctantly she
agrees and their long enduring professional partnership is broken.
Time moves on. It is 1925 then 1926. Mary is firmly established as one of the
greatest stars of the silent screen but talking pictures are just around the
corner. Griffith feels his career is ended, that he is a forgotten man. Lillian
tells him he will always be remembered as one of the pioneers of film.
In 1927 the screen finds its voice and the silent stars realise their careers
are behind them. For Lillian it has been an art; for Mary it has made a fortune;
for Zukor it has been a business; for Griffith it has been a dream. But the
dream is not over. Out of the ashes arises the Phoenix of the talkies. Hundreds
of new stars emerge. Bigger studios are built. The work of the pioneers has
created the most popular entertainment force the world has ever known.
The Production
team
Stage Director - David Arrnitt
Musical Director - Anthony Morris
Choreographer - Sarah Redmond
Stage Manager - Alan Carlile
Assisted by - Peter Smith
Sets - Charlie Seagroatt / Richard Seagroatt and Company
Costumes - Geoff Keep / Tracey Smith & Company
Box Office - Brian Farley
Front of House - Brian Farley & Friends of Phoenix
Prompt - Mike Stevens
Photography - Andy Strivens / Ian Caldecourt &
South London Press
Accompanist at Rehearsal - Anthony Calnan
Printing - Mayday Printing |