The Performance of Jewish Ethnicity in Anne Nichols' Abie's Irish
Rose
TED
MERWIN
WHAT HUMORIST H. L. Mencken in the 1920s called "America's third-largest
industry" was a Broadway play about Jewish-Irish intermarriage called
Abie's Irish Rose which ran for 2,327 performances, opening on
23 May 1922 at the Fulton Theatre on West 46th Street and closing on 22
October 1927 at the Republic Theatre on West 42nd Street. The play opened
to mostly negative—if not downright damning—reviews and struggled
for the first two months of its run. But it then found its audience and
quickly became a sensation. By the time it closed on Broadway in October,
1927 after a record-setting 2,327 performances (a record it held for fourteen
years), productions of Abie's Irish Rose had been seen throughout
the world; the play had attracted audiences totaling an estimated eleven
million people, and it had grossed close to five million dollars. The
play's success was a watershed in the evolution of regional theatre in
America as well; it ran for months in cities across the country which
had never supported a single production for more than a few weeks at a
time.
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