Friday, August 21, 2020

296. LADY AUDLEY'S SECRET. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

Russel Nype, Donna Curtis.

LADY AUDLEY’S SECRET [Musical/Crime/Marriage/Period] B/D: Douglas Seale; M: George Goehring; LY: John Kuntz; SC: Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s novel, Lady Audley’s Secret; CH: George Bunt; S/C: Alicia Finkel; L: Lawrence Metzler; P: Haila Stoddart and Arnold H. Levy; T: Eastside Playhouse (OB); 10/3/72-10/8/72 (7)

Previously seen in Baltimore and Chicago, this musical burlesqued a once popular Victorian "sensation" novel that had first been dramatized in 1863 and later was turned into several silent films. It was about paying the piper for such sins as blackmail, arson, murder, and bigamy, managing to squeeze a good deal of the book into its musical format. However, lacking a decent score, consistently intelligent lyrics, and a surefooted comic style, it ended up being “aimless and basically trivial,” as Clive Barnes judged it. The attractive company could do little to shore up the faulty structure and it crumbled in a week’s time.

What Douglas Watt dismissed as a “witless and cloying enterprise” concerns the title character (Donna Curtis), secretly married to one man, but for reasons of ambition, married as well to an old nobleman (Douglas Seale, who directed and wrote the adaptation). When husband number one shows up she kills him and attempts to prevent her secret from emerging. She goes crazy and dies, but is forgiven by those she's left behind.

This was, said Edith Oliver, “a pain of a show,” although “very well done indeed.” Nonetheless, it departed in a week. Well-known players quickly out of a job included Russel Nype and June Gable.