Peggy from Paris is a musical comedy with book and lyrics by George Ade and music by William Loraine. It opened at Wallack's Theatre, New York, on 10 September 10 1903.
Dramatis Personæ
CAPTAIN ALONZO PLUMMER | W. T. Hodge | |
(of Hickory Crick, the village dignitary) | ||
HON. JABEZ FLANDERS (the village orator) | Dan Baker | |
WALT QUACKENBUSH (the village joker) | Goodale Dickerman | |
JIM PEASLEY (the village station agent) | E. H. O'Connor | |
LUTIE PLUMMER (the village soprano) | Guelma L. Baker | |
MRS. HOMER KETCHAM (the village news bureau) | Mina Schwartze | |
LEM HARVEY (the village tenor) | Chas. L. Welch | |
CICERO J. GRAMPIS (a Napoleon of the drama) | Fred Lennox | |
MONTAGUE FISH (a banker with private ambition) | Geo. A. Beane | |
ALEXANDER NERVEEN (collegian) | John B. Park | |
REGINALD HICKEY (a useful boy) | Arthur Deagan |
M. HOMMARD M. FOLIES-BERGERE M. BON-BON |
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(of the Franco American League) | { { { |
Dan Baker G. Dickerman E. H. O'Connor |
PEGGY PLUMMER (known as Mlle. Fleurette Caramelle) | Helen Bertram |
SOPHIE BLOTZ (Mlle. Fleurette Caramelle's maid) | Josie Sadler |
MRS. MONTAGUE FISH (a wife) | Alice Hegeman |
LILY ANN LYNCH (the home-grown article) | Helen Hale |
ACT I - Scene 1 - Parlor of the Commercial Hotel, Hickory Crick, Illinois -
The Old Time Party.
- No. 1 - Opening Chorus - "Happy, happy Illinois, land of milk and honey, where existence never cloys..."
- No. 2 - Song - Lutie and Chorus - "Lullabies are out of date since I went to the music school..."
- Nos. 3 & 4 - Finale and Song - Plummer and Chorus - "Goodbye, goodbye, perhaps you'll ne'er return..."
ACT I - Scene 2 - The stage of the Paragon Theatre, Chicago -
The getting together of the Plummers.
- No. 5 - Opening Chorus and Solo - Lily - "What ho! ev'ry story must have a beginning, that's why we are singing to you..."
- No. 6 - Song - (singer unspecified) - "I thought I was wise to the whole bunch o' fairies..."
- No. 7 - Song - Alexander and Students - "There are no days like the good old days when we were college chums..."
- Nos. 8 & 9 - Song - Grampis and Chorus - "From my earliest youth I longed for the day..."
- No. 10 - Duet - Lutie and Grampis - "Like a breath from the flower strewn prairie; like a breeze from the woodland far..."
- No. 11 - Chorus - "Welcome! Welcome, fair Mam'selle! Though in French we cannot tell what we really think of you..."
- No. 12 - Song - Peggy and Chorus - "She is a damsel who's known as a Mam'selle, her home in belle Paree..."
- No. 13 - Finale Act I - "Most entrancing foreign lady, we are honored by your presence here today..."
ACT II - Scene 1 - Reception Room of Peggy's Apartments, Auditorium Hotel.
- No. 14a - Opening
- No. 14b - Entrance of Chappies, Managers & Autograph Girls - "How doth the busy gilded youth improve each shining hour?"
- No. 15 - Song - Sophie and Chorus - "One day I went to the Saengerfest on the banks of the dear old Rhine..."
- No. 16 - Duet - Alexander and Peggy - "Oh, why does jealous men suspect there's something wrong..."
- No. 17 - Sextet - Lutie, Harriet, Grampis, Alexander, Reginald and Plummer - "Sing of the fields of clover hay..." (5 verses)
- No. 18 - Janitor Song - Grampis and Chorus - "The Shah of Persia on his throne, he isn't one, two, three..."
- No. 19 - Song - Grampis and Chorus - "There was a time in days of yore when marriage was no joke..." (3 verses)
ACT II - Scene 2 - Honeymoon Terrace - The dress rehearsal of "King Janitoro."
- No. 20 - Song - Peggy and Girls - "Life is short and youth so brief a span. Years flit by and, ah! so sad the man..."
- No. 21 - Song - Reginald, Alexander and Male Chorus - "Where the highballs grow and the pool-balls roll..."
- External Link
- Vocal Score at the Internet Archive
Page modified 11 February 2017