Blackbirds of 1928

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Blackbirds of 1928
Title page of Broadway program
MusicJimmy McHugh
LyricsDorothy Fields
Basismusical revue
Productions1928 Broadway

Blackbirds of 1928 was a hit Broadway musical

I Can't Give You Anything But Love
", "Bandanna Babies" and "I Must Have That Man" all sung by Hall.

Hall on the front cover of the French edition of Vu (magazine),1929

History

Blackbirds of 1928 was the idea of impresario Lew Leslie, who planned to build the show around Florence Mills in New York City after her success in the hit 1926 show Blackbirds in London. Mills died from tuberculosis in 1927 before rehearsals for the new show had started and Hall was enlisted to replace her.

Blackbirds of 1928 started its life as a floorshow at Les Ambassadeurs Club on 57th Street, New York with songs written by Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields.

Fields recalled,

Otto Kahn
’s son) and his orchestra, and a lovely lady named Adelaide Hall, who sang".

McHugh recalled, "I knew about Roger Wolfe Kahn wanting to close the club, and I told Lew Leslie, and Lew went up and made arrangements to take it over. This was the start of the show called Blackbirds of 1928. Leslie opened Les Ambassadeurs with the first half of the show". The show was a great hit. McHugh continued, "From there we wrote a second half and we took the show to Atlantic City".

After the tryout in

Atlantic City
the show opened on Broadway. It was the first Broadway show for which Fields and McHugh had written the entire score and turned out to be a milestone in their respective careers and was one of the most successful shows they were ever connected with.

Adelaide Hall in Blackbirds of 1928

Productions

The show originally opened on January 4, 1928, under the heading The Blackbird Revue at Les Ambassadeurs Nightclub in New York, before transferring in May 1928 to the

Bill Bojangles Robinson.[6] Aida Ward, Tim Moore, Blue McAllister, the Blackbirds Beauty Chorus and the Famous Blackbirds Orchestra conducted by Felix Weir. Also in the cast were Johnny Hudgins, Eloise C. Uggams, Elisabeth Welch, Mantan Moreland, Cecil Mack, Evelyn Anderson, and Nina Mae McKinney. Orchestral arrangements were by Will Vodery
.

On 7 June 1929, the original Broadway production opened at the Moulin Rouge, Paris, France, where it became the hit of the season. In Paris it ran for three months before returning to the US for an American road tour.

Musical numbers and Sketches (in order of performance)

Prologue: Way Down South

  • The Call of the South
  • Shuffle Your Feet
  • Dixie

Revue Part One

Aunt Jemima Stroll

Scene in Jungleland

  • Diga Diga Do

Bear Cat Jones Last Fight

I Can't Give You Anything But Love

  • Song
  • Trio

What a Night

Bandanna Babies

Playing According to Hoyle

Three Bad Men From Harlem

Porgy (with apologies to the Theatre Guild and Dorothy and DuBose Heyward)

  • Porgy

Finale (part one)

Revue Part Two

Magnolia's Wedding Day

Earl Tucker Giving His Conception of the Low-Down Dance

Picking a Plot

Doin' the New Low-Down

Getting Married in Harlem

I Must Have That Man

Here Comes My Blackbird

  • Song
  • A Memory of 1927

Finale (part two)

Recordings

1933 recordings

In February 1933, Jack Kapp of Brunswick Records assembled an all-star group of Brunswick artists to record the entire score. Issued on six 10" 78s (6516 through 6521), available in an album set (the first such set of popular music from a Broadway show) and also sold individually:

Bibliography

  • Williams, Iain Cameron (2002). Underneath A Harlem Moon
  • Williams, Iain Cameron. The KAHNS of Fifth Avenue, iwp Publishing, February 17, 2022, - chapters 10 & 11 cover the staging of Blackbirds of 1928.

References

  1. ^ "Blackbirds of 1928 – Broadway Musical – Original". IBDb.com. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  2. .
  3. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-02-04. Retrieved 2015-03-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ a b c d Williams, Iain Cameron (15 September 2002). "Underneath a Harlem Moon: The Harlem to Paris Years of Adelaide Hall". Continuum. Retrieved 14 October 2023 – via Amazon.
  5. ^ "Museum of the City of New York - Bill Robinson and Adelaide Hall in Lew Leslie's "Blackbirds of 1928."". Collections.mcny.org. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  6. ^ "NYPL Digital Collections". Digitalcollections.nypl.org. Retrieved 14 October 2023.

External links