Readers of the New York Times on January 19, 1910, were greeted with the following theatrical review:
FAT PEOPLE MUST AVOID THIS FARCE;
Unless They Want To Put On Extra Pounds To Prove An Old Adage
If you’re confused, the lead of the review elaborates:
“If to laugh is to grow fat, obesity patients had better take to the other side of the road when they see the sign ‘William Collier in ‘A Lucky Star’ looming up in front of the Hudson Theatre on Forty-Fourth Street.”
This is actually from a glowing review of a new farce by Anne Crawford Flexner. Do you know anybody who says ‘to laugh is to grow fat’ anymore? Thank goodness that one died out.
Flexner, by the way, was a fascinating woman, an ardent feminist and suffragist whose daughter Eleanor became a revolutionary in the field of women’s studies.
Thanks to absurdly positives reviews like the one in the Times, Flexner’s ‘A Lucky Star’ continued on Broadway for three more months. Read the full review here.
1 reply on “100 Years Ago: Worst theatrical review ever written?”
“Don’t laugh or you’ll grow fat” was indeed an old-school expression, as this Betty Boop cartoon shows:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4bqvWyVaro