George Abbott(1887-1995)
- Writer
- Director
- Additional Crew
Legendary Broadway writer/producer/director George Abbott was born in
1887 in Forestville, New York. His father was mayor of Salamanca, New
York, for two terms. In 1898 his family moved to Cheyenne, Wyoming, and
Abbott attended Kearney Military Academy. The family returned to New
York, where Abbott attended Hamburg High School, graduating in 1907,
and the University of Rochester (BA degree in 1911). He wrote the play
"Perfectly Harmless" for University Dramatic Club. He attended Harvard
University from 1911-1912, studying play writing under
George Pierce Baker, and wrote "The
Head of the Family" for Harvard Dramatic Club. In 1912 he won $100 in a
play contest sponsored by the Bijou Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts,
for "The Man in the Manhole", and worked at the Bijou for a year as
assistant stage manager. He made his Broadway debut as an actor in 1913
in "The Misleading Lady" (as Babe Merrill, a drunken student), followed
by "The Yeoman of the Guard" (1915), "The Queen's Enemies" (1916),
"Daddies" (1918), "The Broken Wing" (1920), "Dulcy" (on tour) (1921),
"Zander the Great" (1923), "White Desert" (1923), "Hell-Bent for
Heaven" (1924), "Lazybones" (1924), "Processional" (1925) and "Cowboy
Crazy" (1926). From that point he concentrated on writing and
directing, with "The Fall Guy" (his Broadway's debut, 1925), "Three Men
on a Horse" (1935), "Jumbo" (1935), "On Your Toes" (1936), "The Boys
from Syracuse" (1938), "Too Many Girls" (1939), "Pal Joey" (1940),
"Best Foot Forward" (1941), "On the Town" (1944), "High Buttom Shoes"
(1947), "Where's Charley?" (1948), "Call Me Madam" (1950), "A Tree
Grows in Brooklyn" (1951), "Wonderful Town" (1953), "The Pajama Game"
(1954), "Damn Yankees" (1955), "New Girl Town" (1957), "Fiorello!"
(1959), "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Forum" (1962), "Flora,
the Red Menace" (1965; Liza Minnelli's
Broadway debut).
He won five Tony Awards and the Pulitzer Prize (for "Fiorello!"). He was nominated for an Oscar for writing All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). His daughter, Judith Abbott, is a stage actress/director and was married (1946-49) to Tom Ewell.
He won five Tony Awards and the Pulitzer Prize (for "Fiorello!"). He was nominated for an Oscar for writing All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). His daughter, Judith Abbott, is a stage actress/director and was married (1946-49) to Tom Ewell.