Page 185 - Weiss, Jernej, ur./ed. 2021. Opereta med obema svetovnima vojnama ▪︎ Operetta between the Two World Wars. Koper/Ljubljana: Založba Univerze na Primorskem in Festival Ljubljana. Studia musicologica Labacensia, 5
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288 metres of velvet, 16 pairs of shoes, 12 yellow top hats, 5 bathtubs ...

position the styles attributed to local and cosmopolitan cultures.14 In fact,
this debate inspired Imre Kálmán’s 1928 operetta, Die Herzogin von Chica­
go, and Béla Zerkovitz’s Miss Amerika in 1929.

Director Jack Haskell’s methods also did little to help the theatre’s im-
age in the press. “His way of theatre making,” as the press put it, ended up
in scandals. He gave instructions using a whistle, and soon had a quarrel
with the stage crew who were unable to fit the set of a mountain on stage. 15
A week later he had another quarrel with a stage manager; after that with
a chorus girl, who he even kicked – and this is just what was printed in the
papers.

Haskell insulted an actress – even more, he had a difference with
manager Tapolczai. The quarrel spread like the Spanish flu to oth­
er members of the crew, so at 1 PM everybody was upset with every­
body. The majority though was on Tapolczai’s side.16
Not much later the performers stopped the rehearsal to talk to the
manager about how Haskell addressed them. On January 27, Haskell faint-
ed from exhaustion, but two days later he again physically insulted an Eng-
lish girl.17 The two sides of the press interpreted it differently: conservatives
that by insulting a girl the arrogant Englishman had hurt Hungary’s na-
tional pride, and the liberal side defended him by saying that he was sim-
ply prioritising the show.18 Defending his brutality became much easier af-
ter the premiere, when the show opened to rave reviews:

Whatever measures had to be taken, it is now clear that such disci­
pline, precision, synchronisation, such amount of stage tricks, such
dazzling acting was never seen on Hungarian stage before – and

14 See Kornél Zipernovszky, “‘Who will win – the jazz or Gypsy, it is hard to tell:’ Gyp-
sy musicians defend Hungarian national culture against American jazz,” in AMER­
ICANA - E-Journal of American Studies in Hungary, vol. X, Special issue on jazz,
http://americanaejournal.hu/vol10jazz/zipernovszky.

15 Esti Kurír, January 4, 1925.
16 Pesti Napló, January 9, 1925.
17 Several physical insults and fights happened even after Haskell left. In March Lala

Collins had a quarrel with the leading man, Tibor Halmay. Collins hit Halmay,
who punched back so hard that Collins fainted and had to skip a performance. Új
Nemzedék, March 25, 1925.
18 “[...] it was about time to bring a director to Budapest who teaches discipline to the ac­
tors.” Pesti Hírlap, January 8, 1925.

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