Cheryl
Crawford, 1902-1986
Cheryl Crawford,
probably one of the most influential female producers on Broadway ever,
got her start directing plays in her family’s Merriman Road home
in Akron.
Crawford, who successfully brought “Brigadoon,”
“Porgy and Bess,” “One Touch of Venus,” “Paint
Your Wagon” and others to Broadway, was the daughter of Robert
Kingsley and Luella Elizabeth Crawford. Her father was the owner of
a successful real estate firm (Crawford Real Estate); her mother cared
for the four Crawford children.
The eldest of the
children and the only girl, Crawford went to grade school and high school
in Akron. She then went on to the exclusive Smith College, where she
majored in drama. Because she was so tall, she played many of the male
roles in the Smith-College productions. But Crawford never wanted to
be an actor. She always wanted to be a producer.
After her graduation from Smith College (she was briefly
expelled for smoking off campus during her senior year but her grades
were so good that the administration relented and let her graduate),
Crawford headed for New York City. Using her inheritance, Crawford enrolled
in the acting school of the Theatre Guild, even though she had no acting
aspirations and admitted as much to the school director and company
producer Theresa Helburn. Crawford was allowed to stay because she had
the money for the tuition.
After graduation, she went on to be an assistant to
a director for the Theatre Guild’s stock company in upper New
York and worked part-time, played poker and bottled bathtub gin to pay
the bills. In the process, she was getting the experience and contacts
she needed to produce. As assistant stage manager on “Pygmalion,”
she worked with actor Lynn Fontanne. She worked with famed French director
Jacques Copeau on a production of “The Brothers Karamazov”
that featured Alfred Lund, Edward G. Robinson, Fontanne and Clare Eames.
By 1929, she was experienced enough to take charge of a company heading
off for London.
By 1931, Crawford
-- tired of the Theatre Guild’s lack of focus -- made plans to
move on, by creating her own company (with Lee Strasberg), The Group
Theatre. Building on a group of 28 actors, among them Clifford Odets,
Stella Adler, Robert Lewis and Franchot Tone, the group wanted to become
a true company so the actors, directors, producers, writers and crew
went off to Connecticut to bond and rehearse. Crawford’s primary
responsibility in all this was arranging the needed finances, no mean
task during these Depression years.
The early Group
always seemed to be short of money. Most of the early productions –
many of them critical successes – failed to have a long run in
New York. Finally in 1933, the Group had its first commercial success,
a production that Crawford had pushed for, “Men in White,”
a medical drama that won the Pulitzer Price and played in New York for
311 performances.
That didn’t
set the pattern, however. Subsequent productions were often critical
successes but commercial failures. In 1936 Crawford resigned from the
company. As she recalled in her autobiography One Naked Individual:
My Fifty Years in the Theatre (Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill
Co., 1977), “I felt exhilarated, even cocky, to be on my own.
I was going to do great things, bring to audiences distinguished plays,
quality entertainment” (p. 103).
Crawford became enormously successful as an independent
producer. She started the Maplewood Theatre and brought such actors
as Helen Hayes, Bojangles Robinson, Ethel Barrymore, Ingrid Bergman,
Tallulah Bankhead, Paul Robeson and others to the stage. Broadway theatre
owner Lee Shubert was so impressed with the Maplewood’s production
of a revival of Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess” that he
arranged to bring it to Broadway. It became a critical as well as commercial
success.
After “Porgy and Bess,” Crawford decided
to concentrate on musicals. She then brought “One Touch of Venus”
to the stage, signing Marlene Dietrich to the production. Dietrich withdrew,
however, when she saw the final script that she said was “too
sexy and profane.” So Crawford turned to Mary Martin. Directed
by Elia Kazan and choreographed by the legendary Agnes deMille, “One
Touch of Venus” was a critical and commercial success, with the
production taking most of the top prizes at the first Donaldson Awards.
Soon she had other musical successes on Broadway, “Brigadoon”
(1947) and “Paint Your Wagon” (1951).
In 1946, she set up yet another company, the American
Repertory, with friends Eva LeGallience and Margaret Webster. That company
included an impressive array of actors, including Eli Wallach, Efrem
Zimbalist Jr., William Windom and Julie Harris, and investors, including
William Paley of CBS, Mrs. Samuel Goldwyn and others.
In 1947, she resigned because she was going to start
one of the most important acting schools (with an associated theatre)
in the nation. She, Elia Kazan and Bobby Lewis created the Actors Studio
(Lee Strasberg, the individual most closely identified with the Studio,
did not come aboard until 1951). The Actors Studio is credited with
training some of the most important actors of the 20th century: Paul
Newman, Marlon Brando, Rod Steiger, James Dean, Sidney Poitier, Al Pacino,
Robert DeNiro, Steve McQueen, Joanne Woodward, Jane Fonda, Geraldine
Paige, Shelley Winters, Ann Bancroft and many more. In 1976, Crawford
reported that Actors Studio graduates had received 98 Academy Award
nominations and 21 Oscars. Since then, the number has probably doubled.
Crawford was given
the hardest job at the school. “My major task was to keep us solvent,”
Crawford recalled in her autobiography. The theatre failed but the school
(now under actor Al Pacino’s guidance) continues today. As Crawford
explained, “Lee (Strasberg)’s great gifts are teaching and
inspirational guidance, not administration and management” (One
Naked Individual, p. 227).
Crawford experienced
her greatest Broadway successes before 1954. The years 1954 to 1974,
she wrote, were lean ones financially and emotionally. Although she
had successes with “Sweet Bird of Youth,” “Brecht
on Brecht” and “Period of Adjustment,” she also had
15 productions that failed during those two decades.
Her emotional trials
were worsened by her wrangling with Sen. Joe McCarthy and his committee
on Un-American Activities and the destruction of her home in Connecticut
by fire. Her financial situation was worsened when a trusted assistant
embezzled a good deal of money from her. Through it all, however, she
continued to produce plays.
Crawford died in
New York City on October 7, 1986. During her life, Crawford produced
more than 100 plays and helped create one of the most successful acting
schools in the nation. She was well regarded by other producers, directors
and actors.
In September 2002,
the New York Public Library celebrated her contributions to the theatre
with the Crawford Centennial. Her papers are located in the Billy Rose
Theatre Collection of the New York Public Library for the Performing
Arts and the University of Houston Library.
All photos are reprinted
from Cheryl Crawford, One Naked Individual: My Fifty Years in the
Theatre (Indianapolis & New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc.,
1977). Middle photo shows the Group Theatre directors, from left, Lee
Strasberg, Harold Clurman and Cheryl Crawford in 1931 (photo from the
Blackman Photo Service). Bottom photo shows rehearsals for “Strange
Interlude.” From left, Cheryl Crawford, Pat Hingle, Ben Gazzara,
Jane Fonda, Franchot Tone and Geraldine Page (photo by Joseph Abeles).
--Kathleen
Endres
