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  1. Russel Crouse (20 February 1893 – 3 April 1966) was an American playwright and librettist, best known for his work in the Broadway writing partnership of Lindsay and Crouse. Life and career. Born in Findlay, Ohio, Crouse was the son of Sarah (née Schumacher) and Hiram Powers Crouse, a newspaperman.

  2. February 11, 1968, New York, New York) and Russel Crouse (b. February 20, 1893, Findlay, Ohio, U.S.—d. April 3, 1966, New York, New York) were notable both for their continual successes and for the way they complemented each other’s talents. Prior to meeting Crouse, Lindsay had already gained experience as an actor, director, and playwright ...

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    • Anything Goes, Really!
    • Life with Father
    • Other Hits
    • A Legacy of Comedy

    One principle of comedy is that humor is often born from a spontaneous observation, and it is as if the career of the writing team of Lindsay and Crouse was guided by that basic comic principle. In the 1930s, both men were actors in New York. They also started writing at that time, travelling in the same circles. In 1934, they got their big break. ...

    Bigger things awaited the writing team. In 1939, they adapted Clarence Day’s comic novel Life with Father, and they created one of Broadway’s first mega hits. Life with Father, in which Crouse starred with his actress/wife Dorothy Stickney, became the second show to break the 3,000 performance mark on Broadway, and it set the new record for long ru...

    In the early 1940s, Lindsay and Crouse were producing a new play by Joseph Kesselring. Entitled Arsenic and Old Lace, the original script was a drama focusing on real life events that occurred in a house in Windsor, Connecticut. Kesselring based his drama on Amy Archer-Gilligan, an elderly woman who took in boarders and poisoned them for their pens...

    As writers, producers, and play doctors, the team of Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse were two of the best. Their attention to detail, ability to discover and create comedy in the moment, and finesse in weaving intricate plots that utilized quirky characters delighted audiences and set box office records. Lindsay and Crouse: they were two of a kind...

  4. The morning room of the Day house on Madison Avenue in the late 1880s. Life with Father is a 1939 play by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, adapted from a humorous autobiographical book of stories compiled in 1935 by Clarence Day. The Broadway production ran for 3,224 performances over 401 weeks to become the longest-running non-musical play on ...

    • Howard Lindsay, Russel Crouse
    • November 8, 1939
    • 1939
    • Comedy
  5. Lindsay and Crouse was the writing team of Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, who collaborated famously on a succession of Broadway plays and musicals for 27 years during the mid 20th century. Their first collaboration was the rewriting of the book for the Cole Porter musical Anything Goes in 1935. They continued to co-pen books for Broadway ...

  6. Russel Crouse was an American playwright, producer, and actor, and is most well known for his writing collaboration with Howard Lindsay. The pair wrote the books for musicals by composers like Rodgers and Hammerstein, Cole Porter, and Irving Berlin, won the Tony Award for Best Musical for their work as book writers on The Sound of Music, and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1946 for their ...

  7. Mar 4, 2021 · Ohio Center for the Book March 4, 2021. Born: February 20, 1893. Died: April 3, 1966. Ohio connection: Birth. Findlay. Russel M. Crouse was born in Findlay, Ohio, on February 20, 1893, the son of a newspaper publisher. Well-known for his sharp wit and outrageous puns, Crouse worked for nearly 20 years as a reporter for newspapers in Kansas City ...

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