The play started as a scenario by
Walter Hackett called "C.O.D.". Hackett, behind by $3,000 on his board bill at the Hotel Algonquin, negotiated with Frank M. Case, then manager of the Algonquin (he would later buy the hotel in 1932), to settle his account in exchange for twenty-five percent of all royalties on "C.O.D.". Hackett had learned his lesson, when 4 years earlier he landed in jail after trying to pay his hotel bill at the Castleton in
Staten Island with forged checks. Eugene Walter was then called to whip the play into shape for production. First produced for the stage as
Fads and Frills by
Charles Dillingham in 1910, it was abandoned as a failure after a three-week run.
Sam Shubert and
Lee Shubert thereafter produced the play as
Homeward Bound. It premiered in New York on January 28, 1911 at the
Daly's Theatre and subsequently went on tour, but was losing money and further performances were suspended. On March 27, 1911 the
New York Daily Tribune announced that the Shuberts were preparing to make another production of
Homeward Bound, this time starring
Margaret Illington.
The New York Clipper wrote that Walter had changed the title of his play again, to ''Who's to Blame?''. Whether it was true or a subtle
April Fool's joke (it was published April 1), the new title for the third rewrite of the play was '''''Mrs. Maxwell's Mistake'''''. It was anticipated to premiere April 17, 1911 at the
Maxine Elliott Theatre but was rescheduled at the last minute for the following week; it ended up premiering at the Park Theatre in Bridgeport CT for one show on April 20. It finally made its Broadway debut on April 24 at the
Maxine Elliott Theatre, but was again a commercial failure. After three unsuccessful attempts as a comedy,
Eugene Walter decided sometime after May 1911 to rewrite the play as a drama. Theatrical agent and producer
Harry Frazee met Walter on a train ride from
Chicago to
New York City, and convinced him that his latest rewrite of the play, now titled
Fine Feathers, was the best thing he had ever written. He offered the playwright a contract and a royalty check in exchange for significant creative control. His confidence boosted by Frazee's enthusiasm and money, Walter felt that he might finally have a box office hit on his hands and decided to approach Frank M. Case, who was still entitled to twenty-five percent of all royalties, and on June 4, 1912 an agreement was signed by which Case sold all his rights in the play to Walter for $200. The play opened at the Cort Theatre in Chicago August 12, 1912. ==Characters==