On the Town On the Town opened on Broadway at the Adelphi Theater on Dec. 28th, 1944. It moved briefly to the 44th Street Theater on June 4, 1945, and finally to the Martin Beck Theater on July 30, 1945, before closing on Feb. 2nd, 1946 after a run of 462 performances. Battles stayed with the production for the entirety of the run, missing two periods due to illness and vacation break when understudy Marten Sameth stepped into his role. After closing on Broadway,
On the Town opened (without Mr. Battles) as a touring production two days later in Baltimore on February 4 and in 1949 a film version of
On the Town was produced by MGM with
Gene Kelly starring in the role originated by Battles. MGM was a financial backer of
On the Town and before its stage debut paid a $100,000 deposit towards securing the screen rights. In addition to giving Battles his career making role,
On the Town was the first Broadway success for a quartet of American theater legends: composer and conductor
Leonard Bernstein, choreographer
Jerome Robbins, and actors and book and lyric writers
Adolph Green and
Betty Comden. Louis Kronenberger of the New York newspaper
PM concurred by calling it "much the best musical of the year". The show's detractors included John Chapman of the
New York Daily News, who dismissed it as "a dullish musical comedy". Occupying the middle ground between the extremes was Burton Rascoe of the
New York World Telegram who offered merely that "if you are not too exacting it is pretty good fun". Battles's role as Gabey put him at the heart of the matter in
On the Town as one of the trio of sailors the show follows over a 24-hour period of leave in New York City. As Gabey, Battles featured in the singing of six of the show's songs: "
New York, New York", "Lonely Town", "Lucky to be Me", "Subway Ride", "Imaginary Coney Island", and the show ending reprise of "New York, New York". From
Wilella Waldorf of the
New York Post: "John Battles as the lovelorn gob is an engaging youth". Robert Garland of the
New York Journal American, while ruefully less than enthused about the show, echoed Barnes of the
Herald Tribune and included Battles's singing on "Lonely Town" and "Lucky To Be Me" among features to recommend the show.
Allegro If
On the Town heralded the arrival of new legends on Broadway, Battles' next role, the male lead in the new musical
Allegro from
Richard Rodgers and
Oscar Hammerstein II, was an engagement with legends already well established. Rodgers and Hammerstein had already between them nearly six glory-filled decades of Broadway triumph and in their first collaboration,
Oklahoma!, created an enormous hit (even at that moment in the midst of a stunning performance run of 2,212 shows) that was to become a staple of the American musical theater stage. Rodgers and Hammerstein's producing partners for
Allegro, Lawrence Langer and Theresa Helburn of the
Theatre Guild, were equally distinguished. The Guild's producing credits stretched back to 1919 and included original Broadway productions of works by
Eugene O'Neill,
Ferenc Molnár,
George Bernard Shaw, and
George Gershwin. Langer and Helburn's previous collaborations with Rodgers and Hammerstein were several and included
Oklahoma! and the now revered
Carousel. The debut of
Allegro was avidly awaited. Richard Watts, Jr. of the
New York Post called it "the most strenuously anticipated musical show of the post-war era" and advance ticket sales for
Allegro were reported as unprecedented by longtime
New York Times theater reporter Sam Zolotow. Battles's role as ''Allegro's
protagonist Joseph Taylor, Jr. was apparently among the first to be cast. On July 4, 1947, Zolotow reported in the Times'' that as of that date "only John Battles and John Conte are definite for the cast". As such, Battles joined yet another American theater luminary already attached to the project.
Agnes de Mille, niece of Hollywood film producing and directing titan
Cecil B. DeMille, was on board as director in addition to her accustomed role as
choreographer. Agnes de Mille had previously choreographed the original Broadway productions of Rodgers and Hammerstein's
Oklahoma! and
Carousel and was fresh off her
Tony winning success with
Alan Jay Lerner and
Frederick Loewe's
Brigadoon.
Allegro opened on Broadway at the
Majestic Theatre on October 10, 1947. It ran until July 10, 1948, for a total of 315 performances. Battles performed in his role for the entirety of the run.
Allegro centers on the first 35 years of the unremarkable life and times of Joseph Taylor, Jr., the character played by Battles. Several critics likened the unpretentious tale of this musical play to
Thornton Wilder's iconic drama of everyday small-town American life
Our Town. New York reviews for
Allegro were largely favorable and those nearly reverent. Brooks Atkinson of
The New York Times called it "a work of great beauty and purity" and stated that Rodgers and Hammerstein had only "just missed the final splendor of a perfect work of art". Ward Morehouse, writing in
The Sun, called it a "musical play of beauty and dignity" and ranked it alongside Rodgers and Hammerstein's masterworks
Oklahoma! and
Carousel as "a theatrical piece of taste, imagination, and showmanship". Not to be outdone, Robert Coleman in the
Daily Mirror called it perfection. The few negative reviews for
Allegro expressed a profoundly different view. Louis Kronenberger, in the New York newspaper
PM, called it a grave disappointment that could be called an out-and-out failure and stated that the strange thing about
Allegro was "not that it's bad but that it's boring". William Hawkins in the
New York World Telegram echoed such sentiments, calling
Allegro a vast disappointment. The New York critics' reaction to Battles's performance in
Allegro was generally positive. Howard Barnes in the
New York Herald Tribune opined that "John Battles is perfect as the hero". Ward Morehouse in
The Sun called Battles "an affecting Joe Taylor - forthright, bewildered, and believable". Even the New York newspaper ''PM's
severely disappointed Louis Kronenberger allowed that Battles was a likable Joe Taylor. It was only William Hawkins in the New York World Telegram'' who sounded a sour note in calling the cast (with two noted exceptions, not including Battles) simply colorless. == Engagements abroad ==