Liza (1922) Pinkard also wrote and produced the
Broadway musical, comedy show
Liza (from the book by Irvin C. Miller), which opened November 27, 1922 at
Daly's 63rd Street Theatre,
New York City. Ran for 172 performances (November 27, 1922 - April 21, 1923). Original Cast included
Emmett Anthony, Will A. Cook, Thaddius Drayton, Alonzo Fenderson,
Doe Doe Green, R. Eddie Greenlee, Snippy Mason,
Irvin C. Miller, Quintard Miller, Billy Mills, Packer Ramsey, Maude Russell, Gertrude Saunders, Margaret Simms, William Simms and Elizabeth Terrill. Lyrics and music by Maceo Pinkard: "Tag Day," "Pleasure," "I'm the Sheriff," "Liza," "Just a Barber Shop Cord," "Just a Barber Shop Cord," "That Brownskin Flapper," "On the Moonlit Swanee," "Essence," "Forget Your Troubles, "(I've Got Those) Runnin' Wild Blues," "Dandy," "My Creole Girl," "Planning," "Love Me," and "Don't Be Blue." Music popularized on disc by
Zez Confrey and His Orchestra (Victor 19055), Albert E. Short's and His Tivoli Syncopators (Vocalion 14554), and the new Synco Jazz Band (Perfect 14104). Category: Musical, Comedy, Original, Broadway Description: A musical in two acts Setting: Summer Time in Jimtown, South Carolina
Review The Negro hit of the year, with book by Irving C. Miller and music by Maceo Pinkard, opened at Daly's 63rd Street Theater in November. "The dressing rooms, which were built for
Shuffle Along," said
Eubie Blake, "were completed just in time for
Liza." A few months later
Liza moved to the Nora Bayes Theater on 44th Street, and became the first Negro show to play Broadway proper during the regular season. (Only the summer months had been available for Negro productions heretofore, while the critics wondered why the shows were presented at such a hot time of the year.)
Liza ran for 172 performances at a time when a run of one hundred was considered good. Maceo Pinkard died in
New York City on July 19, 1962. Each year,
Bluefield State University holds a weeklong festival in honor of its famous alumnus. In 1999, the Grammy-nominated album
The Love Movement by
A Tribe Called Quest included a sample of the 1920 Maceo Pinkard composition "Start It Up." ==Film scores==