Background According to a newspaper account,
Arthur Wing Pinero had completely outlined the play in 1919, and finished the first act by April 1920. The title was not known until February 1922, when it was learned
Owen Nares and B. A. Meyer would produce it at the
Duke of York's Theatre, then tenanted by
Philip Michael Faraday. The author was cagey about the storyline, though he did indicate it was
fantasy. Most of the cast was already engaged by mid-February. Rehearsals, under the direction of the playwright, were ongoing by 18 February 1922, and it was known that
Sir Frederic Cowen was composing original incidental music for
The Enchanted Cottage. though it was later learned that
J. J. Shubert actually signed the agreement with Sir Arthur Pinero, in association with William A. Brady.
Cast West End premiere and reception The first performance of
The Enchanted Cottage was its West End premiere at the
Duke of York's Theatre on 1 March 1922. The reviewer for the
Evening Standard noted the difficulty of using the supernatural on stage, and suggested it was too easy to be cynical about Pinero's use of fantasy and ignore the inspiring message. They felt
Owen Nares had transcended his image and never before shown "himself so technically skilled and engrossing an actor". They also saluted
Laura Cowie for her "self-sacrifice", but "the witchcraft does not work quite credibly". The critic for
The Daily Telegraph presented what would become a common judgement, that Pinero had tried fantasy but suffered in comparison to
J. M. Barrie's light touch. They said the first two acts worked well enough, though the dream sequence lacked "poetic fancy", but the play broke down in a weak third act. The criticism for
The Enchanted Cottage gave rise to a complaint: a correspondent to
The Daily Telegraph wrote about the lack of critical appreciation for incidental music in plays. The writer said that
Sir Frederic Cowen, who composed the music and conducted the theatre orchestra in its performance, was twice called for by the audience during the second act curtain, which no reviewer mentioned. A supporting letter specified the orchestra consisted of "a quartet of strings, a flute, clarinet, horn, and piano", with music confined to an overture and during the dream scene. A critic going by "F. E. B." of
The Musical Times commented that the music was melodious and had great effect in the play. The music later became an orchestral suite performed separately.
The Enchanted Cottage closed at the Duke of York's Theater on 22 April 1922, with suggestions it would taken on tour or revived later.
US tryouts Surprisingly, the first performances
William A. Brady and the
Shuberts authorized in America for
The Enchanted Company were by a stock company manager,
Jessie Bonstelle, though the Brady office was at pains to suggest these were tryouts. Jessie Bonstelle had been promised the direction of the Broadway premiere, but the value of these tryouts was diminished in that not a single performer in them would be used in the cast on Broadway. There were two brief "tryouts": a short stint in
Providence, Rhode Island, starting 25 September 1922, and a week-long engagement at the Shubert Michigan in Detroit, beginning 2 October 1922. These tryouts were staged by Melville Burke, and starred Jessie Bonstelle as Laura and
Calvin Thomas as Oliver, with Pauline Crell as Mrs. Minnett,
Douglas Dumbrille as Major Hillgrove, and
Earle Larrimore as the Rev. Corsellis. Detroit reviewer Len G. Shaw felt the play had too much conversation, but the acting was good and well received. For the first performances the actors operated under the handicap of a hurriedly assembled wardrobe, as the railroad company had lost their costumes.
Broadway premiere and reception There was very little advance notice for
The Enchanted Cottage until late March 1923. The cast (
Katharine Cornell, Noel Tearle,
Clara Blandick,
Gilbert Emery, and others) and directors (Jessie Bonstelle and William A. Brady Jr) were announced a week before the opening date, which itself was pulled forward. Rehearsals were still ongoing the last week before the opening. The Broadway premiere occurred at the
Ritz Theatre on Saturday, 31 March 1923.
The Brooklyn Daily Times reviewer said that "If the gospel of
Coue still has potency among us,
The Enchanted Cottage should be successful". They judged the acting of Gilbert Emery as Major Hillgrove the best in the play, followed closely by Katharine Cornell as Laura. And they speculated as to how much better the play might have been in the hands of
J. M. Barrie. Arthur Pollock thought it typical of Pinero, that when he turned to fantasy after decades of realism, he should make it "bare and literal". He felt Pinero had expended a great deal of effort for a simple idea, "that love is blind". Pollock judged "The acting, in general, like the play, was transparent, conventional, more obvious than necessary".
Burns Mantle wrote that
The Enchanted Cottage was "sentimental and more depressing than cheering". Echoing other American critics, he thought Mrs. Minnett a much older woman, calling her "an ancient crone",
The Enchanted Cottage closed at the Ritz Theatre on 26 May 1923, having had roughly the same length of run as the West End production. ==Adaptations==