Sam Hardy in GET-RICH-QUICK WALLINGFORD (1921). Photo by Moffett Studio
The VARIETY reviewer did not much care for Marc Klaw and A. L. Erlanger’s production of THE RIVIERA GIRL (1917), even with its book by Guy Bolton and P. G. Wodehouse. The sets and costumes by Joseph Urban were duly admired, but some of the other production choices seem questionable.
Sam Hardy, as a vulgar American investigating the Monte Carlo scene, gets chided for his broad acting and blatant cribbing from other comics, but he does seem like a bright spot in the cast: “A quartet, ‘Man, Man, Man,’ might have been a hit had the lyrics been distinguishable by the audience, while [a] duet by Hardy and Juliette Day, ‘Let’s Build a Little Bungalow in Quogue,’ could have been developed into the hit of the show but for the same reason. It was not until the last act that one of the numbers really got over, and that was the comedy number, ‘Why Don’t They Hand It to Me?’ led by Hardy with the chorus working well behind him.”
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