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Judith
Ann Schiff is Chief Research Archivist at the Yale University Library.
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Old
Yale:
Before
He Came to Dinner
When
Monty Woolley was forced out of his job at Yale, students and alumni
rose up in protest. But it may have been the best thing that ever
happened to him.
April
1999
by Judith Ann Schiff
Most
people remember Monty Woolley '11 -- if they remember him at all
-- as the acid-tongued
houseguest in the 1941 film The
Man Who Came to Dinner. But Woolley spent more than ten
years as a Yale drama teacher before he went on to a distinguished
career on Broadway and in Hollywood. In fact, if it hadn't been
for a clash of personalities in the University's drama programs,
Woolley might never have left Yale.
From the time of his
arrival as an undergraduate, Edgar Montillion Woolley introduced
a new standard of theatrical performance -- and theatrical living
-- to Yale. As the son of a successful owner of hotels in New York
City and Saratoga Springs, he knew the stars of the era and emulated
their lifestyles in New Haven. He entertained lavishly and organized
costume parties that became the stuff of legend. Among the friends
he made at Yale was Cole
Porter '13, who later wrote that he "considered meeting
the loquacious Monty one of [his] finest experiences at Yale."
Woolley directed and acted in Porter's hit shows for the Yale
Dramat.
After earning master's
degrees at Yale and Harvard, Woolley served as drama coach at Yale
from 1914 to 1917. World War I service took him to Paris, where
he and Porter renewed their friendship, and in 1919, Woolley was
appointed assistant professor of drama at Yale. Under his leadership,
undergraduate theater flourished artistically and financially.
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When
Woolley was not reappointed, reports
alleging "a sinister plan of the Yale Corporation"
appeared in the New York newspapers.
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When Edward S. Harkness
gave a million dollars in 1924 to establish a drama department at
Yale (the first in the United States) Dramat members assumed that
their beloved coach would be one of the first men to be offered
a staff position. But their hopes were dashed in the spring of 1925,
when they learned that the new department head, George Pierce Baker,
had not chosen him. Woolley resigned from the Dramat, and a great
furor arose throughout the campus. Supporters from all over the
country demanded his reinstatement.
The Yale Corporation
responded by voting -- at the request of the Dramat -- to designate
Woolley director of undergraduate dramatics. Woolley then reconsidered
his resignation, and the Dramat appointed him coach. Two years later,
though, the second part of the affair erupted. Professor Baker and
Woolley could not get along, and the Corporation did not renew his
appointment. Woolley did not want to continue as a private Dramat
coach and again resigned. This time the student reaction was even
more outspoken. Reports alleging "a sinister plan of the Yale
Corporation" appeared in the New York newspapers. But the protests
and petitions were useless, and Woolley left Yale for good.
Yale's loss became Broadway's
and Hollywood's gain. With Cole Porter's help, Woolley soon became
a successful director of musicals and revues. In 1936, he began
his career as an actor, and in 1939 took the stage role that brought
him lasting fame, in The Man Who Came to Dinner. After portraying
Sheridan Whiteside (a character based on the drama critic Alexander
Woollcott) for 739 performances, he repeated the role in the now
classic film. Woolley appeared in more than 20 films, was nominated
twice for Oscars, and in 1946 played himself in Night
and Day, a film biography of Porter.
Woolley is credited
as a pioneer in university and musical theater in America. In contrast
with the experimental and proletarian style represented by Baker,
Woolley represented a tradition of witty, escapist sophistication.
This creativity was exemplified by his spontaneous contribution
to one of Porter's hit songs when he was his guest on a 1935 world
cruise. As they watched the sunrise, Porter cried, "It's delightful."
His wife Linda added, " It's delicious," and Monty continued,
"It's de-lovely."
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