Although he wrote hundreds of songs and was a key figure in the birth of
the American stage musical, P. G. Wodehouse's (1881-1975) long and
influential career as a lyricist has been almost completely forgotten
and unheralded - until now. Highly regarded by literati for his rich,
sardonic Wooster and Jeeves books (among his more than ninety novels and
volumes of short stories), Wodehouse broke new ground by writing songs
that were cohesively integrated into the narrative action of musicals
rather than presented as a string of unrelated tunes, which was the
then-standard format. Particularly in the shows he wrote with Guy Bolton
and Jerome Kern, Wodehouse transformed the musical from a poor man's
Gilbert and Sullivan-style operetta into a more idiomatic and
respectable form based on contemporary life. This book sets the lyrics
from his nearly forty theatrical productions within the context of each
individual show, providing incisive and informative commentary for each.
Lavishly illustrated with photos and memorabilia, Barry Day establishes
why, throughout the 1920s and 1930s, Wodehouse was considered a top-tier
theatrical figure on both sides of the Atlantic.