{{Short description|American playwright, actor}} {{infobox person |name=Louis De Lange |birth_date={{birth date text|1856}} |birth_place=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |death_date={{death date|1906|3|13|1856}} |death_place=New York City, U.S. |education=University of Pennsylvania (DDS) }} '''Louis De Lange''', also known as '''Louis De Lange Moss''' (sometimes erroneously spelled '''Delange''' or '''DeLange''' or '''de Lange''')<ref name="nyt"/><ref name="UP">{{cite book|page=557|title=General Alumni Catalogue of the University of Pennsylvania|year=1922|editor=W. J. Maxweii|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|url=https://archive.org/stream/generalalumnicat00univuoft/generalalumnicat00univuoft_djvu.txt}}</ref> (1856 – March 13, 1906)<ref>{{cite book|page=1367|title=Index-catalogue of the Library of the Surgeon-General's Office, United States Army: Authors and subjects|publisher=United States National Library of Medicine|year=1972|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pAk5AQAAMAAJ&dq=%22Louis+De+Lange%22+1856+1906&pg=PA1367}}</ref> was an American playwright, actor, and theatrical manager. As a stage actor he primarily appeared in light operas and musicals; notably portraying Sir Joseph Porter in the original production of John Philip Sousa's pirated version of Gilbert and Sullivan's ''H.M.S. Pinafore'' in Philadelphia, on Broadway and on tour in 1879. As a dramatist he mainly wrote the books for musicals; often in collaboration with writer Edgar Smith on projects created for the comedy duo Lew Fields and Joe Weber. De Lange also worked as Fields and Weber's manager for their national tours. His wife was the Broadway actress Selma Mantell who appeared in the ''Ziegfeld Follies'' among other Broadway shows. Their son was the bandleader and lyricist Eddie DeLange.
==Life and career== Born and raised in Philadelphia, Louis De Lange was the adopted son of Isaac M. Moss; a wealthy stationer who was a prominent member of Philadelphia's Jewish community.<ref name="nyt">{{cite news|title=LOUIS DE LANGE KILLED IN HIS ROOM IN HOTEL; Whether Playwright Was Murdered the Police Can't Say|date=March 14, 1906|page= 2|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1906/03/14/archives/louis-de-lange-killed-in-his-room-in-hotel-whether-playwright-was.html}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=The Jews of Philadelphia: Their History from the Earliest Settlements to the Present Time; a Record of Events and Institutions, and of Leading Members of the Jewish Community in Every Sphere of Activity|author=Henry Samuel Morais|year=1894|page=446|publisher=Levytype Company}}</ref> In 1872 he entered the University of Pennsylvania to study to be a dentist; graduating with a Doctor of Dental Surgery degree in 1876.<ref name="UP"/> Following graduation, he established a dental practice at 46 Farnsworth Ave in Philadelphia which was active as late as 1883.<ref>{{cite book|page=205|title=Boyd's Burlington County Directory|year=1883|publisher=C. E. Howe Company}}</ref> Against the wishes of his adopted father he abandoned his career as a dentist and pursued a career as an actor and playwright.<ref name="nyt"/> His brother, Alexander De Lange, was a comedian who performed under the name Alexander Clark.<ref name="nyt"/>
As an actor, De Lange had an early and particular triumph on Broadway at Daly's Theatre in 1879 as The Right Honorable Sir Joseph Porter, K.C.B. in Gilbert and Sullivan's ''H.M.S. Pinafore''; a production which had begun its life at Philadelphia's Horticultural Hall and then moved to that city's Walnut Street Theatre before coming to New York and touring throughout 1879.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tfCnWX2ZUD0C&dq=Louis+De+Lange%C2%A0H.M.S.+Pinafore%C2%A0&pg=PA622|title=The Story of Pinafore in the United States|page=622|author=Robert Grau|journal=The Musician|editor=Herbert Wilbur Greene|volume=15|year=1910}}</ref> This was a pirated production of ''Pinafore'' that was led by John Philip Sousa and used Sousa's orchestrations.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://jamesbrookskuykendall.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Pirating-Pinafore_-Sousas-1879-Orchestration.pdf|author=James Brooks Kuykendall and Elyse Ridder|title="PIRATING PINAFORE: SOUSA'S 1879 ORCHESTRATION"|date=June 2022|doi=10.1353/not.2022.0040|work=Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association|volume=78 |issue=4 |pages=501–517 |s2cid=250271583 }}</ref> After this he toured the United States as a member of various light opera companies in the 1880s and 1890s; including those of Charles Pyke (the husband of Alice Nielsen)<ref>{{cite journal|title=Early Opera In Los Angeles|author=W. Francis Gates|journal=Pacific Coast Musician|date=October 13, 1934|page=29|volume=23}}</ref> and Rudolph Aronson.<ref>{{cite news|title=Grand Opera House|work=Indianapolis Journal|date=December 28, 1889|page=5A}}</ref> In 1882 he performed in productions of ''Patience'', ''Pinafore'', and ''Claude Duval'' at the Grand Opera House in Chicago.<ref>Andreas, p. 646</ref>
In 1885 De Lange returned to Broadway in a production of ''Orpheus and Eurydice'' at the Fifth Avenue Theatre.<ref>Brown, p. 43</ref> He also starred as Ralli Carr in Walter Slaughter and Basil Hood's musical ''Gentleman Joe'' at the Bijou Theatre in 1896,<ref>Brown, p. 298</ref> and as Paidagogus in J. Cheever Goodwin's ''Pippins'' at the Broadway Theatre in 1890.<ref>Brown, p. 403</ref> In 1901 he was committed to the Columbia Theatre in Boston where he starred in productions of ''The Mikado'' and ''Boccaccio''.<ref>{{cite news|title=The First Nighter; The Columbia Theatre|work=Boston Home Journal|date=November 30, 1901|volume=57|number=48|page=12}}</ref>
De Lange authored several plays; many of which were staged on Broadway. Several of his plays were musicals for which he wrote the books in collaboration with other writers and composers; most especially Edgar Smith on projects created for the comedy duo Lew Fields and Joe Weber. He was also the manager for many of the national touring productions starring Fields and Weber.<ref name="nyt"/> His first significant play, ''The Globe Trotter'', premiered in Philadelphia in May 1894.<ref name="Trotter">{{cite news|title=The Globe Trotter|work=The Philadelphia Inquirer|date=May 13, 1894|page= 11}}</ref> His plays that appeared on Broadway include ''When the Cat's Away'' (1896, Bijou Theatre; later retitled ''The Gay Mr. Lightfoot''),<ref name="Cat">Brown, p. 298-299</ref> ''Pousse Cafe'' (1897, Imperial Music Hall),<ref name="Pousse">Brown, p. 588</ref> ''The Little Host'' (1898, Herald Square Theatre),<ref name="Herald">Bordman, p. 187</ref> ''Mother Goose'' (1899, Fourteenth Street Theatre),<ref>Bordman, p. 190</ref> and ''Sweet Anne Page'' (1900, Manhattan Theatre).<ref>Dietz, p. 46</ref>
At the age of fifty, Louis De Lange was found dead in his room at the Mock's Hotel in New York City on March 13, 1906.<ref name="nyt"/> His throat had been cut.<ref name="nyt"/> At the time of his published obituary in ''The New York Times'' the police could not determine whether it was a murder or a suicide; although a suspect was in custody and his hotel room had been robbed.<ref name="nyt"/> He was married to the actress Selma Mantell who starred in the ''Ziegfeld Follies'' among other shows.<ref name="nyt"/><ref name="Billboard"/> The couple had one son,<ref name="nyt"/> the bandleader and lyricist Eddie DeLange,<ref name="Billboard">{{cite magazine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QA4EAAAAMBAJ&dq=%22Eddie+DeLange%22+father&pg=PT17|title=Eddie DeLange Dies On Coast Following Illness|magazine=Billboard|date=July 23, 1949}}</ref> who was two years old at the time of Louis De Lange's death.<ref name="nyt"/>
==Partial list of works== *''High Tide'', a musical comedy in three acts by Louis De Lange and F. P. Weadon; premiered April 7, 1889 at the Newmarket Theatre in Saint Paul, Minnesota<ref>{{cite thesis|title=A History of the Theatre in St. Paul, Minnesota, from Its Beginning to 1890, Volume 2|author=Frank M. Whiting|year=1941|type=PhD|publisher=Minnesota Historical Society library as PN2277.S21 W434.}}</ref> *''Once on a time'', a comedy in four acts, copyrighted April 12, 1889<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hjLKGXpTj-sC&dq=%C2%A0%22Louis+De+Lange%22+%22Once+on+a+time%22&pg=PA1700|title=Dramatic Compositions Copyrighted in the United States, 1870 to 1916|page=1700|publisher=Library of Congress,. Copyright Office|editor=Henry Spaulding Parsons|year=1918}}</ref> *''The Globe Trotter'', a farce in three acts by Louis De Lange, premiered May 1894, Philadelphia<ref name="Trotter"/> *''When the Cat's Away'' (later retitled ''The Gay Mr. Lightfoot''),<ref name="Cat"/> a farce in three acts by Louis De Lange and Lee Arthur,<ref>Chapman & Garrison, p. 181</ref> premiered September 1, 1896, Bijou Theatre<ref name="Cat"/> *''Pousse Cafe, Or The Worst Born'', a burlesque, libretto by Edgar Smith and Louis de Lange, music by John Stromberg<ref>Chapman & Garrison, p. 180</ref> premiered December 2, 1897, Imperial Music Hall<ref name="Pousse"/> *''The Wayhighman'', a burlesque parody of Reginald De Koven's ''The Highwayman''; book by Edgar Smith and Louis De Lange; music by John Stromberg; premiered January 27, 1898 at Broadway Music Hall<ref>Franceschina, p. 101</ref> *''The Little Host'', musical play in two acts;<ref>Chapman & Garrison, p. 248</ref> book by Edgar Smith and Louis De Lange, music by Thomas Chilvers and W. T. Francis; premiered December 26, 1898 at the Herald Square Theatre<ref name="Herald"/> *''Mother Goose'', a musical comedy in three acts; libretto by Edgar Smith and Louis de Lange; music by Fred J. Eustis and Frederick Gagel; premiered at the Fourteenth Street Theatre, May 1, 1899<ref>Chapman & Garrison, p. 259</ref> *''Sweet Ann Page'', a comic opera in three acts; libretto by Louis de Lange and Edgar Smith; music by W. H. Neidlinger; premiered December 3, 1900 at the Manhattan Theatre<ref>Chapman & Garrison, p. 380</ref> *''The Japskys'', a musical; book by Louis De Lange; music by Billee Taylor; published 1904, Continental Music<ref>Sheppard, p. 432</ref> *''Lafitte'', comic opera in three acts, libretto by Louis De Lange; music by Victor Herbert; this work was copyrighted December 8, 1924 after the deaths of Herbert and De Lange by Herbert's wife Therese Herbert<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XvDUlgh0Fp0C&dq=%C2%A0%22Louis+De+Lange%22+%22Lafitte%22&pg=PA410|page=410|title=Catalog of Copyright Entries. Fourth Series|publisher=Library of Congress, Copyright Office|year=1926}}</ref>
==Citations== {{reflist}}
==Bibliography== *{{cite book|title=History of Chicago: From the fire of 1871 until 1885|author=Alfred Theodore Andreas|year=1886|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=THd5AAAAMAAJ&dq=%C2%A0%22Louis+De+Lange%22+%22Philadelphia%22&pg=PA646}} *{{cite book|title=American Musical Theater: A Chronicle|first=Gerald|last=Bordman|year=2001|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn= 9780195130744}} *{{cite book|last=Brown|first=Thomas Allston|title=A History of the New York Stage From the First Performance in 1732 to 1901, volume III|place=New York|publisher=Dodd, Mead & Company|year=1903|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EzELAAAAIAAJ}} *{{cite book|title=The Best Plays of 1894–1899 |editor-first1=John|editor-last1=Chapman |editor-first2=Garrison P.|editor-last2=Sherwood|year=1955|publisher=Dodd, Mead & Co.}} *{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LecZEAAAQBAJ&dq=%22Adele%22+Jean+Briquet+dan+dietz&pg=PA225|first=Dan|last= Dietz|title=The Complete Book of 1910s Broadway Musicals|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield Publishers|year=2021|isbn=9781538150283}} *{{cite book|title=Harry B. Smith: Dean of American Librettists|first=John |last= Franceschina|year=2004|isbn=9781135949082|publisher=Taylor & Francis}} *{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GJOqDwAAQBAJ&dq=%22Louis+De+Lange%22%C2%A0The+Japskys&pg=PA432|title=Extreme Exoticism: Japan in the American Musical Imagination|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=9780190072704|year=2019|first=William Anthony|last= Sheppard}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:De Lange, Louis}} Category:1856 births Category:1906 deaths Category:American dramatists and playwrights Category:American musical theatre actors Category:Jewish American male actors Category:University of Pennsylvania alumni Category:Writers from Philadelphia Category:Deaths by stabbing in New York (state)