The Scarecrow is a play written by
Percy MacKaye in 1908, and first presented on
Broadway in 1911. It is based on
Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story, "
Feathertop", but greatly expands upon the tale. Mackaye himself stated that he hoped that the play would not be taken as a dramatization of
Feathertop, since the intentions of the two works are so different: "The scarecrow Feathertop is ridiculous, as the emblem of a superficial fop; the scarecrow Ravensbane is pitiful, as the emblem of human bathos."
Productions
Frank Reicher, known to modern audiences for playing the ship's captain in the original
King Kong and its sequel
Son of Kong, starred in the title role in the original 1911 Broadway production. The play had what would now be considered an extremely short run in New York (23 performances). In 1923 it was filmed as a silent movie,
Puritan Passions, starring Mary Astor. The play was revived twice in New York (most recently in 2005), has been made into an opera, and has become a favorite in
regional theatre in the United States. It was made into a children's
animated film issued only on video, with the plot and characters of the original play almost totally changed. A 1972 television production...
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