Glad To See You was a 1944 American musical comedy. The musical, which involves the adventure of a USO troupe during World War II,[1] was intended for Broadway but flopped, closing after out-of-town tryouts and never opening in New York.
The production was not a success. It tried out in Philadelphia, opening at the Schubert Theatre (now the Miller) on November 13, 1944, where it was poorly received.[6]
Shortly after the opening, Davis was sidelined in a car crash, and lyricist Cahn himself served as a temporary replacement.[6] The production then moved on December 13 to the Opera House in Boston, where Berkeley left the show to return to Hollywood (being replaced by Charles Conaway) and Eddie Foy, Jr. was drafted for the starring role.[6][7] It closed there on January 6, 1945, having never made it to Broadway.[2][1][8]
Billboard gave a review favorable in some respects, praising the sets, costume, and cast ("The bounty of gals on deck lean definitely to the looker side" (transl. "There was good number of female players, and they were physically attractive")), but castigating the script as "threadbare and shallow... [a] piece of mediocrity" and avering that "there is little in the score that is original or infectious" save for a few numbers, notably Most Unusual Weather.[3]
Mark Steyn, writing retrospectively in 2015, described Glad To See You as an "awe-inspiringly hideous train-wreck of a musical",[9] and it is not known to have been staged since its 1944–45 flop.
^ abc"Out-Of-Town Openings – Glad To See You". Billboard. Vol. 56, no. 48. Cincinnati: The Billboard Publishing Company. November 25, 1944. p. 30. Retrieved April 10, 2017.