The Garden of Allah (play)
| The Garden of Allah | |
|---|---|
Photo from Act II | |
| Written by | Robert Hichens and Mary Anderson |
| Directed by | Hugh Ford |
| Date premiered | October 21, 1911 |
| Place premiered | Century Theatre, New York City |
| Original language | English |
| Subject | Conflict between spiritual conscience and romantic feelings |
| Genre | Drama |
| Setting | French Algeria and French Tunis around 1900 |
The Garden of Allah is a play written by Robert Hichens and Mary Anderson. It was based on Hichens 1904 novel of the same name. It consists of four acts and an epilogue, with a medium-sized speaking cast and slow pacing. The play is concerned with the romance between a wealthy young Englishwoman and a half-Russian, half-English man of mysterious background. The settings are various locales in French Algeria and French Tunis around 1900, particularly the oasis town of Beni-Mora, a fictional name for Biskra. The title stems from an Arabic saying that the desert is the Garden of Allah.
The play was a commercial success, famed for its spectacle, with large numbers of authentic Algerian people, live animals, and complex set designs and effects. However, it was not a dramatic success; several reviewers expressed surprise that a book with so much dramatic potential was winnowed down to a few disjointed scenes. Despite the lack of drama, over 375,000 people saw it during the Broadway run (Oct 1911-May 1912), more than any single play to that date.