Lost, Strayed or Stolen

Lost, Strayed or Stolen is a musical comedy in four acts with music by Woolson Morse and words by J. Cheever Goodwin, adapted from the French farce Le baptême du petit Oscar by Eugène Grangé and Victor Bernard. The story concerns a missing child and its nursemaid, three competing potential godfathers and an opera diva.

It was produced at the Fifth Avenue Theatre in New York City on September 16, 1896, and ran with success.[1] It was directed by Ben Teal, the musical director was John McGhie and dances in act 4 were arranged by Rose Becket. The show was made into a 1908 film of the same name.[2]

  1. ^ Bordman, Gerald and Richard Norton. American Musical Theatre: A Chronicle (1978), p. 169
  2. ^ "Lost, Strayed or Stolen (1908)", The New York Times, accessed September 13, 2015