Although early Herbert productions like 1897's +The Serenade (his first major success), 1898's +The Fortune Teller, and 1899's +Cyrano de Bergerac remained steeped in operetta tradition, over time his work adopted an increasingly modernized American sensibility anticipating the breakthroughs of Jerome Kern. Broadway hits including 1903's +Babes in Toyland, 1906's +Mlle. Modiste, 1910's +Naughty Marietta, and 1913's +Sweethearts launched a number of popular favorites like Gypsy Love, Tramp! Tramp! Tramp!, Every Day Is Ladies' Day With Me, Because You're You, Kiss Me Again, Indian Summer, A Kiss in the Dark, and Moonbeams; authored with a series of lyricists including Rida Johnson Young, Buddy De Sylva, Harry B. Smith, and Gene Buck. In 1916, Herbert also composed music for the film #The Fall of a Nation, believed to be the first American score ever written specifically as accompaniment for a silent movie. He was working on music for the next +Ziegfeld Follies when he suffered a fatal heart attack on May 26, 1924; the 1939 film biopic #The Great Victor Herbert starred Walter Connolly in the title role. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi