Gustave Carl Luders was born on December 13, 1865 in Bremen, Germany. He trained as a musician in Germany. In 1888 he immigrated to the United Stated where he settled in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. There he worked as an orchestra conductor and the director of a light opera company.[1]
In 1889 Luders began working for M. Witmark & Sons as a music arranger. Soon after he relocated to Chicago where he worked in various theaters as a pit orchestra conductor. He began writing operettas and music comedies with the librettist Frank S. Pixley who was his most frequent collaborator. Their most successful work was The Prince of Pilsen.[1] It was adapted into the film The Prince of Pilsen.[2] It was staged many times both in the United States and abroad into the 1950s.[1] His other successful works included The Burgomaster (1900), Woodland (1904) and The Sho-Gun (1904).[1]