As it was at the overture and shall be at the exit music, bliss without end. Amen.

Theatre Aficionado at Large

"Not Since Carrie"

If you like musicals, and are intrigued by the failures, then this is the book for you. Ken Mandelbaum is detailed and concise in recounting the failures of Broadway musicals through the years. I’ve read it several times over the years; it’s engaging, never boring and quite funny to hear some of the anecdotes and some of the horrifying decisions made by creative teams.

By the way, where has Ken Mandelbaum gone? He stopped writing his column almost two years ago and no one seems to have heard anything from him since. I hope he’s well and off updating this book so we can get the last twenty years of disasters documented.

Posted on January 31, 2008 at 9:43 am.

Outstanding songs from flop shows, Part 2

Sarah gave me a little iota of hell (teensy) for leaving out Prettybelle in my last post. I apologize to those diehard fans by placing that show at the top of tonight’s list…which will include two selections from said score.

“You Never Looked Better”/”When I’m Drunk, I’m Beautiful” – Prettybelle (Jule Styne-Bob Merrill; 1971; closed in Boston) A schizophrenic southern belle with a drinking problem, an now-deceased abusive husband and a penchant for whoring herself out to minorities. And would you believe, Jerry Herman didn’t write it! The show was problematic from the beginning, namely the the source material. “You Never Looked Better” was actually cut while the show was out of town; but when they recorded the album (some ten years later) they reinstated this gem Lansbury when her husband dies. There’s a chance it’ll be sung at my funeral. However, the most glorious moment of the show is the eleven o’clock number “When I’m Drunk, I’m Beautiful.” The title says it all, but you need to hear the lead-in, the clever lyrics and the glorious bridge (which is actually quite Hermanesque). A no-holds barred paean to the magic of alcohol, Lansbury sends this one out of the ballpark; a cultist’s delight.

“So Much You Loved Me” – Rex (Richard Rodgers-Sheldon Harnick; 1976; Lunt-Fontanne – 48 performances). You’d think Henry VIII would make for great singing; but, alas it didn’t. The score is decent, especially whenever Penny Fuller opens her mouth. This ballad, sung by Anne Boleyn to Henry at the end of their relationship, has marvelous lyrics and a gorgeous melodic progression in the A-section from Mr. Rodgers. A gem of a song. (Sarah Brightman recorded this song, the only one from the score to have life outside of it. But, c’mon, who the hell wants to hear that?) (The melody is also used in “From Afar”: Henry’s soliloquized, yet secretive admiration for his daughter Elizabeth).

“Why Do the Wrong People Travel?” – Sail Away (Noel Coward; Broadhurst – 167 performances). Truth be told, I actually judge this from the original London cast recording of the score, which I really prefer to the Broadway. Most specifically because it doesn’t censor the funniest joke in this song. Elaine Stritch starred as a “world-weary” cruise hostess finding romance onboard ship in a role written specifically for her by Noel Coward. Well, this was originally going to be an operetta with Stritch as the comic support; but, out of town the show was overhauled with the original leads fired, their parts cut out entirely and Stritch made the star (she would be above-the-title in London). The show was dismissed as decidedly old-fashioned by critics and had relatively brief runs in NY and London (where it played 262 performances, after an even worse critical reception). The song is a sardonic showcase in the eleven o’clock spot for Stritchie (hmm, “The Ladies Who Lunch” anyone?) in which she lists her grievances about the tourists she encounters. It’s pretty riotous and Stritch (naturally) still brought down the house when she reprised it in At Liberty.

Somehow I Never Could Believe” – Street Scene (Kurt Weill-Langston Hughes; 1947; Adelphi – 148 performances). Elmer Rice’s tragedy became the basis for this ambitious “American opera” with some glorious results. Combining legitimate opera with musical comedy (more of the former than the latter), there are a great many aural wonders (“Ain’t it Awful the Heat,” “Lonely House,” “Moon-Faced, Starry-Eyed”), but it is this daring seven minute aria that captivated me on the first listen. Weill and Hughes took the traditional character am/want song and used it to tell us the history of the character of ill-fated Anna Maurrant. She sings of her hopes and dreams of her childhood and of how she watched those dreams die trapped in a loveless marriage in the tenements of NYC; a display of her loneliness and eventual optimism that things will be better. The song requires a dramatic soprano – basically something only the truly proficient in opera should attempt. A powerhouse of a showstopper. It would be nice if City Opera could get Victoria Clark for the role of Anna. Perhaps keep it in the Lincoln Center family and cast Kelli O’Hara and Aaron Lazar in the roles of the young lovers.

“All the Things You Are” – Very Warm for May (Jerome Kern-Oscar Hammerstein II; 1939; Alvin – 59 performances). The most beautiful song ever written. Well, if not, it’s certainly one of them. If you get the chance, you should hear the original orchestration for this number for a baritone and coloratura soprano. Spellbinding is the word. There is a recording of the original cast from a radio broadcast, as well as a recreation on John McGlinn’s Broadway Showstoppers CD with Rebecca Luker.

“Children of the Wind,”/”Blame it on the Summer Night”/”Rags” – Rags (Charles Strouse-Stephen Schwartz; 1986; Mark Hellinger – 4 performances). Teresa Stratas was Rebecca, the heroine in this musical about a Jewish immigrant discovering injustice and fighting political corruption on the lower East Side of Manhattan. Consider it a sort of ‘post-Fiddler’ attempt at the immigrant experience in America. The show had little advance and poor notices and folded quickly. But it has a stunner of a score. The first song is a powerhouse aria in which Rebecca dreams of a home for herself and her son. The second is a delicious bluesy number with a scintillating orchestration and a seductive lyric in which Rebecca realizes she’s falling in love. The third is an angry indictment of the social stratifications of the time delivered by the ill-fated Bella, played by Judy Kuhn (who received a Tony nomination). The original cast album, recorded in 1991, features Julia Migenes in the place of Stratas.

Posted on at 2:02 am.

Gypsy marquee

Why isn’t this more exciting?
At least the production inside will be…
Posted on January 29, 2008 at 1:46 am.

Outstanding songs from flop shows

Let it be known, I love my flops. I have been fascinated by them for years, ever since my interest in Broadway musicals became deeply profound in late 2000, early 2001 and I decided I wanted every recording ever made. That was the year I first sampled Sondheim; Bernstein (aside from West Side Story) and I heard my first genuine flop score: Candide. This fascination continued to grow until I wanted to hear every possible score out there. I never realized that I would hear some of the songs on this list, but I have been fortunately blessed to know them.

Here are a few of my favorite flop numbers, perhaps the first in a series of blogs, perhaps not. We’ll see. Order is random; just as they come to me.

“One More Walk Around the Garden” – Carmelina (Burton Lane-Alan Jay Lerner; 1979; St. James: 17 performances) An adaptation of the popular Gina Lollobrigida film, Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell (one woman; her daughter; the three former WWII GI’s who could be the father – elements conspicuously present in Mamma Mia) features this hauntingly simplistic and poignantly nostalgic trio for the three soldiers as they reminisce. Achingly beautiful.

“Sur Le Quais” – Lolita, My Love (John Barry- Alan Jay Lerner; 1971; closed closed out of town in Boston) Dorothy Loudon’s performance as Charlotte Haze is perhaps the greatest thing this ill-fated adaptation of Nabokov’s extraordinary novel has to offer. In looking at the material as an example of creating an adaptation, it works well; the pederasty is just plain uncomfortable to stomach when dramatized, especially in a musical. Loudon stopped the show with this Gallic-flavored romp with Humbert midway through the first act.

“Duet for One (The First Lady of the Land)” – 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue (Leonard Bernstein- Alan Jay Lerner; 1976; Mark Hellinger: 7 performances) A musical covering race relations and the first one hundred years of the White House. Lofty ambitions basically did the show in the from beginning. With a libretto that plays more like a musical revue than a book show; and two actors (Ken Howard and the divine Patricia Routledge) serving as each President and First Lady, the show’s strength is in its performers and its score. There is not enough time in a 2 1/2 hour musical to possibly cover all the ground that I’m sure the creative team hoped to. The show never completely gelled; much was changed and revised and the show was a critical and financial disaster in NY, lasting a week; and Bernstein refused to allow the original cast album to be made, which is unfortunate. In this act two showstopper, one of the most daunting and brilliantly conceived in a flop or hit, Patricia Routledge switches between the characters of Julia Grant and Lucy Hayes at the inauguration of Rutherford B. Hayes. For almost nine minutes; we get the history of the election, the end of the era of Reconstruction and racial commentary thrown in among the barbed insults the character hurl at one another. She’s a schizophrenic marvel as she created two clearly delineated characters while utilizing a chest resonance for one and a coloratura soprano for the other. Genius.

“Glitter and Be Gay” – Candide (Leonard Bernstein-Richard Wilbur, John LaTouche, & Dorothy Parker; 1956; Martin Beck: 73 performances). Sure, it’s gone on to glory in opera repertories and numerous revivals around the world – and its overture is a popular favorite among classical orchestras. But Candide was a pretty hefty flop in 1956, dividing critics (still does) and just not pulling in the business. Barbara Cook, that legend divine, received the most difficult piece for sopranos in the musical theatre canon (hell, and opera) with this demanding coloratura soprano aria. Not only are you expected to hit high Eb’s above C, you must also be witty, satiric and hilarious. It goes without saying that Cook’s rendition is definitive.

“It’s Enough to Make a Lady Fall in Love”/”Let’s See What Happens”/”Not on Your Nellie” – Darling of the Day (Jules Styne-E.Y. Harburg; 1968; George Abbott: 32 performances). See my previous post.

“He Had Refinement” – A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (Arthur Schwartz-Dorothy Fields; 1951; Alvin: 267 performances). Speculation to the flop of this problematic yet endearing musical of the Betty Smith novel (brilliant bildungsroman I might add; yes I was an English major) was due to the rearrangement in structure, with the novel’s protagonist Francie taking a back seat to the parents (this included her absence from the entire first act as well). Also Shirley Booth, who received top billing for her part as Cissy, a secondary character, seemed to have thrown off the balance of the show because she walked away with it in her pocket. The force that is Booth displayed her requisite earthy charm, gracious down-to-earth humor and effortless star quality throughout the evening. The most memorable of these moments was her loving recollection of her “first Harry” in laugh out loud hilarious “He Had Refinement.” (An honorable mention here to the glorious yet underrated act one finale, the soaring “I’ll Buy You a Star”).

“And I Was Beautiful” – Dear World (Jerry Herman; 1969; Mark Hellinger: 132 performances). There is much to enjoy in Herman’s score: the showstopping “I Don’t Want to Know,” the intricate trio “The Tea Party,” “Kiss Her Now” and “I’ve Never Said I Love You” could all fit the bill here, but for me it is this devastating ballad about the loss of love – and the effects time has on said loss. sung by a resplendent Angela Lansbury as the Madwoman of Chaillot. Listen to it.

“Sez I/If It Isn’t Everything” – Donnybrook! (Johnny Burke; 1961; 46th Street: 68 performances) The musical version of the highly popular The Quiet Man did’t fare well on Broadway, but possesses a rather delightful score, with performances from Art Lund, Joan Fagan, Eddie Foy Jr and the ever reliable Susan Johnson. Ellen Roe Danaher (Mary Kate in the film), played by Fagan, sings this spirited Celtic jig, one of the liveliest numbers to ever open a musical, in which she explains to her family her philosophies on love – and how she hasn’t found the right man. Think of it as a feistily belted Irish cousin to Brigadoon’s “Waitin’ for My Dearie” and Oklahoma!’s “Many a New Day.”

“A Time for Singing” – A Time for Singing (John Morris-Gerald Freedman; 1966; Broadway: 41 performances). Tessie O’Shea leads this exuberant title song here; a musical adaptation of How Green Was My Valley that has a woefully unknown gem of a score. Nothing but sheer joy emanates from this song. Encores!, come on!

“Please Hello” – Pacific Overtures. (Stephen Sondheim; 1976; Winter Garden: 193 performances). Only Sondheim could write a showstopper that effectively told the history of Western imperialism in Japan in the 19th century. He cleverly uses a musical style from each country represented to characterize the national diplomacy (Sousa march for the US, Gilbert and Sullivan patter for England, can-can for France, etc.). It’s a nine minute history lesson that works wonders.

If I could, I would post each song on here, but I don’t think that’s possible.

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Upcoming Theatrical Excursions

  • 8/21 - I Do! I Do! (Westport Country Playhouse)
  • 8/27 - Our Town

Walking Among My Yesterdays - 2010

  • 1/3 - Ragtime
  • 1/20 - Tyne Daly: The Second Time Around (Feinstein's)
  • 2/6 - Betty Buckley: For the Love of Broadway! (Feinstein's)
  • 2/7 - Fanny (Encores!)
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  • 5/26 - Next Fall
  • 6/20 - A Little Night Music
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  • 7/31 - A Little Night Music

Walking Among My Yesterdays - 2009

  •  1/3 - Hairspray
  • 1/11 - Gypsy
  • 1/22 - Mary Poppins
  • 1/25 - Pal Joey
  • 2/8 - Music in the Air (Encores!)
  • 2/19 - August: Osage County
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  • 4/23 - Irena's Vow
  • 5/5 - God of Carnage
  • 5/13 - 33 Variations
  • 5/13 - Reasons to be Pretty
  • 5/15 - Joe Turner's Come and Gone
  • 5/16 - The Norman Conquests: Table Manners
  • 5/16 - The Norman Conquests: Living Together
  • 5/16 - The Norman Conquests: Round and Round the Garden
  • 5/19 - Mary Stuart
  • 5/24 - Red Masquerade
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  • 5/31 - The Philanthropist
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  • 6/6 - August: Osage County
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  • 6/23 - Blithe Spirit
  • 6/27 - Much Ado About Nothing (HVSF)
  • 6/28 - August: Osage County (closing)
  • 7/9 - The Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged (HVSF)
  • 7/16 - Pericles (HVSF)
  • 7/19 - Blithe Spirit
  • 7/26 - The Norman Conquests: Table Manners
  • 7/26 - The Norman Conquests: Living Together
  • 7/26 - The Norman Conquests: Round and Round the Garden
  • 8/16 - Mary Stuart
  • 8/23 - How Now, Dow Jones
  • 9/2 - 9 to 5
  • 9/18 - The Royal Family
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  • 11/24 - A Little Night Music (first preview)
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  • 12/17 - Ernest in Love (Irish Rep)

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