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Do Re Mi

 
Wikipedia: Do Re Mi (musical)
For the song from the musical The Sound of Music, see Do-Re-Mi. For other uses, see Do Re Mi.
Do Re Mi
Do re silvers.JPG
Original Broadway Cast Recording
Music Jule Styne
Lyrics Betty Comden
Adolph Green
Book Garson Kanin
Productions 1960 Broadway
1961 West End
1999 Broadway concert

Do Re Mi is a musical with music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, and a book by Garson Kanin, who also directed the original 1960 Broadway production. The plot centers on a minor-league con man who decides to go (somewhat) straight by going into the business of juke boxes and music promotion. The musical introduced the popular songs "Cry Like the Wind" and "Make Someone Happy".

"Make Someone Happy" was recorded by Barbra Streisand for her 2009 album "Love Is the Answer".

Contents

Synopsis

Hubie Cram is "a loser endlessly scheming to win big." His long-suffering patient wife Kay urges him to "Take a Job", while he plots. He finds three pals, Fatso O'Rear, Brains Berman and Skin Demopoulos, and they scheme to enter the juke-box business ("It's Legitimate"). Soon they have 300 juke-boxes, which they plan on selling to John Henry Wheeler, a record prodcer. Hubie discovers a naive singer, Tilda Mullen, and they plan their future ("Ambition"). At a fancy nightclub Hubie explains, and demonstrates, gangster's behavior that he learned from watching the Late Late Show. Kay compares her abandoned comfortable existence with the insecurity of life with Hubie ("Adventure"). Tilda and Wheeler fall in love ("Make Someone Happy"). In the end Hubie realizes that he has nothing except a wonderful marriage.

Design elements

The musical was notable for its elaborate scenic design by Boris Aronson, who conceived the set as an enormous pop art jukebox and used extremely novel forms like collage in his design. The curtain of juke boxes "evoked a cathedral's stained glass effect."[1] In a scene in a night club, the tables had drawn figures instead of actors, and the actors would talk with these drawings.[2]

Songs

Act I
  • "Waiting, Waiting" – Kay Cram
  • "All You Need Is a Quarter" – The Swingers
  • "Take a Job" – Hubie and Kay Cram
  • "It's Legitimate" – Hubie, Fatso O'Rear, Brains Berman, Skin Demopoulos and the Loaders
  • "I Know About Love" – John Henry Wheeler
  • "The Auditions" – Marsha, Lou and Gretchen
  • "Cry Like the Wind" – Tilda Mullen
  • "Ambition" – Hubie and Tilda Mullen
  • "Success" – The Tilda Mullen Fans, Tilda Mullen, Hubie, Fatso O'Rear, Brains Berman and Skin Demopoulos
  • "Fireworks" – Tilda Mullen and John Henry Wheeler
  • "What's New at the Zoo" – Tilda Mullen and Animal Girls
  • "Asking for You" – John Henry Wheeler
  • "The Late, Late Show" – Hubie
Act II
  • "Adventure" – Hubie and Kay Cram
  • "Make Someone Happy" – John Henry Wheeler and Tilda Mullen
  • "Don't Be Ashamed of a Teardrop" – Hubie, Fatso O'Rear, Brains Berman and Skin Demopoulos
  • "V.I.P." – The Public and Hubie
  • "All of My Life" – Hubie
  • Finale – Hubie, Kay Cram and Company

Original Broadway cast

Productions

The show opened on Broadway at the St. James Theatre on December 26, 1960, transferred to the 54th Street Theatre on December 25, 1961 and closed on January 13, 1962 for a total of 400 performances. Scenic design was by Boris Aronson, costume design by Irene Sharaff with assistance from Florence Klotz, and choreography was by Marc Breaux and Dee Dee Wood.

The London West End production opened at the Prince of Wales Theatre on October 12, 1961 and ran for 169 performances.[3] It starred Max Bygraves, Maggie Fitzgibbon, Steve Arlen and Jan Waters.

Encores! at New York's City Center presented a concert version in 1999, starring Nathan Lane, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Heather Headley and Randy Graff.[4]

The 42nd Street Moon theatre company, San Francisco, California production ran in August 2001.[5]

Recordings

The Original Broadway cast recording was released in January 1961 by RCA. The 1999 Encores! cast recording was released on September 21, 1999 by DRG.[6]

Response

The New York Times called the musical "fast, loud and occasionally funny." It noted that "a team of expensive talent has turned out some lively songs, set them in motion in feverishly paced production numbers and has managed to overcome, at least part of the time, the cheapness of a machine-made book." It commented that Phil Silvers was cast against type, here playing "the fall guy, the poor sap who ends as the victim.... Betty Comden and Adolph Green have written sprightly lyrics, and Jule Styne has contributed some attractive as well as some ear-shattering tunes. The loveliest is "Cry Like the Wind" which has the keening quality of a folk song of lamentation."[7]

According to Stanley Green, the musical had "an average score that is worth the price just to hear Miss Walker describe her life of 'Adventure'".[8] Ethan Mordden wrote that the song "Adventure" is "one of the grandest comedy songs ever.... Here we learn that she, at least, already knows that it's a wonderful marriage, because it's never boring ... then came a Mad Scene - a bolero complete with trumpets pealing out like the band in the Plaza del Toro on corrida day and woodwinds tripping up the scale with the flash of a hundred capes."[9]

In reviewing the 1999 "Encores!" production for The New York Times, Ben Brantley wrote that, despite its famous creators, "the show still has the incomplete feeling of a work that never quite meets its own aspirations...A tale of buffoonish gangsters trying to muscle in on the music industry." He further suggested that the show was like a "shotgun marriage" of Bye Bye Birdie and Guys and Dolls with parts of the television sit-com The Honeymooners.[4]

Awards and nominations

References

  1. ^ "Boris Aronson" pbs.org, accessed September 3, 2009
  2. ^ Mordden, p. 19
  3. ^ London shows chronology, 1961 guidetomusicaltheatre.com, accessed September 3, 2009
  4. ^ a b Brantley, Ben."A Singing Nathan Lane Adds Ham to the Fizz",The New York Times, May 8, 1999
  5. ^ Connema, Richard."'Do Re Mi'",broadwaytalk.com, accessed September 2, 2009
  6. ^ 'Do Re Mi' 1999 album listing castalbumcollector.com, accessed September 3, 2009
  7. ^ Taubman, Howard. "The Theatre: Do Re Mi, a Musical Fast and Loud", The New York Times, December 27, 1960, p. 23
  8. ^ Green, Stanley (1984). The World of Musical Comedy, Da Capo Press. ISBN 0306802074, p. 445
  9. ^ Mordden, p. 18
  • Mordden, Ethan (2002). Open a New Window: The Broadway Musical in the 1960s. pp. 18-20, ISBN 1403960135

External links


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