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The Sunshine Boys

 
American Theater Guide: The Sunshine Boys

Sunshine Boys, The (1972), a comedy by Neil Simon. [ Broadhurst Theatre, 538 perf.] Willie Clark (Jack Albertson) and Al Lewis (Sam Levene) were an old vaudeville team who fought and separated many years earlier. Willie now lives alone, largely in pajamas, in a small New York hotel. Al lives with his daughter in New Jersey. CBS wants to do a nostalgic program about the history of comedy and wants to reunite Lewis and Clark. It falls to Al's nephew, Ben Silverman (Lewis J. Stadlen), to persuade the old men to forget their animosities and perform together again. This proves a hard task, but Ben finally succeeds. But during a rehearsal at the studio Willie has a heart attack. Recuperating back home, he finally agrees to move to the Actors' Home. Then Al pays him a visit and announces that he, too, must move to the Home. The quarreling can continue on. Hailed by T. E. Kalem of Time magazine as “a cripplingly funny show,” this affectionately savage comedy was Simon's tenth consecutive success. A 1997 revival with Tony Randall and Jack Klugman was also a hit.

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The Sunshine Boys
2e 1.jpeg
Original Broadway poster
Written by Neil Simon
Date premiered December 18, 1972
Original language English
Genre Comedy
IBDB profile

The Sunshine Boys is a play by Neil Simon that was produced on Broadway in 1972 and later adapted for film and television.

Contents

Plot

The play focuses on aging Al Lewis and Willy Clark, a one-time vaudevillian team known as "Lewis and Clark" who, over the course of forty-odd years, not only grew to hate each other but never spoke to each other off-stage throughout the final year of their act. The stubborn Clark, who was not ready for retirement, resented the wiser Lewis for breaking up the act when he opted to leave show business. It is now 1972 and CBS is inviting the team to reunite for a special on the history of comedy, with the pair representing the vaudeville era at its best. Clark is convinced by his nephew Ben to revive one of the old routines one last time. Much of the humor is derived from efforts to get the two cantankerous actors into the same room for a rehearsal, their differences of opinion once they reunite, and their shenanigans on the actual broadcast.

Neil Simon was inspired by two venerable vaudeville teams. The longevity of "Lewis and Clark" was inspired by Smith and Dale who, unlike their theatrical counterparts, were inseparable lifelong friends. The undercurrent of hostility between "Lewis and Clark" was inspired by the team of Gallagher and Shean, who were successful professionally but argumentative personally.

Theatre productions

After two previews, the original Broadway production, produced by Emanuel Azenberg and directed by Alan Arkin, opened on December 18, 1972 at the Broadhurst Theatre. It transferred to the Shubert and then the Lunt-Fontanne before completing its 538-performance run. The original cast included Sam Levene as Lewis, Jack Albertson as Clark, and Lewis J. Stadlen as Ben. Replacements later in the run included Lou Jacobi as Lewis and Jack Gilford as Clark.

Tony Award nominations went to Simon (Best Play), Albertson (Best Actor in a Play) and Arkin (Best Direction of a Play), and Albertson won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance.

In 1997, under the auspices of the National Actors Theatre, a production was mounted at the Coconut Grove Playhouse in Miami, and its success justified a transfer north. After twelve previews, the Broadway revival directed by John Tillinger opened on December 8, 1997 at the Lyceum Theatre, where it ran for 230 performances. The cast included Tony Randall as Lewis, Jack Klugman as Clark, and Matthew Arkin as Ben.

Film adaptation

The 1975 film adaptation cast George Burns as Lewis and Walter Matthau as Clark.

Television adaptations

In 1995, Simon adapted his play yet again for a Hallmark Entertainment production that finally aired on December 28, 1997. His teleplay updated the setting and made the two comedians the product of the early days of television, the medium in which the playwright got his start. Directed by John Erman, it starred Woody Allen as Lewis and Peter Falk as Clark, with Michael McKean, Liev Schreiber, Edie Falco, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Whoopi Goldberg in supporting roles.

There have been three German television versions of The Sunshine Boys, all entitled Sonny Boys. The 1982 adaptation starred Carl-Heinz Schroth and Johannes Heesters, the 1995 version featured Harald Juhnke and Wolfgang Spier, and Werner Schneyder and Dieter Hildebrandt appeared in the 2001 edition.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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