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Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes (1949)
Anita Loos’ unforgettable
1920s gold digger Lorelei Lee conquered
Broadway in this classic but seldom-seen
musical comedy hit. Lorelei and her friend
Dorothy Shaw liven up a trip to Paris on
the Ile de France with Jule Styne/Leo
Robin standards
like “Diamonds
Are a Girl’s
Best Friend,” “Bye Bye, Baby,” “A
Little Girl from Little Rock,” “Just
a Kiss Apart,” and “I
Love What I’m Doin’.”
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The Cabaret Girl (1922)
The great Princess Theatre
team of Jerome Kern and
P.G. Wodehouse took
London’s
West End by storm with this dizzy farce. The story is
a typically
merry Wodehouse concoction
about the antics of a late-night cabaret troupe that
must impersonate nobility in an effort to win a society
boyfriend for a down-on-her-luck singer.
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Can-Can (1953)
CAN-CAN
made Broadway history twice-over.
It introduced Gwen Verdon to the
New York stage and featured a dazzling Cole Porter score
that placed no less than six songs
in the Top Ten!
Porter’s songs highlight a
wry comedy about the battle between
a serious-minded judge and a free-spirited
Montmartre nightclub owner during
La Belle Epoque – the era when
the scandalous can-can dance turned
Paris into “Gay
Paree!” The
immortal Porter score includes “I
Love Paris,” “C’est
Magnifique,” “It’s
All Right With Me,” “Allez
Vous-En,” “Live and Let
Live,” “I Am in Love,” and
the rousing title song.
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Hooray for What! (1937)
An NEA sponsored
restoration! A truly “lost” gem, Harold Arlen and
Yip Harburg’s
HOORAY FOR WHAT! is a wildly comic send-up
of fascism,
jingoism and war profiteering. The plot follows
a mild-mannered scientist who has accidentally invented
a terrible weapon capable of conquering the
world. When a glitch reverses
the effect
so it promotes peace and brotherhood instead,
the super-powers declare it worthless. The
Arlen/Harburg score features traditional
love ballads like “I’ve
Gone Romantic on You,” as
well as the bluesy “Moanin’ in
the Mornin’,” the
scathingly mocking “Down
With Love,” and “God’s
Country,” a
gentle chiding of American pop culture.
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| December
8 - January 2, 2005 |
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Once Upon a Mattress (1959)
Comedian Lea DeLaria
brings her own musical comedy panache to Mary
Rodgers and Marshall
Barer's classic Broadway
retelling of the Princess and the Pea. DeLaria
plays
Carol Burnett’s original role of Princess
Winnifred the Woebegone, newly arrived in a
distant kingdom to see if she can become the
Prince’s bride by passing a test set
by the wicked Queen (is there any other kind?).
The songs include “Shy,” “Happily
Ever After,” “Many Moons Ago,” “In
a Little While,” “Normandy,” and “Yesterday
I Loved You.”
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| March
30, 2005 - April 17, 2005 |
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Tenderloin (1960)
Jerry Bock & Sheldon
Harnick’s hilariously
twisted encore to their Pulitzer Prize-winning
FIORELLO! follows Rev. Brock’s crusade
to clean up turn-of-the-century Manhattan’s
notorious Tenderloin district. The good doctor
finds that many New Yorkers prefer their bawdy
hotspot of sin and vice to his less colorful
promise of salvation. The now-classic score
includes “Artificial Flowers,” “Dear
Friend,” “The Picture of Happiness,” “Good
Clean Fun,” and “My
Miss Mary.”
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| April
27, 2005 - May 22, 2005 |
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The Boys from
Syracuse (1938)
The first musical
ever adapted from Shakespeare remains the most
madcap musical farce ever
to animate the stage! Two sets of twins are
at the center of a wild tale of mistaken identities,
perplexed wives, disgruntled courtesans, and
outraged constables. The tangled web is eventually
unraveled, and along the way some of Richard
Rodgers & Lorenz
Hart’s
most ravishing songs are sung: “Falling
in Love With Love,” “This Can’t
Be Love,” “Sing For Your Supper,” “You
Have Cast Your Shadow on the Sea,” “Dear
Old Syracuse,” and
others.
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