VINTAGE BROADWAY: Orchestral Selections
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Vintage Broadway Cole Porter Rodgers and Hammerstein II Jule Styne Burton Lane The Broadway musical has a tradition traceable to the New York première of...
Vintage Broadway
Cole Porter Rodgers and Hammerstein II Jule Styne Burton Lane
The Broadway musical has a tradition traceable to the
New York première of John Gay's Beggar's Opera at
the Nassau Theater, Manhattan Island in 1751. By 1900
the commercially-inspired modern musical had
evolved, via American burlesque and Negro minstrelsy,
with imported European conventions added, into the
tuneful, stylish, 'native American' bourgeois operettas
of Kerker and Victor Herbert. During the twentieth
century more than 2,000 productions were staged in
Broadway theatres, all of which owed something to the
time-honoured traditions of pantomime, ballet,
Viennese operetta and English comic-opera, vaudeville
and farce, although only fifty or so of these musicals
enjoyed initial runs of over five hundred performances
and far fewer exceeded one thousand or were
blockbusters on a par with (to cite a few obvious
examples) Show Boat (1927 - the first truly modern
musical in its marriage of music to a realistic storyline),
Oklahoma! (1947), South Pacific (1949), My Fair Lady
(1956), West Side Story and The Music Man (both 1957)
and The Sound Of Music (1959), as well as Kiss Me,
Kate (1948) and Funny Girl (1964), two more megamusicals
included here alongside several others less
famous, but which nonetheless qualify as light classics
and, being now half a century or more old, have earned
the tag 'vintage'.
With sophistication and elegance his keynotes, Cole
Porter (1891-1964) was a major figure of the twentiethcentury
screen and stage musical. For many years a
virtual synonym for Broadway, the Peru (Indiana)-born
composer-lyricist who wrote over twenty shows for the
Golden Mile is represented here by arrangements from
three of his mature efforts. The most durable of these,
the monumental Kiss Me, Kate, opened in New York in
December 1948, with Alfred Drake and Patricia
Morison taking the leads. Running for an initial 1,077
performances, it won a first Tony 'best musical' award
and two citations (best book, best score). With score
ranking among Porter's finest and with libretto by Sam
(1899-1971) and Bella Spewack (1899-1990), this witty
play-within-a-play paraphrase of Shakespeare's Taming
of the Shrew like its model traces family feud and
reconciliation. Staged by Jack Hylton in March 1951 in
London (501 performances) it was subsequently
revived at various international locations over the next
forty years and memorably filmed by MGM in 1953,
starring Howard Keel and Katherine Grayson.
Can-Can, with libretto by Abe Burrows (alias
Borowitz, 1910-1985) and produced by conductor Cy
Feuer and Ernest Martin, opened in New York in May,
1953. A typically Parisian piece of froth, with some
well-honed numbers, at 892 performances its Broadway
sojourn was Porter's second longest, and although it
never won the international acclaim of Kiss Me, Kate, it
enjoyed creditable New York revivals, in 1959, 1962
and 1981. In London it ran for 394 performances (from
October 1954) but is now best remembered through the
heavily adapted 1960 filming by Twentieth Century
Fox, starring Frank Sinatra, Shirley MacLaine, Maurice
Chevalier and Louis Jordan, which earned an Oscar
nomination for Nelson Riddle's musical direction.
Porter's last stage musical (discounting Aladdin,
originally filmed for television) Silk Stockings was
conceived as a sequel to Can-Can. Paris again is the
setting and its libretto, by George Simon Kaufman
(1889-1961), Leueen McGrath and Abe Burrows, is
derived from the screenplay of Ninotchka, a 1939 Greta
Garbo vehicle produced by Ernst Lubitsch for MGM.
The show ran on Broadway from February 1955 (478
performances) and whereas it received no London
commission, its film-version of 1957, by MGM,
starring Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse, choreography
by Eugene Loring, was favourably received.
The fifteen-year association of the New York
theatrical giants Richard Rodgers (1902-1979) and
Oscar Hammerstein II (1895-1960) began with
Oklahoma! in 1943. Chronologically their sixth
Broadway collaboration, their 'backstage' musical Me
And Juliet opened in New York in May 1953 and ran for
358 performances. Upstaged by Golden Mile
competition from Can-Can, from Harold Rome's Wish
You Were Here and Bernstein's Wonderful Town,
however, it was overlooked by critics who had praised
their earlier shows, notably Carousel and The King And
I. Me And Juliet had no London run and nowadays is
forgotten apart from its main theme, 'No Other Love', a
borrowing from Rodgers' filmscore of the 1954 screen
documentary Victory At Sea, its one enduring standard.
With book by Hammerstein, who was also lyricist,
and Joseph Albert Fields (1885-1966), Flower Drum
Song was Rodgers and Hammerstein's ninth Broadway
production. An adaptation of a Chinese-American novel
by Chin Y. Lee, it was directed by Gene Kelly and ran
for 600 performances on Broadway from December,
1958. Staged in London in March 1960, the following
year it was filmed by United Artists, featuring its
original stars Miyoshi Emeki, Nancy Kwan and James
Shigeta.
The New York team of lyricist Edgar 'Yip' Harburg
(alias Isidore Hochberg, 1898-1981) and composer
Burton Lane (alias Levy, born 1912) enjoyed various
key screen and stage successes from about 1940.
Harburg had earlier co-run an electrical business before
turning to song-writing in 1929, while until that same
year Lane was a staff writer with Tin Pan Alley music
publishers Remick. Before joining forces both worked
prolifically for Broadway and Hollywood. Opening in
January 1947, at 725 performances Finian's Rainbow
was easily the duo's greatest Broadway success,
although Emile Littler's parallel London production
(also 1947) failed after only 55 performances. The filmversion
(Warners, 1968) starred Fred Astaire, Petula
Clarke and Tommy Steele.
Born in London but raised in Chicago, Jule Styne
(alias Jules Kerwin Stein, 1905-1994) first won
recognition as a concert pianist and Hollywood
arranger, working variously with Sammy Cahn, Frank
Loesser, Harburg and Sondheim. From 1947 he
extended his activity to the Broadway stage, scoring his
first significant hit in 1949 with Gentlemen Prefer
Blondes (filmed in 1953). With book by Isobel Lennart
and lyrics by Bob Merrill, Funny Girl opened in March,
1964. Loosely based on the larger-than-life adventures
of New York east side comedienne Fanny Brice, it
provided the youthful Barbra Streisand with an ideal
starring vehicle. A subsequent high-gloss film
(Columbia, 1968) also starred the Oscar-winning
Streisand, as also did the less than auspicious 1975
screen sequel, Funny Lady.
Peter Dempsey
Can-Can (selections) (more info)
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Can-Can (selections) - 11:04
Funny Girl (selections) (more info)
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Funny Girl (selections) - 6:16
Me and Juliet (selections) (more info)
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Me and Juliet (selections) - 9:49
Finian's Rainbow (selections) (more info)
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Finian's Rainbow (selections) - 8:25
Kiss Me, Kate (selections) (more info)
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Kiss Me, Kate (selections) - 10:32
Flower Drum Song (selections) (more info)
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Flower Drum Song (selections) - 9:30
Silk Stockings (selections) (more info)
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Silk Stockings (selections) - 10:59