A poster from the original 1934 production. |
On November 21, 1934 a silly froth of a musical farce opened at Broadway’s Alvin
Theater featuring a tiny, but leather lunged diva-to-be named Ethel
Merman. Cole Porter’s Anything Goes has gone on to be oft revived in New York, London,
and in the movies on the basis of it
silly romance at sea plot and the composer’s classic songs.
The book by Guy Bolton and P. G.
Woodhouse spun romantic intrigue
and classical farce misunderstanding
aboard the liner S.S. American featured the antics of Billy
Crocker, a stowaway in love with
heiress Hope Harcourt, who was engaged to Lord Evelyn Oakleigh
while nightclub singer Reno
Sweeney and Public Enemy #13 Moonface Martin aided him in the quest
for love.
The show had a disastrous try-out in Boston. The script was
re-written, much of it unaccredited, by Director
Howard Lindsay and Russell
Crouse. Part of the problem
was that the producers thought the show should center around the conventional
young people—Billy Crocker and Hope Harcourt.
But they were boring. By
contrast saucy Reno Sweeny and the comic gangster Moonface Martin
popped, especially in the performances by young Merman and veteran character
actor Victor Moore. Big changes were last minute song additions by Porter, scribbling away furiously in
a Newport, Rhode Island guest
house. The additions included the spectacular first act closer with
Merman singing and dancing with the crew
of the liner to Anything Goes. The song also gave a new
name to the play that had already gone through Crazy Week and Hard
to Get.
Other songs in the original production included
such future standards as I Get a Kick Out of You, You’re
the Top, Blow Gabriel Blow, and The Gypsy in Me.
The final score was so strong that another future classic, You’d be So
Easy to Love was cut at the
last minute because the show was running long. It would finally appear
two years later being sung by James Stewart to Eleanor Powell in
the film Born to Dance.
The show had major Broadway revivals in 1962, 1987, and 2011 each of which did major tinkering with the song line-up, often
adding Porter songs from other shows,
re-arranging the order, even changing which character sang which songs.
Among the Porter classic shuffled into the show in one or both of these
versions were Friendship, It’s De-Lovely,
and Let’s Misbehave. The many amateur and community theater
revivals of the show generally use either the 1934 or 1987 scripts, although
even these productions often throw in other Porter material.
The two film versions, both by Paramount,
took even more liberties with the
plot, even re-naming major characters.
Both the 1936 and 1956 versions were re-written to shift the emphasis to the
male lead, played both times by Paramount’s biggest star Bing Crosby. And
each of the films replaced some of Porter’s songs, particularly the lesser
production numbers, with music by other writers. In 1936, in which Merman
reprised her role as Reno, Hoagy Carmichael and three other composers
contributed to the show. The 1956 version had to be drastically
re-written by Sidney Sheldon because Crosby could no longer play a naive
juvenile. This time the songwriting team of Sammy Cahn and Jimmy
Van Heusen provided the additional material.
In 1954 Merman, then 50 years old, reprised he
break-out role in a one hour version on The Colgate Comedy Hour
with Frank Sinatra, who she detested,
as the male lead, renamed yet again, and Burt Lahr as Moonface Martin.
Merman got to do the title number in a recreation of the 1934 production,
complete with choreography, in 1979
as part of the TV show Musical Comedy Tonight.
Three divas as Reno Sweeney--Ethel Merman, Patti LuPone, and Sutton Foster. |
The role of Reno has proved to be irresistible diva bait over the
years. Patti LuPone strutted her stuff in the hugely popular 1987
revival. The reigning queen of British musicals, Elaine Page produced her
own West End production the following year. Sutton Foster, a diva
for the new millennium, took the part in 2011.
The role of Reno has proved to be irresistible diva bait over the
years. Patti LuPone strutted her stuff in the hugely popular 1987
revival. The reigning queen of British musicals, Elaine Page produced her
own West End production the following year. Sutton Foster, a diva
for the new millennium, took the part in 2011.
The Tony
Awards didn’t exist when the original production hit the boards. But the 1987
and 2011 revivals took home a combined 6 trophies
plus armfuls of critic’s Drama Desk
Awards.
And somewhere right now an ambitious high school drama teacher with the stand out female student performer of
his career is struggling to get a
large cast to devolve the complicated choreography of that first act closer.
No comments:
Post a Comment