You'll Never Walk Alone from Carousel by Renée Fleming.
Note—A couple of days ago I posted Hank Williams classic I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry as a response
to the social distancing and isolation many of us are experiencing during the
Coronavirus emergency. Folks seemed to
like that so much that yesterday I featured British World War II favorite Vera
Lynn singing the romantic separation ballad I’ll Be Seeing You and announced that I would make one of my Murfin
Music Festival a regular feature for the foreseeable. Today I am migrating it to Heretic, Rebel, a Thing to Flout from where it can easily be shared widely.
Since
this is Sunday and some of us are
really missing our church connection and in need of a dose of spirituality and encouragement
here is something inspirational. But today’s song does not come from any hymnal, it comes from Broadway.
The graduation scene from the original Broadway production of Rodger and Hammerstein's Carousel.
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Carousel was the second musical by Richard Rodgers and Oscar
Hammerstein II. It was Ference Molnár’s 1909 play Liliom,
transplanting its Budapest setting
to the Maine coastline in 1873. It was an unusual and grim choice in an era
when most stage musicals were still revues,
frothy romantic comedies, or light operettas. In the show innocent textile mill girl Julie Jordon meets rough and tumble carousel barker Billy Bigelow at carnival set up for the town’s annual clam bake. He woos,
seduces, and abuses the girl before committing suicide after a botched robbery. Then in an apparently universalist heaven, he is summoned from his duties as a star polisher by the Starkeeper to return invisibly to earth
to save his daughter Louise who is
in trouble and considering suicide
herself due to the shame of being a bastard and living as a social pariah with her disgrace mother. In his frustration at being unable to get
through to Louise, Billy slaps her.
Unlike the original play in which the daughter is doomed, Carousel ends in a moment of uplifting triumph as Louise marches in for her high school graduation.
In
the musical Julie is comforted after Billy’s death by Netti Fowler, Julie’s wise cousin
and owner of a small seaside resort who sings You’ll Never Walk Alone. The song is reprised in the final graduation scene by the whole cast.
In
the original production Julie was played by Jan Clayton, later noted as the mom on TV’s Lassie, Billy by macho baritone John Raite, Christine Johnson
as Nettie, and ingénue Bambi Lynn as
Louise. Many performers have taken the
stage in numerous Broadway Revivals, London
productions, touring companies
and innumerable regional, community, and school theater productions.
The movie poster for the 1956 film adaptation.
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The
1956 20th Century Fox film adaptation
Featured Shirley Jones, Gordon MacRea, Claramae Turner, and Susan
Luckey in the roles.
Renée Fleming as Nettie comforts Julie in the 2018 Broadway revival of Carousel
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Today
we are featuring a version of You’ll
Never Walk Alone from the 2018 Broadway revival by opera lyric soprano diva Renée Fleming.
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