The Lusty Month of May from Camelot sung by Julie Andrews.
Alfred Lord Tennyson wrote “In the
Spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.” Alan
Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe
had a much randier assessment in
their 1960 Broadway musical Camelot.
The
musical was adapted from T. H. White’s 1958 The Once and Future King, the
same Arthurian novel on which Disney based it’s 1963 animated film The Sword in the Stone.
It was directed by Moss Hart and ran on Broadway for 873
performances, winning four Tony Awards
and spawning several revivals, foreign productions, and the 1967 Warner Bros. film Camelot. The stellar
original cast included Richard Burton as
King Arthur, Robert Goulet as Lancelot,
David Hurst as Merlin, and Roddy McDowell as
Mordred.
Julie Andrews who broke out to American stardom in Lerner and Loewe’s
My
Fair Lady was the duo’s first and only pick to play Guinevere.
Lerner & Loewe's struggles to get Camelot on Broadway were chronicled in a Time cover piece.
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Andrews
was famously snubbed by Warner Bros. when Audrey
Hepburn was cast as Eliza Doolittle in
My Fair Lady. Despite film musical triumphs in Disney’s Mary
Poppins and the mega-hit Sound of Music and solid dramatic roles
in The
Americanization of Emily and Alfred
Hitchcock’s Torn Curtin, she did
not appear in the 1967 film. Miffed by Jack Warner’s insult, Andrews declined an offer to sell. Largely in solidarity with her Burton, Goulet, and McDowell did likewise
replaced with non-singer Vanessa
Redgrave, Richard Harris, Franco Nero, and David Hemmings respectively.
John F. Kennedy was famously
fond of Camelot and frequently played
the enormously successful original cast
album in the White House. In a 1963 Life interview, Jacqueline Kennedy, referenced
a line from the Lerner and Loewe
musical to describe the Kennedy era White House—Don’t let it be forgot, that
once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment, that was known as Camelot.” The martyred
President’s friend and speech writer Ted Sorensen cemented the public identification of the
administration with Camelot in his subsequent books Kennedy in 1965 and The
Kennedy Legacy in 1970.
The original Broadway Camelot poster.
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In
the play July Andrews’ Guinevere was hardly the nearly pristine white goddess
portrayed in Le Morte d’Arthur by Sir
Thomas Malory and subsequent romances. Instead she was a headstrong lass quite smitten
by the attentions of Arthur. And she
was not shy about flaunting it in
the song The Lusty Month of May.
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