Read Loverly:The Life and Times of My Fair Lady (Broadway Legacies) Online
Authors: Dominic McHugh
Tags: #The Life And Times Of My Fair Lady
Lerner and Loewe
abandonment of initial version, 13
casting ideas, 10
discussions with Mary Martin, 9
discussions over title, 44
initial discussions with Pascal, 7
resumption of project, 20–21
royalty discussions, 11, 12, 20
track record of, 7–8
visits to London, 27–30, 41.
See also individual song titles
Lewis, Robert, 10, 19, 28
Levin, Herman
announcement of
Pygmalion
musical, 20
approach to Michael Kidd, 24–25
approaches to prospective stars, 21–22
contracts, 39–41
negotiations with Beaumont, 30–33, 36–39
negotiations with Holloway’s agent, 29–31
as producer of
Li’l Abner
, 19
relationship with Cecil Beaton, 28
relationship with Oliver Smith, 25–27
Lieberson, Goddard, 44, 173, 178
Liff, Samuel, 46, 179
“Limehouse,” 58, 63, 69, 97
Loesser, Frank, 7, 8, 196
Loewe, Frederick
collaboration with Harold Rome, 14–16.
See also
Lerner and Loewe;
individual song titles
Lowe, Roy, 40, 41
Mackintosh, Sir Cameron, 187–89
Mark Hellinger Theatre, 39, 178, 183
Martin, Mary, 2, 4, 6
Lerner’s pursuit of, 10, 11–12
reaction to Lerner and Loewe’s work, 8–9
Marshall, Armina, 6, 11
Mason, Jack, 46, 96, 121, 152, 169
Menotti, Gian Carlo, 7
Merman, Ethel, 9, 40
Miller, Freda, 109, 113, 115, 116, 161
Minnelli, Vincente, 118, 181
Mordden, Ethan, 197
Morris, William, 1
The Most Happy Fella
, 7
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 5
Mulhare, Edward, 176, 179
The Music Man
, 201
My Square Laddie
, 176, 180
Nesbitt, Cathleen, 39, 40, 176, 185
New Haven, 39, 44–47, 58, 170
Nixon, Marni, 130, 180, 181, 190
Nunn, Trevor, 57, 170, 188–90, 209
Offenbach, Jacques, 5
O’Hara, Kelli, 186
Oklahoma!
7, 42, 110, 170, 201
“On the Street Where You Live”
musical sources for, 155–58
operetta, 198, 207
original lyric for, 215
On the Town
, 14, 177
One Touch of Venus
, 1, 6, 9, 206
“Opening,” 69, 122–25
operetta, 130, 167, 179, 196–99
orchestrations.
See
Bennett, Robert Russell; Lang, Philip J.; Mason, Jack;
individual song titles
“Overture,” 69, 122–25
Ovid, 1
Paint Your Wagon
, 7, 12, 95, 191–92, 201
Lerner-Schwartz version of, 16–18
Pascal, Gabriel, 109, 206
as initial producer of musical, 6–11, 14, 19, 20
as producer of
Pygmalion
movie, 4, 23, 35, 53, 55
Pascal, Valerie, 55
Philadelphia, 4, 39, 44, 47, 130
Pickering, Colonel Hugh
as Eliza’s protector, 204, 205
observing Eliza at the ball, 164
singing role of, 198
tracking down Eliza, 144
“You Did It,” 166–67
“Please Don’t Marry Me,” 98, 102, 142, 157, 169
Porter, Cole, 7–10, 200, 201
“Processional,” 163
Previn, André, 13, 17, 182
Prince, Harold, 15
Pryce, Jonathan, 188–89
Pygmalion myth, 1, 110
Pygmalion
(Shaw)
deviations from, 85, 93, 95
film, 4, 57, 64, 72
play, 3, 4–14, 49–58
“The Rain in Spain,” 76, 91, 100, 102, 122
Redgrave, Michael, 11, 12, 22, 26, 176
rehearsals, 19–22, 44–48
Richardson, Ian, 183–84
Riding, Joanna, 189
Rittmann, Trude, 96, 122, 149, 162–64, 169
and “Dress Ballet, 109, 113–17
and Entr’acte, 165
and “Get Me to the Church on Time,” 153–54
and “A Hymn to Him, 144–45
and “I’m an Ordinary Man,” 148–49
and “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face,” 147
and “Just You Wait,” 129, 132
and “On the Street Where You Live,” 132
and Overture, 122–25
and “The Rain in Spain,” 160–63
and “The Servants’ Chorus,” 158–59
and “Show Me,” 133
and “Shy,” 103, 104
and “Why Can’t the English,” 136, 139
Robertson, Liz, 187
Robin, Leo, 14, 15
Rodgers and Hammerstein
Allegro
, 7
Carousel
, 3, 7, 144, 201
dominance in secondary literature, 193–94, 199, 200
The King and I
, 9, 11
Oklahoma!
3, 7, 21, 170
Pipe Dream
, 27
Pygmalion
musical, 6, 23–24, 49, 95
South Pacific
, 2, 9, 12
romantic ambiguity
in Higgins–Eliza relationship, 2, 80–84, 86–90
precedent of
The King and I
, 30
“Say a Prayer for Me Tonight,” 119
understudy, 39
Rome, Harold, 14–16, 21
Rose, George, 180, 183–84
Ross, Jerry, 13
Saints and Sinners
, 14–16
Sanders, George, 10
“Say a Prayer for Me Tonight,” 47, 62, 162, 171
musical sources for, 118–21
Schwartz, Arthur, 7, 13, 16, 18, 19
“The Servants’ Chorus,” 91, 117, 121, 128, 158
settings, 88–90
Shaw, George Bernard
attitude toward operettas/musicals based on his works, 4–6, 11
relationship with Gabriel Pascal, 8
socialist outlook of, 49–51.
See also
Pygmalion
Shelley, Mary, 1
“Show Me”
musical sources for, 132–33
as part of show’s structure, 78, 83, 90, 91, 93
Shubert Theatre, New Haven, 39, 46, 170
“Shy,” 72, 76, 79, 100, 102–5
Silk Stockings
, 201
Sirmay, Dr. Albert, 40
Smart, Gino, 122, 154
socialism, 49, 137
“The Son of the Wooden Soldier,” 161
Sondheim, Stephen, 187, 201
South Pacific
, 2, 6, 9, 12, 16
Straus, Oscar, 4, 5
Styne, Jule, 10, 15, 21, 26
Swenson, Inga, 180
Sullivan, Sir Arthur, 167, 196–97
Swain, Joseph, 54, 203
The Taming of the Shrew
, 8, 200, 207
Tenderloin
, 12
Theatre Guild, 3–10, 13–14, 20–22
“There’s a Thing Called Love,” 100
This Is the Army
, 201
timescale, 92–94
title, 44, 125
“The Undeserving Poor,” 58, 60, 97, 206
Walker, Nancy, 177
Warner Bros., 181
Weaver, Fritz, 180
Weill, Kurt, 1, 4, 6–9, 197
West Side Story
, 132, 181, 196, 201
“What’s to Become of Me,” 97–98
What’s Up?
7, 191
Where’s Charley?
7
“Why Can’t the English?”
musical gestures in, 197
musical sources for, 134–42
original lyric of, 213
as part of show’s structure, 88, 91
Wilson, John C., 10, 12
Wilson, Lou, 36
Wish You Were Here
, 13, 15
“With a Little Bit of Luck”
musical gestures in, 197
musical sources for, 151–52
“Without You”
genesis of, 72, 79, 86–88, 91
musical sources for, 133–34, 146–47, 149
original lyric of, 211
as part of show’s structure, 90–91
Wonderful Town
, 14
“Wouldn’t It Be Loverly?”
in movie version, 182
musical gestures in, 197, 207
musical sources for, 125–27
as part of show’s structure, 69, 72, 78, 88, 90
“You Did It”
concerted form of, 192, 198
cut passage from, 217
genesis of, 65, 72, 78–79, 90
Michael Kidd’s reaction to, 24
musical sources for, 165–68
“You Haven’t Changed At All,” 192
Ziegfeld Follies
, 176