Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Leave It to Me!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leave It to Me!
Original Broadway Playbill
MusicCole Porter
LyricsCole Porter
BookSamuel and Bella Spewack
Productions1938 Broadway

Leave It to Me! is a 1938 musical produced by Vinton Freedley with music and lyrics by Cole Porter. The book was a collaborative effort by Samuel and Bella Spewack, who also directed the Broadway production. The musical was based on the play Clear All Wires by the Spewacks, which was performed on Broadway for 93 performances in 1932,[1] and which was filmed in 1933, starring Lee Tracy, Benita Hume, Una Merkel and James Gleason.[2]

It was set in Stalinist Russia in the 1930s, with Stalin himself appearing at the end. But its comic treatment of Soviets and Nazis seemed misplaced during the Cold War, and the show was not revived until the late 1980s.[3]

Mary Martin made her Broadway debut in this musical,[4][5] which introduced the songs "Get Out of Town" and "My Heart Belongs to Daddy."

Productions

[edit]

The musical had pre-Broadway tryouts at the Shubert Theatre, New Haven, starting on October 13, 1938 and then at the Shubert Theatre, Boston, starting on October 17, 1938.[6]

It opened on Broadway at the Imperial Theatre on November 9, 1938 and closed on July 15, 1939 after 291 performances. It reopened on September 4, 1939 and closed September 16, 1939 for another 16 performances.[6] The choreography was by Robert Alton, costumes by Raoul Pene du Bois, set by Albert Johnson, and Ernest K. Gann was the General Manager. The cast featured William Gaxton, Victor Moore, Sophie Tucker, Mary Martin, Tamara Drasin, and Alexander Asro.[6] In his first Broadway show, Gene Kelly had a role as a dancer and Secretary to Mr. Goodhue.[7] The original production ended with the appearance of Joseph Stalin, who led a final dance to the Soviet anthem The Internationale. After the signing of the Nazi-Soviet pact, Stalin was dropped from the show.[8]

The Equity Library Theater in New York City presented a revival of the show – the first time it was revived in the United States – in March 1988.[9] The "Musicals Tonight!" series, New York City, held a staged concert in March 2001.[10] 42nd Street Moon Theatre Company, San Francisco, presented the musical in November–December 2001.[11]

Plot

[edit]
Victor Moore as Alonzo "Stinky" Goodhue on the cover of Stage magazine (October 1938)

In the late 1930s, aging businessman Alonzo "Stinky" Goodhue has become the American ambassador to the Soviet Union. The job was secured for him by his social-climbing wife, Leora, who helped to fund Franklin Roosevelt's re-election campaign. However, "Stinky" has no desire to live in Stalinist Russia. He is longing for the pleasures of his home in Topeka, Kansas, especially banana splits. He hopes his tenure as ambassador will be a short one. Meanwhile, an ambitious newspaper reporter, Buckley J. "Buck" Thomas, is employed to discredit Goodhue by his publisher who wants to be the ambassador himself. When Thomas and Goodhue realise they both have the same aims, they work together.

Goodhue plans to make major diplomatic gaffes, which will be publicised by Thomas. He delivers an inflammatory speech, but is hailed for his courage. He kicks the Ambassador of Nazi Germany, to the delight of the Soviets. He then attempts to shoot a Soviet official, but hits a counter-revolutionary aristocrat instead. Each time he ends up being hailed as a hero (in a parody of diplomatic speak, the British ambassador says "Britain views your deed [kicking the Nazi] with pride and alarm, congratulates and condemns you, and will now perform its breathtaking triple loop, suspended by a single wire, sitting in a tub of water."). His recall seems further away than ever.

In a subplot, Buck Thomas is involved with his boss's "protégée", the free-spirited Dolly Winslow. He falls in love with Colette, one of Goodhue's daughters. He has to extract himself from Dolly to win Colette. Dolly eventually finds herself stranded at a railroad station in Siberia. She slowly takes off her furs to admirers as she sings of her flirtations, but insists "My Heart Belongs to Daddy", referring to her "sweet millionaire" sugar-daddy.

The ambassador finally resolves to give up his tricks and tries to promote good relations between the United States and the Soviet Union; however his sincere attempts to improve matters now go disastrously wrong. He finally gets his wish to be recalled back to Topeka.

Original cast and characters

[edit]

Musical numbers

[edit]

Critical response

[edit]

Music scholar David Ewen wrote that Mary Martin "stole the limelight...in her Broadway debut." Appearing in a scene at a railway station, she did "a mock strip tease while removing her ermine wraps, and all the while chanting in a baby voice, 'My Heart Belongs to Daddy.' The house went into an uproar, thereby proclaiming a new queen of musical comedy."[5]

References

[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ Clear All Wires on IBDB.com
  2. ^ Clear All Wires! at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  3. ^ Gussow, Mel (March 14, 1988). "Reluctant Envoy's Tale: Porter's 'Leave It to Me!'". The New York Times. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
  4. ^ Ewen, David. "Cole Porter: The Great Sophisticate" theatrehistory.com (originally published in The Story of America's Musical Theater, 1961), accessed January 11, 2011
  5. ^ a b "Mary Martin is Broadway's newest song star", LIFE, p. 29, December 19, 1938
  6. ^ a b c "'Leave It to Me'" sondheimguide.com, accessed January 11, 2011
  7. ^ Krebs, Albin. "Gene Kelly, Dancer of Vigor and Grace, Dies" New York Times, February 3, 1996
  8. ^ Bordman, Gerald Martin and Hischak, Thomas S. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre, New York: Oxford University Press, 2004, p.379.
  9. ^ Gussow, Mel. "Review/Theater; Reluctant Envoy's Tale: Porter's 'Leave It to Me!'" New York Times, March 14, 1988
  10. ^ "'Leave it to Me Listing" Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine musicalstonight.org, accessed January 11, 2011
  11. ^ "'Leave It to Me!' listing" Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine 42ndstmoon.com, accessed January 11, 2011
[edit]