Showing posts with label Damn Yankees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Damn Yankees. Show all posts

June 23, 2025

20,000 vinyl LPs 388: Redhead ~ Bob Fossie & Gwen Verdon

 ~  
vinyl LP front cover detail 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®


Today is the birthday of American choreographer, dancer, filmmaker, and stage director Bob Fosse who was known for his work on stage and screen; he is one of the most influential figures in the field of jazz dance in the twentieth century.  He revolutionized musicals with his distinct style of dance and was on a par with Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly.       
 
Fosse started his career acting in the musical productions of Call Me Mister (1947), Billion Dollar Baby (1951), and Pal Joey (1952). He transitioned into directing and choreographing musical works, winning Tony Awards for choreographing The Pajama Game (1954), Damn Yankees (1955), Redhead (1959), Little Me (1963), Sweet Charity (1966), Pippin (1972), Dancin' (1978), and Big Deal (1986), as well as for directing Pippin. He also worked on Bells Are Ringing (1956), New Girl in Town (1958), How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1961), and Chicago (1975).           
 

vinyl LP front cover 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
photo of album cover by Styrous®

    
 
 
 
vinyl LP front cover detail 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®
 
 
Fosse forged an uncompromising modern style, characterized by finger-snapping, tilted bowler hats, fishnet stockings, splayed gloved fingers, turned-in knees and toes, shoulder rolls and jazz hands. His third wife was dancer and actress Gwen Verdon, whom he met choreographing Damn Yankees, in which she starred and with whom he collaborated on a number of theater and film projects.          
 
Fosse's extramarital affairs put a strain on the marriage and by 1971 they were separated, although they remained legally married until his death in 1987. Verdon never re-partnered. During their joint career, Fosse would continually take blame from critics while Gwen Verdon would get praise. However, Verdon always looked out for him and was Fosse's personal press secretary throughout their marriage.        
 
  
vinyl LP back cover 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
photo of album back cover by Styrous®


In Redhead, Fosse used one of the first ballet sequences in a show that contained five different styles of dance: Fosse's jazz, a cancan, a gypsy dance, a march and an old-fashioned English music hall number. Set in London in the 1880s, around the time of Jack the Ripper, the musical is a murder mystery in the setting of a wax museum.         
 


vinyl LP back cover details 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
photo of album back cover by Styrous®





vinyl LP back cover detail 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
detail photo of album back cover by Styrous®




 
vinyl LP back cover detail 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
photo of album back cover by Styrous®






vinyl LP back cover detail 
 cover design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian
photo of album back cover by Styrous®


In 1961, Fosse's epilepsy was revealed when he had a seizure onstage during rehearsals for The Conquering Hero. He died of a heart attack on September 23, 1987, at George Washington University Hospital while the revival of Sweet Charity was opening at the nearby National Theatre. He had collapsed in Verdon's arms near the Willard Hotel. As he had requested, Verdon and Nicole Fosse scattered his ashes in the Atlantic Ocean off Quogue, Long Island, where Fosse had been living with his girlfriend of four years.  A month after his death, Verdon fulfilled Fosse's request for his friends to "go out and have dinner on me" by hosting a star-studded, celebrity-filled evening at Tavern on the Green with Verdon, Reinking, Jessica Lange, Roy Scheider, Ben Vereen, and E. L. Doctorow attending.          


 
vinyl LP side 1 
photo by Styrous®
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
vinyl LP side 2 
photo by Styrous®
 
 
 
Tracklist:
       
Side 1:
        
A1 - Orchestra* – Overture
A2 - Patrons* –    The Simpson Sisters' Door
A3 - Gwen Verdon – The Right Finger Of My Left Hand
A4 - Gwen Verdon, Richard Kiley, Leonard Stone – Just For Once
A5 - Gwen Verdon – Merely Marvelous
A6 - Leonard Stone – The Uncle Sam Rag
A7 - Gwen Verdon – Erbie Fitch's Twitch
A8 - Richard Kiley, Leonard Stone – She's Just Not Enough Woman For Me
A9 - Gwen Verdon, Cynthia Latham, Doris Rich – Behave Yourself
       
Side 2:
       
B1 - Gwen Verdon, Richard Kiley – Look Who's In Love
B2 - Richard Kiley – My Girl Is Just Enough Woman For Me
B3 - Orchestra* – Essie's Vision
B4 - Bob Dixon (17) – Two Faces In The Dark
B5 - Richard Kiley – I'm Back In Circulation
B6 - Joy Nichols, Pat Ferrier – We Loves Ya, Jimey, Arranged By Sid Ramin
B8 - Gwen Verdon, Richard Kiley – I'll Try
B9 - Entire Company* – Chase And Finale
        
Companies, etc.
       
    Pressed By – RCA Records Pressing Plant, Indianapolis
    Recorded At – RCA Victor Studios, New York
        
Credits:
       
    Arranged By [Dance Music] – Roger Adams
    Choreography [Associate Choreographer] – Donald McKayle
    Design Concept – Rouben Ter-Arutunian
    Directed By, Choreography – Bob Fosse
    Lighting – Jean Rosenthal
    Lyrics By, Liner Notes – Dorothy Fields
    Music By – Albert Hague
    Music Director, Arranged By [Vocal Arrangements] – Jay Blackton
    Orchestrated By – Philip J. Lang, Robert Russell Bennett
    Presenter – Lawrence Carr, Robert Fryer
    Production Manager – Robert Linden
    Vocals [Essie Whimple] – Gwen Verdon
    Vocals [George Poppett] – Leonard Stone
    Vocals [Maude Simpson] – Cynthia Latham
    Vocals [May] – Joy Nichols
    Vocals [Sarah Simpson] – Doris Rich
    Vocals [Tilly] – Pat Ferrier
    Vocals [Tom Baxter] – Richard Kiley
    Written-By [Book By] – David Shaw (23), Dorothy Fields, Herbert Fields, Sidney Sheldon
        
Notes:
       
Original 1959 Broadway Cast recording of the murder mystery stage musical starring Gwen Verdon and Richard Kiley.
Recorded Feb 8, 1959
       
Barcode and Other Identifiers
 
    Matrix / Runout (Side A Runout): K2 PP1128-3S A2 I
    Matrix / Runout (Side B Runout): K2 PP1129-4S I A2
 
Gwen Verdon, Richard Kiley – Redhead (An Original Cast Recording)
Label: RCA Victor – LOC-1048
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Mono
Country: US
Released: 1959
Genre: Stage & Screen
Style: Musical        

         
Viewfinder links:        
         
Fred Astaire            
Bob Fosse         
Albert Hague              
Gene Kelly           
Richard Kiley           
Jessica Lange         
Rouben Ter-Arutunian        
Gwen Verdon         
        
Net links:        
        
Britannica ~ Bob Fosse         
Masterworks Broadway ~ Bob Fosse        
PBS ~ Bob Fosse          
Play Bill ~ Bob Fosse         
Senses of Cinema ~ Bob Fosse                
        
YouTube links:        
         
Damn Yankees ~  
     Who's Got the Pain (Bob Fosse & Gwen Verdon)               
Bob Fosse dance numbers              
Bob Fosse Dancing            
Bob Fosse (documentary) (1 hr.)           
Kiss Me Kate ~ From This Moment On          
Redhead ~ complete recordings         
Sweet Charity ~ Hey Big Spender        
Tommy Tune & Ann Reinking                 
        
         
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Monday, June 23, 2025        
       
 
 









June 1, 2022

Damn Yankees articles/mentions

 ~         
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Damn Yankees     
date & photographer unknown      
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
     
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 

May 5, 2022

damn yankees & interesting suff over sixty years

 ~     
 
 
 
Over sixty years ago today, on May 5, 1955 - The musical Damn Yankees opened in New York City on Broadway at the 46th Street Theatre.  

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I mostly hate sports but I love this musical about the game of baseball, which is only slightly less boring than U. S. football. However, I did love it when my dad would take me to the Seals Stadium (affectionately called "The Queen of Concrete") on 16th and Bryant to watch the San Francisco Seals play.   
 
 
 
date & photographer unknown

 
Actually, the main reason I loved going to the baseball game was that there were vendors with large metal barrels that had spigots on the bottom strapped to the front of their bodies walking through the bleachers selling the hot soup that was in the barrels. It was usually cold so I always had a cup of soup!!!!   
 
Anyway, I've digressed; what a surprise! So, back to Damn Yankees. I like this musical as it has a lot of fun songs and it has a really interesting plot (who can argue with the Devil?). Fifty-year-old Joe Boyd transforms into 22-year-old Joe Hardy. The song the two Joes sing during the transition, Goodbye Old Girl, puts the play on my all-time favorite list. I wrote about the musical and in particular, the song, over ten years ago with lots of information in it that I won't repeat but you may read if you'd like at the (link below).      
 
In 1960 there was a lovely instrumental jazz quartet rendition of Goodbye recorded by Art Farmer on trumpet with Tommy Williams on bass, Tommy Flanagan on piano and Albert Heath gently backing on drums (link below).    

In 2017 there was a revival of Damn Yahkees with Maggie Gyllenhaal, sister of Jake Gyllenhaal, taking the Gwen Verdon role as the seductress Lola and Whoopi Goldberg as the gender-bent Applegate,       
 
photo by Walter McBride 
 
 
 
Goodby, Old Girl lyrics
 
[JOE BOYD]
Goodbye, old girl
My old girl
When you awaken, I'll be gone
Can't tell you where I go
It isn't fair, I know
But trust in me and carry on

Goodbye old friend
My old friend
There's sometin' I must let you know
I haven't said it much
I guess I've lost my touch
But, my old girl, I love you so

No I know it hasn't all been rosy
We've had squabblin' days when tears were brought about
But in a moment or two
We would bill and coo
And never even knew
What we fought about
And now your Joe has to go
But he'll come back to you again
So sleep your sleep, old girl
Our love will keep, old girl, till then
My old girl
Goodbye

[JOE HARDY]
Hey
Did you...?
I can't beliеve it
Wham

And though your Joe has to go
He may comе back to you again
So sleep your sleep, old girl
Our love will keep, old girl, till then

Goodbye, old girl
My old girl
Goodbye
 
 
Other damn yankees stuff 

Damn Yankees was an American rock supergroup formed in 1989. It included Tommy Shaw of Styx, Jack Blades of Night Ranger, Ted Nugent of The Amboy Dukes and Michael Cartellone a drummer who would later join Lynyrd Skynyrd). That's a pretty good lineup.       

The group is remembered for the songs High Enough and Where You Goin' Now, both of them Top 40 hits in the early 1990s.       

          
photo by Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives_Getty Images


Viewfinder links:
          
Art Farmer         
Whoopi Goldberg         
Gwen Verdon         
         
Net links:
       
Jack Blades ~ How I wrote Damn Yankees' High Enough        
        
YouTube links:
Damn Yankees ~ Goodbye, Old Girl 1958 (soundtrack)       
Damn Yankees ~ High Enough         
Damn Yankees ~ Where You Goin' Now                   
Art Farmer ~ Goodbye Old Girl        
         









Styrous® ~ Thursday, May 5, 2022     
        




















Art Farmer articles/mentions

 ~       
      
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

May 5, 2021

20,000 vinyl LPs 289: Damn Yankees & Gwen Verdon

 ~  
vinyl LP front cover   
cover photo by Gene Cook 
photo of album cover by Styrous®
 

Sixty-six years ago today the Broadway musical Damn Yankees opened in 1955. I have loved this show for decades; the songs have become classics because of their beauty, creativity and even humor.          

Goodbye Old Girl is among my top favorite songs; it is one of love and hope for the future with a touch of wistfulness. The plot is based on the legend of Faust. Robert Shafer (Joe Boyd) sells his soul to Mr. Applegate, (really the Devil) played by Ray Walston who is billed as the star of the musical, in exchange for youth; Stephen Douglass (Joe Hardy) is the youth he becomes (plot below). The song is occurs during the transformation scene. In the 1958 film version, Walston & Shafer reprise their roles but Joe Hardy is played and the song sung (slightly off key) by Tab Hunter. Who wouldn't sell their soul to look like him?    
 
 
 

Another reason I love this show is Gwen Verdon. What a treasure she was. In Yankees she plays the role of Lola, with a capitol LA. She is the devil's familiar sent by him to seduce Joe so he won't break his bond; she sings and made a huge hit of the song, Whatever Lola Wants. Can-Can made her a star but Lola made her a legend!         


Damn Yankees - 1955
photographer unknown


The dance numbers choreographed by Bob Fosse are a bunch of fun. There is Shoeless Joe from Hannibal, Mo., a rollicking hoedown led by Rae Allen, with the Baseball Players cast. 
 
Verdon and Fosse team up on the song, Who's Got the Pain (When They Do the Mambo)?.  Then there is Two Lost Souls both with gestures that would become signature Fosse moves.          
 
 
Damn Yankees - Two Lost Souls
photographer unknown
 
 
Fosse met Verdon in this show; they would go on to become a fantastic dance team known as the "Dynamic Duo of Broadway" and they even married.         


Damn Yankees -Who's Got the Pain 
photographer unknown

  
The songs are great! Heart is a bouncy, joyous and inspiring tune sung by baseball team members, Russ Brown, Jimmie Komack, Nathaniel Frey and Albert Linville.        
 
 
Russ Brown, Jimmie Komack, Nathaniel Frey and Albert Linville 
Damn Yankees - 1955
photographer unknown
 
 
Damn Yankees - entire cast 1955
photographer unknown
 
            
Damn Yankees won the Tony Award for Best Musical, both Douglass and Walston for Best Performance By a Leading Actor in a Musical, Verdon for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical and Fossie for Best Choreography; it won many other awards as well as.          


vinyl LP back cover
photo by Styrous®


Damn Yankees ran for 1,019 performances in the original Broadway production. Adler and Ross's success with it and The Pajama Game (link below) seemed to point to a bright future for them, but Ross suddenly died of chronic bronchiectasis at age 29, several months after Damn Yankees opened.   




vinyl LP, side 1
photo by Styrous®

 

   
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1 - Shannon Bolin, Robert Shafer, Baseball Fans*, Baseball Widows* – 
               Overture: Six Months Out Of Every Year - 4:40
A2 - Robert Shafer, Stephen Douglass – Goodbye, Old Girl - 3:12
A3 - Russ Brown (3), Jimmie Komack*, Nathaniel Frey, Albert Linville – Heart - 4:34
A4 - Rae Allen, Baseball Players* – Shoeless Joe From Hannibal, Mo. - 3:40
A5 - Gwen Verdon – A Little Brains - A Little Talent - 3:35
A6 - Stephen Douglass, Shannon Bolin – A Man Doesn't Know - 3:07

Side 2:

B1 - Gwen Verdon – Whatever Lola Wants - 3:05
B2 - Jean Stapleton, Ronn Cummins, Jackie Scholle, Cherry Davis – Heart (Reprise) - 1:22
B3 - Gwen Verdon, Eddie Phillips (2) – Who's Got The Pain? - 2:50
B4 - Jimmie Komack*, Nathaniel Frey, Baseball Players* – The Game - 4:24
B5 - Stephen Douglass, Shannon Bolin – Near To You - 5:27
B6 - Ray Walston – Those Were The Good Old Days - 2:32
B7 - Gwen Verdon, Stephen Douglass – Two Lost Souls - 2:15
B8 - Shannon Bolin, Robert Shafer – A Man Doesn't Know (Reprise) - 1:22
B9 - The Entire Company* – Finale - 0:55

Companies, etc.

    Copyright © – RCA
    Pressed By – RCA Records Pressing Plant, Indianapolis

Credits:

    Arranged By [Dance Music Arrangements] – Roger Adams
    Choreography – Bob Fosse
    Directed By [Production Directed By] – George Abbott
    Leader [Musical Direction By], Written-By [Book by] – Hal Hastings*
    Lyrics By – Richard Adler
    Music By – Jerry Ross (2)
    Orchestrated By [Orchestrations By] – Don Walker (3)
    Other [Based On The Novel, "The Year The Yankees Lost The Pennant" By], Written-By [Book by] – Douglass Wallop
    Other [Lola] – Gwen Verdon
    Other [Starring] – Ray Walston, Stephen Douglass
    Other [with] – Eddie Phillips (2), Jimmie Komack*, Jean Stapleton, Nathaniel Frey, Rae Allen, Richard Bishop (3), Robert Shafer (6), Russ Brown (3), Shannon Bolin
    Photography By [Cover Photo] – Gene Cook
    Presenter – Frederick Brisson, Harold Prince, Robert E. Griffith
    Presenter [in association with] – Albert B. Taylor
    Set Designer [Scenery], Design [Costumes Designed By] – Jean Eckart, William Eckart (2)

Notes:

 
 
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Matrix / Runout (Side A label): F2PP-3748
    Matrix / Runout (Side B label): F2PP-3748
    Matrix / Runout (Side A stamped [var. 1]): F2 PP3748-17S
    Matrix / Runout (Side B stamped [var. 1]): F2PP-3749-14S
    Matrix / Runout (Side A stamped [var. 2]): F2 PP3748-12S A2
    Matrix / Runout (Side B stamped [var. 2]): F2 PP 3749 6Ⓢ E1
    Pressing Plant ID (Both sides stamped; RCA Indy): I
 
Various – Damn Yankees - Original Cast Recording
Label: RCA Victor – LOC-1021
Format: Vinyl, Album, LP, Mono
Country: US
Released: 1955
Genre: Stage & Screen
Style: Musical
 
   
         
Viewfinder links:        
         
Stephen Douglass         
Bob Fosse        
Tab Hunter        
Gwen Verdon         
Ray Walston               
        
Net links:        
        
         
        
        
Plot        
        
        
YouTube links:        
        
Damn Yankees ~               
Cast ~ Shoeless Joe from Hannibal, Mo. (original cast)        
Shafer & Douglass ~ Goodbye Old Girl (original cast)   
Shafer & Douglass ~ Goodbye Old Girl (film version)        
Gwen Verdon ~ Whatever Lola Wants, Lola Gets (original cast)   
Gwen Verdon ~ Whatever Lola Wants, Lola Gets (film version)    
Verdon & Fosse ~ Who's Got the Pain? (film version)              
Verdon & Hunter ~ Two Lost Souls (film version)              
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, May 5, 2021