Showing posts with label Rosalind Russell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosalind Russell. Show all posts

May 23, 2021

Rosalind Russell articles/mentions

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Gypsy          
     
     
     
     
     
        
       
       
       
publicity photo 
       
           
     
         







May 21, 2021

20,000 vinyl LPs 291: Gypsy, Ethel Merman & the Hungry i

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The Broadway musical, Gypsy, opened on this day in 1959, sixty three years ago. It is frequently considered one of the crowning achievements of the mid-twentieth century's conventional musical theatre art form, often called the book musical. Gypsy has been referred to as the greatest American musical by numerous critics and writers. Ben Brantley wrote ("what may be the greatest of all American musicals...") and Frank Rich wrote that "Gypsy is nothing if not Broadway's own brassy, unlikely answer to King Lear." Theater critic Clive Barnes wrote that "Gypsy is one of the best of musicals..." and described Rose as "one of the few truly complex characters in the American musical."     
 
 
 
 
vinyl LP front cover detail 


Two musicals were the bombs that blew open the sacred doors of the "Temple of Musicals"; two years earlier West Side Story was the first and Gypsy with Ethel Merman, in the role of Rose, was the second bomber who set off the blast!         


vinyl LP front cover 
 illustrations by Oscar Liebman
photo of album cover by Styrous®


On August 12th in 1961, I had just turned 21 and I saw the touring company of the Broadway musical, Gypsy; Sandra Church had dropped out of the show as Gypsy Rose Lee but Ethel Merman was still playing the role of Rose and she was indeed, dynamite. Little did I anticipate that 15 or so years later I would be using music from this show when I worked with the girls at the Hungry i in San Francisco.      
 
 

 
 






As the play is about the famous burlesque stripper, Gypsy Rose Lee, the songs were made to order for the strippers at the club. You Gotta Have A Gimmick is the ultimate description of what a good stripper must do and have to succeed. Then Let Me Entertain You is innuendo at its very best; it would have been a perfect vehicle for Mae West. What a shame she did not sing it at some point during her career.    
 



In 1962 Gypsy was captured on film with Natalie Wood taking on the role of Gypsy Rose Lee and Rosalind Russell as her mother, Rose.       
 
 
Gypsy poster - 1962
 
 
An interesting note: in the musical Jack Klugman of The Odd Couple fame, has the role of Herbie, in the film version, Karl Malden assumes that role.        



vinyl LP front cover details 
 illustrations by Oscar Liebman
detail photos of album cover by Styrous®























photos by Styrous®






photos by Styrous®


   
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1 - Overture    4:45
A2 - May We Entertain You, Vocals, Jacqueline Mayro, Karen Moore - 1:12
A3 - Some People, Vocals, Ethel Merman - 3:37
A4 - Small World, Vocals – Ethel Merman - 2:15
A5 - Baby June And Her Newsboys, Vocals – Billy Harris (2), Bobby Brownell, Gene Castle, Jacqueline Mayro, Karen Moore, Steve Curry - 1:35
A6 - Mr. Goldstone, I Love You, Vocals – Ethel Merman - 2:21
A7 - Little Lamb, Vocals – Sandra Church (2) - 2:35
A8 - You'll Never Get Away From Me, Vocals – Ethel Merman, Jack Klugman - 2:28
A9 - Dainty June and her Farmboys, Vocals – Lane Bradbury, Sandra Church (2) - 2:17

Side 2:

B1 - If Mama Was Married, Vocals – Lane Bradbury, Sandra Church (2) - 2:47
B2 - All I Need Is The Girl, Vocals – Paul Wallace (2) - 4:32
B3 - Everything's Coming Up Roses, Vocals – Ethel Merman - 3:04
B4 - Together, Vocals – Ethel Merman, Jack Klugman, Sandra Church (2) - 2:43
B5 - You Gotta Have A Gimmick, Vocals – Chotzi Foley, Faith Dane, Maria Karnilova - 3:33
B6 - Let Me Entertain You, Vocals – Sandra Church (2) - 2:53
B7 - Rose's Turn, Vocals – Ethel Merman - 4:18 

Credits:

    Arranged By [Dance Music] – Betty Wahlberg, John Kander
    Illustration – Oscar Liebman
    Lyrics By – Stephen Sondheim
    Music By – Jule Styne
    Written-By [Book By] – Arthur Laurents
    Music Director – Milton Rosenstock
    Orchestrated By – Robert Ginzler, Sid Ramin
    Producer – Goddard Lieberson
    Sleeve Notes – George B. Dale*
    Vocals [Baby June] – Jacqueline Mayro
    Vocals [Baby Louise] – Karen Moore
    Vocals [Dainty June] – Lane Bradbury
    Vocals [Electra] – Chotzi Foley
    Vocals [Herbie] – Jack Klugman
    Vocals [Louise] – Sandra Church (2)
    Vocals [Mazeppa] – Faith Dane
    Vocals [Rose] – Ethel Merman
    Vocals [Tessie Tura] – Maria Karnilova
    Vocals [Tulsa] – Paul Wallace (2)
 
Ethel Merman, Jule Styne And Stephen Sondheim – Gypsy - A Musical Fable
Label: Columbia – OL 5420
Format: Vinyl, LP, Mono
Country: US
Released: 1959
Genre: Stage & Screen
Style: Musical
 
 
 
 
         
Viewfinder links:        
         
Hungry i articles            
Jack Klugman        
Gypsy Rose Lee      
Oscar Liebman           
Ethel Merman         
Rosalind Russell        
Stephen Sondheim        
Jule Styne         
Mae West       
        
Net links:         
         
        
YouTube links:        
         
Sandra Church ~ Let Me Entertain You         
Natalie Wood ~ Let Me Entertain You          
Faith Dane, Chotzi Foley & Maria Karnilova ~ You Gotta Have a Gimmick  
Betty Bruce, Faith Dane & Roxanne Arlen ~ You Gotta Have a Gimmick (1961)     
        
        
         
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Sunday, July 19, 2020       
       
















 

December 2, 2019

The Man In the Moon is a Lady









photo by Styrous®









As I experiment with abstract photographic images I see various subjects in them and quite often there are musical connections I make; that's the fun of visual and especially musical abstraction, experimentation and chance operation

After studying this image for some time, the expression, The Man In the Moon, entered my mind; it refers to any of several pareidolic images of a human face, head or body that certain traditions recognize in the disc of the full moon. The images are composed of the dark areas of the lunar maria, or "seas" and the lighter highlands of the lunar surface.   
       
Then the song, The Man In the Moon is a Lady (link below), sung by Beatrice Arthur in the 1966 Broadway musical, Mame, started running around my mind.      


Beatrice Arthur as Vera Charles in Mame


It's a totally wacky little tune but it's the kind that tends to stick in the mind and the lyrics (link below) are silly but I've been fond of it for decades. 

In 2013, Australian director, Brenda Clarke, did a short film using a faster tempo on piano version of the song with Leon Clarke and Annalisa Lucca dancing; it can be seen on the Australian Maid Productions site (link below). It's a lot of fun to watch.            

As I studied this image I decided to research the song title to see if it had any prior instances; lo and behold I found one. In 1960 Floyd Robinson recorded a song titled, The Man In The Moon Is A Lady (link below). It's a bouncy little tune that is a blend of early rock 'n' roll, country and comedy. I have no idea if the writers of Mame heard it and were influenced by it.       

Robinson was an American country singer, born in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1959 he also wrote, The Little Space Girl, for Jesse Lee Turner (link below). It is in the same vein as Purple People Eater by Sheb Wooley (link below) with the feeling of  I Walk the Line by Johnny Cash. The common thread of all the songs is they are silly with squeaky voices representing the aliens in question and it's great fun to listen to them.
     
      
     
        
Viewfinder links:       
     
Exquisite Little Things 2         
The Man in the Moon Is a Lady lyrics      
     
Net links:       
   
Curious Myths of the Middle Ages/The Man in the Moon       
       
YouTube links:       
       
   
A view of the moon taken Dec. 7, 1992, by NASA's Galileo spacecraft as it traveled to explore the Jupiter system. The distinct bright ray crater at the bottom of the image is the Tycho impact basin.         
         

       
       
       Ya gotta have a sense of humor!

     
        
Styrous® ~ Monday, December 2, 2019