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London Musicals 1965-1969.pub - Over The Footlights

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WHO'S PINKUS? WHERE'S CHELM?<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Jeanetta Cochrane <strong>The</strong>atre, January 3 rd (10 performances)<br />

Music: Monty Norman<br />

Lyrics & Book: Cecil P. Taylor & Monty Norman<br />

Director: Charles Marowitz<br />

Choreographer: Tutte Lemkow<br />

Musical Director: Jack Nathan<br />

Cast: Bernard Bresslaw (Izzy Pinkus), Nancy Nevinson (Rachel Pinkus), David Lander (Rabbi),<br />

Anita Lockwood, Stanley Platts<br />

1967<br />

10<br />

Story: Set in Chelm, the town of fools in Jewish folklore, it charts the progress of Issy Pinkus from poverty to<br />

affluence, from self-neglect to self-respect. At first he is Public Idiot No. 1, unable to get a job even on a<br />

building site, so he sets off for the neighbouring town of Mazeltov to make his fortune. En route he discover<br />

that “a man must follow his heart otherwise he stops being a man”, and equipped with this information, he runs<br />

rings round the local rabbi and business tycoons and becomes a great success.<br />

Notes: This was a “Brechtian” type musical where the songs interrupt the action to comment on the previous<br />

scene or repeat the action in a stand-alone song and dance item. <strong>The</strong> director, Charles Marowitz, was known for<br />

his experimental approach to theatre.<br />

110 IN THE SHADE<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Palace <strong>The</strong>atre, February 8 th (101 Performances)<br />

Music: Harvey Schmidt<br />

Lyrics: Tom Jones<br />

Books: N. Richard Nash<br />

Director: Joseph Anthony<br />

Choreographer: Agnes de Mille<br />

Cast: Stephen Douglas (Bill Starbuck), Inga Swenson (Lizzie Curry) , Ivor Emmanuel (File)<br />

Songs: Lizzie’s Coming Home, Poker Polka, <strong>The</strong> Rain Song, Old<br />

Maid, Everything Beautiful Happens at Night, Simple Little Things,<br />

Wonderful Music<br />

Story: This is the story of Lizzie Curry, a spinster living on a ranch<br />

in the American southwest, and her relationships with File, the local<br />

sheriff – a careful divorcé who is afraid of being hurt again. <strong>The</strong><br />

area is suffering from a drought, when along comes a charismatic<br />

con-man, Bill Starbuck, who claims to be a rainmaker who can<br />

bring relief to the drought-stricken area. Lizzie falls for him and<br />

they are about to run away together when File at last reveals his<br />

love for her. She decides to accept him and settle for the quiet<br />

life—and at that very moment the heavens open.<br />

Notes: In adapting his play “<strong>The</strong> Rainmaker” into a musical, Nash<br />

has remained very faithful to the original, although many of the<br />

interior scenes were moved outdoors to allow for the introduction of<br />

a chorus of townspeople for ensemble numbers and dances. Many<br />

of Jones' lyrics come directly from Nash's play. <strong>The</strong> music and<br />

lyrics were created by the same team that wrote “<strong>The</strong> Fantasticks”<br />

Photo by Houston Rogers<br />

Inga Swenson & Stephen Douglas


WILL SOMEBODY PLEASE SAY SOMETHING?<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Arts <strong>The</strong>atre, February 14 th (12 Performances)<br />

Music: David Allen<br />

Lyrics & Book: David Baxter<br />

Director: David Calderisis<br />

Cast: Stephen Moore (Webster), David Baxter (Trebor), Susan Baxter (Girl)<br />

1967<br />

11<br />

Songs: Isn’t She a Lovely Child, Baby the Good Times Are Coming at Last, I’m the Kind of Girl, I’m in Love,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Only Good Thing,<br />

Notes: Not a musical, but a three-hander “play with songs”. It seems to have come and gone within two<br />

weeks despite being chosen by Plays & Players for a full-text publication in their April 1967 issue.<br />

FIDDLER ON THE ROOF<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Her Majesty's, February 16 th (2,030 Performances)<br />

Music: Jerry Bock<br />

Lyrics: Sheldon Harnick<br />

Book: Joseph Stein<br />

Director-Choreographer: Jerome Robbins<br />

Musical Director: Gareth Davies<br />

Producer: Harold Prince & Richard Pilbrow<br />

Cast: Topol (Tevye), Miriam Karlin (Golde), Cynthia Greville (Yente),<br />

Paul Whitsun-Jones (Lazar Wolf). Sandor Eles (Perchick),<br />

Rosemary Nicols (Tzeitel), Jonathan Lynn (Motel), Caryl Little (Chava)<br />

Songs: Tradition, Matchmaker Matchmaker, If I Were a Rich Man, To Life,<br />

Sunrise Sunset, Miracle of Miracles, Anatevka<br />

Story: Set in 1905 in Czarist Russia, the story focuses on Tevye the milkman, his wife, Golde and their three<br />

daughters in the Jewish village of Anatevka. <strong>The</strong> eldest daughter, Tzeitel, marries a poor tailor even though<br />

Tevye had promised her to the rich, middle-aged butcher, Lazar Wolf. <strong>The</strong> second daughter, Hodel, marries a<br />

young revolutionary who is sent to Siberia. <strong>The</strong> third daughter, Chava, marries outside the faith. At the play's<br />

end the police destroy the village during a pogrom and Tevye and what's left of his family are forced to begin a<br />

new life in America.<br />

Note: Based on the stories of Sholem Aleichem,<br />

this was a musical offering neither attractive<br />

costumes nor pretty scenery, and yet its theme of a<br />

people vainly trying to preserve tradition in a<br />

changing world proved to be enormously popular.<br />

On Broadway it became the longest-running show<br />

up to that time. Topol and Miriam Karlin played<br />

the leading roles in <strong>London</strong> for the first year, and<br />

then were replaced with Alfie Bass and Avis<br />

Bunnage. Alfie Bass remained with the show for<br />

the rest of the run, with occasional temporary<br />

replacements by Les Goudsmit. Avis Bunnage<br />

stayed a further eighteen months and was replaced<br />

by Hy Hazell. Sadly Hy Hazell suddenly died ,<br />

aged 48, after ten months in the role. Avis<br />

Bunnage returned for the remainder of the run.<br />

Topol & Miriam Karlin<br />

Photo by Zoe Dominic


OLIVER (1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Piccadilly <strong>The</strong>atre, April 26 th (331 Performances)<br />

Music, Lyrics, Book: Lionel Bart<br />

Director: David Phethean<br />

Musical Director: Michael Moores<br />

Producer: Donald Albery<br />

1967<br />

12<br />

Cast: Barry Humphries (Fagin), Marti Webb (Nancy), Martin Dell (Bill Sykes), Paul Bartlet (Oliver),<br />

Leslie Stone (Artful Dodger), Tom de Ville (Mr Bumble), Pamela Pitchford (Widow Corney),<br />

Glyn Worsnip (Mr Sowerberry)<br />

Notes: See New <strong>The</strong>atre, June 1960 for original <strong>London</strong> production.<br />

THE DESERT SONG (5 th Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Palace <strong>The</strong>atre, May 13 th (383 Performances)<br />

Music: Sigmund Romberg<br />

Lyrics: Otto Harbach, Oscar Hammerstein, & Frank Mandel<br />

Director: Joan Davis<br />

Choreographer: Virginia Courtney<br />

Musical Director:<br />

Cast: John Hanson (Pierre Birabeau), Patricia Michael (Margot Bonvalet),<br />

Tony Hughes (Bennie Kidd), Lita Scott (Azuri), Dermod Gloster (Sid el Kar),<br />

Raymond du Parc ( Capt Paul Fontaine), Carol Dorée (Clementina),<br />

Doreen Key (Susan)<br />

Songs: <strong>The</strong> Desert Song, <strong>The</strong> Riff Song, Romance, One Alone, One Flower Grows<br />

Alone in Your Garden, I Want a Kiss, It, <strong>The</strong> French Marching Song.<br />

Story: In North Africa the French occupying forces are striving to capture the Red Shadow, who is the leader<br />

of the Riffs, an outlaw band of Moroccan tribesmen. <strong>The</strong> famous renegade is in love with Margot, but she is<br />

infatuated with Pierre Birabeau, the handsome son of the French Governor. Margot is captured by the<br />

mysterious Red Shadow and eventually falls in love with him,<br />

although she does not know his identity – his face is always hidden<br />

from her. However, the Red Shadow is himself captured and<br />

imprisoned by the governor's soldiers, and only then does Margot<br />

discover the Red Shadow is really Pierre in disguise. All ends<br />

happily.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> original <strong>London</strong> production had been at Drury Lane in<br />

1927, and due to its enormous popularity it was revived in the West<br />

End in 1931, 1936, 1939 and 1943. From the late 1950s onwards the<br />

actor-singer John Hanson had headed a semi-permanent UK touring<br />

company presenting “<strong>The</strong> Desert Song” and other popular operettas.<br />

He had played the Red Shadow over 600 times before finally<br />

bringing his company into the West End.<br />

Photo by Dezo Hoffmann Ltd<br />

It was inevitable that the critics would sneer at the “provincial”<br />

scenery, costumes and production, and a fair bet that more than one<br />

of them would go for “No Great Sheikhs” as a title for the review,<br />

but John Hanson was enormously popular with the coach-party trade,<br />

and he succeeded in filling the vast Palace <strong>The</strong>atre for the best part of<br />

a year.<br />

John Hanson


QUEENIE<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Comedy <strong>The</strong>atre, June 22 nd (20 Performances)<br />

Music: Ted Manning & Marvin Laird<br />

Lyrics & Book: Ted Willis<br />

Director: Arthur Lewis<br />

Choreographer: Leo Kharibian<br />

Musical Director: Leo Mole<br />

Producer: Bernard Delfont & Arthur Lewis<br />

Cast: Vivienne Martin (Queenie) ,Kevin Colson (James) , Bill Owen (Tom),<br />

Simon Oates (Dick), Paul Eddington (Harry)<br />

1967<br />

13<br />

Songs: Here is the Key of the Door, We’re Gonna Be Dead and Gone, Special Kind of Man, How Does He<br />

Look in the Morning?, Excuse Me for Speaking My Mind.<br />

Story: This was the ballad tale of a young widow, the landlady of the Queen of Sheba public house, and her<br />

attempts to re-marry. She has her heart set on James, her barman, and to try and get him to propose to her, she<br />

pretends to take on a succession of three “trial” husbands: Tom, Dick and Harry. A sub-plot involves the love<br />

affair of a much younger couple.<br />

Notes: This “ballad-opera” began life as a short TV play – claimed to be the first ever play written entirely in<br />

verse. <strong>The</strong> musical adaptation retained the rhyming couplets in an attempt to re-create the “ballad” feel.<br />

However, the critics claimed the effect was similar to an exceptionally bad pantomime script. <strong>The</strong> show failed<br />

after 20 performances.<br />

ANNIE<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Westminster <strong>The</strong>atre, July 27 th (156 Performances)<br />

Revived February 1 st 1968 ( 242 Performances)<br />

Music: William L. Reed<br />

Lyrics & Book: Alan Thornhill<br />

Director: Henry Cass<br />

Choreographer: Denny Bettis<br />

Musical Director: Ray Cook<br />

Cast: Margaret Burton (Annie Jaeger), Bill Kenwright (Bill Jaeger),<br />

Donald Simpson, Norman Ghent, Angela Richards.<br />

Songs: I Don’t Like Your Hat, It Fair Takes Your Breath Away, I Keeps Myself to<br />

Myself, Who’s the Dictator Jim Parks?, We’re Going to Shake the Country, A<br />

Basinful of Revolution.<br />

Story: <strong>The</strong> life story of Annie Jaeger, an early member of the Moral Rearmament Movement, was the subject<br />

of this musical, starting with her leaving her comfortable home surroundings in 1930s Stockport, and coming to<br />

<strong>London</strong> to spread her message of moral rearmament amongst the people of the capital.<br />

Notes: With its preachy message and parable-like scenes and songs, it was clearly not aimed at the ordinary<br />

theatre-going public, but specifically at supporters of the Moral Rearmament Movement. It turned out that<br />

there were more supporters than one might have thought: after a four and half month run, it was withdrawn for<br />

the planned Christmas show at the Westminster, and then revived in February 1968 for a further six month run.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re were a few minor cast changes for the 1968 production.


SWEET CHARITY<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Prince of Wales <strong>The</strong>atre, October 11 th (476 Performances)<br />

Music: Cy Coleman<br />

Lyrics: Dorothy Fields<br />

Book: Neil Simon<br />

Director: Bob Fosse, restaged by Lawrence Carr<br />

Choreographer: Bob Fosse, reproduced by Robert Linden<br />

Musical Director: Alyn Ainsworth<br />

Producer: Bernard Delfont & Harold Fielding<br />

1967<br />

14<br />

Cast: Juliet Prowse (Charity), Rod McLennan (Oscar) ,<br />

John Keston (Vittorio Vidal) Josephine Blake, Paula Kelly, Fred Evans,<br />

Songs: Hey Big Spender, If My Friends Could See<br />

Me Now, <strong>The</strong>re's Gotta Be Something Better Than<br />

This, Rhythm of Life, I'm a Brass Band, I Love to<br />

Cry at Weddings<br />

Rod McLennan & Juliet Prowse<br />

Story: Charity Hope Valentine works as a dime-adance<br />

hostess at the Fan-Dango Ballroom. Her trusting, romantic nature gets her<br />

involved with an Italian screen star, Vittorio Vidal, and with a “square” named Oscar<br />

whom she meets when they are stuck in an elevator at the 92 nd Street “Y”. Later they<br />

also get stuck on a Coney Island Ferris wheel. Though Oscar promises to marry<br />

Charity, he backs out, and she returns to the Fan-Dango, living “hopefully ever after”<br />

Notes: Based on Fellini's film “Nights of Cabiria”, the South-African born actress Juliet<br />

Prowse gained a great personal success in the <strong>London</strong> production.<br />

Photo by Tom Hustler<br />

MRS WILSON’S DIARY<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Criterion, October 24 th (175 Performances)<br />

Music: Jeremy Taylor<br />

Lyrics: John Wells<br />

Book: Richard Ingrams & John Wells<br />

Director: Joan Littlewood<br />

Cast: Bill Wallis (Harold Wilson), Myvanwy Jenn (Gladys Mary Wilson),<br />

Bob Grant (George Brown), Peter Reeves (Gerald Hoffman),<br />

Sandra Caron (Audrey Callaghan), Johnny Lyons (Jim Callaghan),<br />

Carl Forgione (David Frost), Kevin Smith (President Johnson)<br />

Unknown credit<br />

Bob Grant as George Brown<br />

Songs: Here I Kneel, Who Are the Bastards Now?, <strong>The</strong> Terrible Mr Brown, Why<br />

Should I Worry?, Harold and Me<br />

Notes:: This was a piece of gentle political satire based on the on-going lampoons in<br />

the fortnightly magazine “Private Eye”. It was not really a musical – it was a satirical<br />

play laced with some rather funny songs. It originally opened at the <strong>The</strong>atre Royal<br />

Stratford on September 21 st and quickly transferred.<br />

THE BOY FRIEND ( 1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Comedy <strong>The</strong>atre, November 29 th (365 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics : Sandy Wilson<br />

Director: Sandy Wilson<br />

Choreographer: Noel Tovey<br />

Musical Director: Grant Hossack<br />

Producer: Michael Codron<br />

Cast: Ann Beach (Hortense), Cheryl Kennedy (Polly Browne), Tony Adams (Tony),<br />

Nicholas Bennett (Bobby van Husen), Frances Barlow (Maisie),<br />

Marion Grimaldi (Mme Dubonnet)<br />

Notes: See Original <strong>London</strong> production, Wyndham’s, January 1954


A PRESENT FROM THE CORPORATION<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Fortune <strong>The</strong>atre, November 30 th (3 performances)<br />

Music: John Gould<br />

Lyrics: David Wood<br />

Director: David Wood<br />

Musical Director: John Gould<br />

1967<br />

15<br />

Cast: Terence Brady (Graham Slater), Julia McKenzie (Maggie Slater), John Gower, Gay Soper,<br />

Michael Boothe, Sam Walters.<br />

Story: Graham Slater and his wife Maggie move to a Northern town, where Graham has been appointed<br />

Cultural Officer. <strong>The</strong>y are met with a very cold response from a community that feels “arty, fancy” ideas from<br />

the south are not welcome.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> original production ran for two weeks in rep at the Swan <strong>The</strong>atre, Worcester. <strong>The</strong> local<br />

theatregoers loved the show so much they contributed towards a fund to bring the show to <strong>London</strong>'s Fortune<br />

<strong>The</strong>atre for a three performance “showcase” in the hope it would attract a management to take on the show and<br />

give it a full West-End production. Sadly, no management was interested.<br />

THE FOUR MUSKETEERS<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Drury Lane, December 5 th (462 Performances)<br />

Music: Laurie Johnson<br />

Lyrics: Herbert Kretzmer<br />

Director: Peter Coe<br />

Choreographer: Donald MacKayle<br />

Musical Director: Derek New<br />

Producer: Bernard Delfont<br />

Cast: Harry Secombe (D'Artagnan), Jeremy Lloyd (Porthos), Glyn Owen (Athos),<br />

John Junkin (Aramis), Stephanie Voss (Constance), Elisabeth Larner (Milady),<br />

Kenneth Connor (King Louis XIII)<br />

Songs: A Little Bit of Glory, Think Big, What Love Can Do, Nobody's Changing<br />

Places With Me, Give Me a Man's Life<br />

Story: D'Artagnan, a countrified gentleman, achieves all his deeds of daring by pure accident. Coming to<br />

Paris in search of his beloved Constance, he meets up with the three musketeers of Dumas's story – except here<br />

they are drunken and lecherous rioters – and then he is asked to go to Baden-Baden to retrieve a diamond from<br />

the Queen's former lover (a necessary act if the Queen is to be saved from disgrace and scandal). <strong>The</strong> bumbling<br />

adventures and mishaps all manage to end up bringing praise, success and a brave reputation to a man who is,<br />

at heart, a good-natured country bumpkin.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> show was in trouble from the start: there were many re-writes and several cast changes and walkouts<br />

during rehearsals, including opera star Joyce Blackham, replaced at short notice by Elizabeth Larner. A<br />

great deal of money had been lavished on the production, but the critics found the sets (Sean Kenny) ugly and<br />

impractical, the costumes (Loudon Sainthill) dull. <strong>The</strong> dialogue was said to be infantile, the music a total mishmash<br />

of inappropriate operatic<br />

numbers for Harry Secombe and<br />

silly, sentimental or comedy<br />

numbers, none of which seemed to<br />

belong together. <strong>The</strong> only merit<br />

was Harry Secombe himself, and<br />

his presence in the cast managed to<br />

keep the show afloat for fourteen<br />

months. However, it never<br />

recovered its costs and ended up<br />

with a loss of £50,000.<br />

Harry Secombe & Elizabeth Larner<br />

Photo by John Timbers


1968<br />

YOU’RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Fortune <strong>The</strong>atre, February 1 st (116 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Clark Gesner<br />

Book: “John Gordon” (Clark Gesner)<br />

Director: Joseph Hardy<br />

Choreographer: Patricia Birch<br />

Musical Director: Peter Martin<br />

Producer: Bernard Delfont & Harold Fielding<br />

16<br />

Photo by Tom Hustler<br />

Gene Scandur & Courtney Lane<br />

Cast: Gene Kidwell (Linus), David Rhys Anderson (Charlie Brown),<br />

Courtney Lane (Patty), Gene Scandur (Schroeder), Don Potter (Snoopy),<br />

Boni Enten (Lucy)<br />

Songs: My Blanket and Me, Book Report, T.E.A.M., Suppertime,<br />

Happiness<br />

Notes: This is an average day in the life of Charlie Brown, based on the<br />

comic strip “Peanuts” by Charles Schulz. Charlie flies his kite, writes a<br />

book report for school, plays baseball, and meets up with his friends, the<br />

piano-playing Schroeder, the bossy Lucy, the blanket-loving Linus and<br />

the goggled canine Snoopy who imagines he’s the Red Baron. It managed<br />

just over a three month run.<br />

CABARET<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Palace, February 28 th (336 Performances)<br />

Music: John Kander<br />

Lyrics: Fred Ebb<br />

Book: Joe Masteroff<br />

Director: Harold Prince<br />

Choreographer: Ron Field<br />

Producer: Harold Prince & Richard Pilbrow<br />

Cast: Judi Dench (Sally Bowles), Barry Dennen (MC), Kevin Colson (Clifford),<br />

Lila Kedrova (Fraulein Schneider), Peter Sallis (Herr Schultz), Richard Owens (Ernst Ludwig)<br />

Songs: Willkommen, Don’t Tell Mama, Tomorrow Belongs to<br />

Me, Two Ladies, If You Could See Her Through My Eyes,<br />

Cabaret, <strong>The</strong> Money Song<br />

Story: A bitter evocation of Berlin in the 1930s just as the Nazis<br />

are coming to power, this is the story of Sally Bowles, an aspiring<br />

but untalented English actress working in a seedy nightclub. She<br />

is involved in a doomed romance with a visiting American writer,<br />

Clifford Bradshaw. <strong>The</strong> story is told in tandem with performances<br />

at the Kit-Kat Club, presided over by a leering, sinister Master of<br />

Ceremonies.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> original book was based on the “Berlin Stories” by<br />

Christopher Isherwood, and on John van Druten’s stage-play<br />

version of the stories, “I Am a Camera”. <strong>The</strong> musical<br />

significantly changed the nationality of the leading man from<br />

British to American, presumably for an “international” market.<br />

This was another show which did so much better in New York<br />

than in <strong>London</strong>: the Broadway show ran 1,165 performances<br />

compared to <strong>London</strong>’s 336.<br />

Judi Dench<br />

Photo by Zoe Dominic


CANTERBURY TALES<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Phoenix, March 21 st (2,082 Performances)<br />

Music: Richard Hill & John Hawkins<br />

Lyrics: Nevill Coghill<br />

Book: Nevill Coghill & Martin Starkie<br />

Director: Martin Starkie & Vlado Habunek<br />

Choreographer: David Drew<br />

Musical Director: Gordon Rose<br />

Cast: James Ottaway (Chaucer), Nicky Henson (Squire, Nicholas, Alan, Damian),<br />

Pamela Charles (Prioress, Prosperina), Jessie Evans (Wife of Bath, Old Woman),<br />

Gay Soper (Alison), Kenneth J. Warren (Miller, Gervase, Pluto),<br />

Wilfrid Brambell (Steward, Carpenter, January), Trevor Bannister,<br />

Daniel Thorndike<br />

1968<br />

Songs: I Have a Noble Cock, <strong>The</strong>re’s the Moon, Some Call it Love, I’ll Give My Love a Ring, Love Will Conquer<br />

All, If She Has Never Loved Before, April Song.<br />

Notes: Based on Professor Nevill Coghill’s translation of Chaucer’s “Canterbury Tales”, the show primarily uses<br />

four of the tales: “<strong>The</strong> Miller’s Tale” (two students competing for an affair with the carpenter’s wife); “<strong>The</strong><br />

Merchant’s Tale” (the wife of a rich old man cheats on him with the young Squire); “<strong>The</strong> Steward’s Tale” (multiple<br />

bed-hopping in the house of the Miller) ; and “<strong>The</strong> Wife of Bath’s Tale” (a witch turns into a beautiful young girl to<br />

please an amorous Knight.) This was another example of how American and British musicals could differ: over<br />

2,000 performances in <strong>London</strong>, and just 121 when the show flopped on Broadway<br />

in 1969.<br />

17<br />

MAN OF LA MANCHA<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Piccadilly <strong>The</strong>atre, April 24 th (253 Performances)<br />

Music: Mitch Leigh<br />

Lyrics: Joe Darion<br />

Book: Dale Wasserman<br />

Director: Albert Marre<br />

Choreographer: Jack Cole<br />

Musical Director: Denys Rawson<br />

Producer: Donald Albery<br />

Cast: Keith Michell (Don Quixote), Joan Diener (Aldonza),<br />

Bernard Spear (Sancho Panza), David King (Innkeeper), Alan Crofoot (Padre),<br />

Peter Arne (Dr Carrasco), Olive Gilbert (Housekeeper)<br />

Songs: Little Bird, It’s All the Same, Dulcinea, I Really Like Him,<br />

Golden Helmet of Mambrino, <strong>The</strong> Impossible Dream.<br />

Story: <strong>The</strong>re are two threads to the story: the first deals with Cervantes<br />

and his imprisonment for debts during the Spanish Inquisition, the<br />

second deals with the adventures of Don Quixote that Cervantes tells his<br />

fellow-prisoners. Most of the adventures deal with the Don’s love for the<br />

servant girl, Aldonza – whom he calls his Dulcinea – and his battles to<br />

save her honour. At the end, as the old man lies dying, he manages to<br />

convey to the girl his belief in dreaming the impossible dream.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> show was adapted from Dale Wasserman’s TV play “I, Don<br />

Quixote”, which itself was based on the novel by Cervantes. It had a very<br />

long run in New York, playing 2,328 performances, almost ten times as<br />

long as the <strong>London</strong> run! In the Broadway production Richard Kiley<br />

played Quixote and gained great personal success. (He also appeared in<br />

a <strong>London</strong> revival – see June 1969) . Joan Diener came from America to<br />

repeat the role she had played in the original production.<br />

Bernard Spears and Keith Michell<br />

Photo by Anthony Crickmay


I DO! I DO!<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Lyric <strong>The</strong>atre, May 16 th (115 Performances)<br />

Music: Harvey Schmidt<br />

Lyrics & Book: Tom Jones<br />

Director: Gower Champion (restaged by Lucia Victor)<br />

Musical Director: Ian MacPherson<br />

Producer: H. M. Tennent Ltd<br />

Cast: Anne Rogers, Ian Carmichael<br />

1968<br />

18<br />

Songs: I Love My Wife, My Cup Runneth <strong>Over</strong>, Love isn’t Everything,<br />

Nobody’s Perfect, <strong>The</strong> Honeymoon is <strong>Over</strong>, Where are the Snows?, When<br />

the Kids Get Married, Roll Up the Ribbons<br />

Story: With a cast of just two people, the show covers 50 years in the life of a married couple, Agnes and<br />

Michael, from their wedding day to the day they move out of their house. In between, they bring up a family,<br />

quarrel, threaten to break up, reconcile, plan for a life<br />

without children in the house, and reveal in song<br />

exactly what they mean to each other.<br />

Notes: Adapted from Jan de Hartog’s 1951 play “<strong>The</strong><br />

Fourposter”, a musical with a cast of just two was an<br />

enormous risk, though the New York production was<br />

helped by having two of Broadway’s biggest stars in<br />

the show – Mary Martin and Robert Preston. It ran for<br />

560 performances.<br />

Perhaps Anne Rogers and Ian Carmichael did not have<br />

the same pulling power in <strong>London</strong>, where the show<br />

was regarded as over-sickly and rather dull. It has<br />

become part of theatre folk-lore for the moment when<br />

during Act Two there was an offstage knock on the<br />

door, and a voice cried out from the front stalls “For<br />

God’s sake let them in – whoever it is!”<br />

Ian Carmichael & Anne Rogers<br />

Photo by Angus McBean<br />

CINDY<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Fortune <strong>The</strong>atre, May 30 th (29 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Johnny Brandon<br />

Book: Joe Sauter & Mike Sawyer<br />

Director: Alexander Bridge<br />

Cast: Geraldine Morrow (Cindy Kreller), Johnny Tudor (Lucky), Kalman Glass (Irving Kreller),<br />

Hy Hazell (Zeuida Kreller), Dudley Stevens (Chuck Rosenfeld)<br />

Songs: Once Upon a Time, Is <strong>The</strong>re Something to What He Said?, A Genuine Feminine Girl, Cindy, Think<br />

Mink, Tonight's the Night, If You've Got It You've Got It, Got the World in the Palm of My Hand<br />

Story: This was a version of the Cinderella story, which had done quite well in New York but did not succeed<br />

in <strong>London</strong>.<br />

Notes: Originally an off-Broadway success in 1964, written by British performer Johnny Brandon (who had<br />

moved to the USA after appearing several West End shows, including a featured star role in “Love From<br />

Judy”). <strong>The</strong> English production played a week of previews at the Palace <strong>The</strong>atre Westcliff and moved into the<br />

Fortune. <strong>The</strong> critics hated it and it managed a run of just 29 performances.


1968<br />

GOLDEN BOY<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Palladium, June 4 th (118 Performances)<br />

Music: Charles Strouse<br />

Lyrics: Lee Adams<br />

Book: Clifford Odets & William Gibson<br />

Director: Arthur Penn, re-staged by Michael Thoma<br />

Choreographer: Donald McKayle , re-staged by Jaime Rogers & Lester Wilson<br />

Musical Director: Shepherd Coleman<br />

19<br />

Cast: Sammy Davis (Joe Wellington), Gloria de Haven (Lorna Moon),<br />

Lon Satton (Eddie Satin), Mark Dawson (Tom Moody), Louis Basile (Roxy Gottlieb),<br />

Frank Nastasi<br />

Songs: Night Song, Everything’s Great. Don’t Forget 127 th Street, Lorna’s Here, This is the Life, While the<br />

City Sleeps, I Wanna Be With You<br />

Story: Joe Wellington, a Negro-American, is a young man determined to get out, get rich and make it to the<br />

top. Despite his family’s objections, he turns to boxing as a means of escaping his ghetto roots. He crosses<br />

paths with Mephistopheles-like promoter Eddie Satin and eventually betrays his manager Tom Moody when he<br />

becomes romantically involved with Tom’s white girlfriend, Lorna Moon.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> original play by Clifford Odets told of an Italian-American, Joe Bonaparte, a sensitive would-be<br />

surgeon, fighting in order to pay his way through college, but careful to protect his hands from serious damage<br />

so he could achieve his goal of saving the lives of blacks ignored by white doctors. In an ironic twist, the hands<br />

he hoped would heal kill a man in the ring. <strong>The</strong> story was altered to reflect the situation at the onset of the<br />

Civil Rights era. This was the first book musical to play the Palladium following its medium success on<br />

Broadway. It closed in <strong>London</strong> after four months. On the second night Sammy Davis walked out half-way<br />

through the show, claiming he was too upset to go on because of that day’s assassination of Senator Robert<br />

Kennedy. His understudy took over. Sammy Davis received a very bad press for this and it was said this had a<br />

serious effect on future ticket sales.<br />

THE DANCING YEARS (3 rd Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Saville <strong>The</strong>atre, June 6 th (52 Performances)<br />

Music: Ivor Novello<br />

Lyrics: Christopher Hassall<br />

Director: Joan Davis<br />

Choreographer: Kenneth Tillsen<br />

Musical Director: Robert Probst<br />

Producer: Tom Arnold<br />

Cast: David Knight (Rudi Kleber), June Bronhill (Maria Zeigler),<br />

Cathy Jose (Grete Schöne), Moyna Cope (Cäcile Kurt),<br />

Nicholas Hawtrey (Franzl), Robert Crewsdon (Prince Charles Metternich)<br />

Songs: Waltz of My Heart, I Can Give you the Starlight, My Dearest Dear,<br />

Wings of Sleep<br />

Story: <strong>The</strong> story begins in 1911 at an inn outside Vienna where poor Rudi Kleber and operetta star Maria<br />

Ziegler meet and fall in love. Three years later their bliss is shattered as a result of a misunderstanding and<br />

Maria leaves Rudi and marries a Prince Charles. In 1926 they meet again and discover that they are still in<br />

love, but they decide to separate for the sake of their son, who mistakenly believes the Prince to be his real<br />

father. <strong>The</strong>ir paths cross again in 1938, following the German “Anschluss” with Austria. Rudi has been<br />

arrested for opposing the Nazi regime, but Maria manages to get him released.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> original production had opened at Drury Lane in March 1939, and was forced to close after 187<br />

performances when war was declared in September of that year.<br />

1 st Revival: Following a provincial tour, it returned to the Adelphi <strong>The</strong>atre in <strong>London</strong> in March 1942, and ran<br />

for 969 performances, again forced to close because of increased bombing activity.<br />

2 nd Revival: It undertook yet another provincial tour, returning for the third time to the Casino <strong>The</strong>atre in March<br />

1947 for 96 performances, followed by yet another tour. All in all the show had run almost consecutively for<br />

ten years.


THE STUDENT PRINCE (3 rd Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Cambridge <strong>The</strong>atre, June 8 th (9 months)<br />

Music: Sigmund Romberg<br />

Lyrics & Book: Dorothy Donnelly<br />

Director: Leslie Branch<br />

Music Director: Derek Taverner<br />

Producer: Bernard Delfont & Emile Littler<br />

Cast: John Hanson (Karl Franz), Barbara Strathdee (Kathie),<br />

George Hancock (Dr Engel), Kenneth Henry (Lutz),<br />

Clare Herbert (Princess Margaret), Colin Thomas (Capt. Tarnitz),<br />

Richard Loring (Detlef)<br />

Songs: Golden Days, Come Boys Let’s All be Gay Boys, Drinking Song,<br />

Deep in My Heart Dear, Serenade, Just We Two, Gaudeamus Igitur<br />

1968<br />

Story: Set in 1860 , Crown Prince Karl Franz of Karlsberg has been<br />

promised in marriage since childhood to the Princess Johanna. His<br />

grandfather, King Ferdinand, sends him to Heidelberg University where Barbara Strathdee and John Hanson<br />

he will live incognito like a regular student, under the watchful eye of a<br />

kindly mentor, Doctor Engel, and his snooty valet Lutz. At the University Karl falls in love with a waitress, Kathie,<br />

who works at the Inn of the Three Golden Apples. <strong>The</strong>y consider eloping, but Karl suddenly becomes King and<br />

must return and honour the arranged marriage with Princess Johanna (who is also in love<br />

with another man, Captain Tarnitz). He returns to Heidelberg two years later but<br />

discovers that youth cannot be recaptured and the past must be left in the past, although<br />

his true love will always be Kathie.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> original novel “Karl Heinrich” by Wilhelm Meyer-Forster was adapted into a<br />

play called “Alt Heidelberg”, and Rudolf Bleichman’s English translation was a big hit<br />

in New York around 1900. In 1924 Dorothy Donnelly and Sigmund Romberg turned it<br />

into the longest-running Broadway musical of the 1920s (608 performances). <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>London</strong> production at His Majesty’s <strong>The</strong>atre opened on February 3 rd 1926, but closed<br />

after 96 performances. It was said to be “too German” and too close to the end of the<br />

Great War for <strong>London</strong> audiences, although a subsequent UK tour was extremely<br />

successfully. It saw <strong>London</strong> revivals in 1929 and 1944 (Stoll <strong>The</strong>atre), and this, the 3 rd<br />

revival was a revised version including some extra songs.<br />

20<br />

Photo by Dezo Hoffmann<br />

LADY BE GOOD (1 st revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Saville <strong>The</strong>atre, July 25 th (156 Performances)<br />

Music: George Gershwin<br />

Lyrics: Ira Gershwin<br />

Book: Guy Bolton & Fred Thompson<br />

Director: Hugh Goldie<br />

Musical Director: Ed Coleman<br />

Cast: Lionel Blair (Dick Trevor), Aimi Macdonald (Suzie Trevor) ,<br />

Joe Baker (J. Watterson Watkins), Joe Chisholm (Jeff), Patyrick Rose (Jack Robinson),<br />

Raymond Clarke (Bertie Bassett), Pauline Garner, Elizabeth Connor<br />

Songs: Fascinating Rhythm, <strong>The</strong> Half of It Dearie Blues, Hang on to Me, Juanita, Swiss<br />

Miss<br />

Story: Dick and Suzie Trevor are a brother and sister dancing act who are rejected from the vaudeville circuit but<br />

manage to continue their career by entertaining at the homes of wealthy friends. Along the way Suzie pretends to<br />

be a Spanish heiress in order to claim a large inheritance, but she is found out. Somehow she and Dick come into<br />

some money anyway, and she manages to save Dick from a disastrous marriage to a gold-digger.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> show was originally specially created for Fred and Adelle Astaire, who played it on Broadway from<br />

December 1924 and then came with the show to <strong>London</strong>’s Empire <strong>The</strong>atre from April 14 th 1926 . It ran for 326<br />

performances. (<strong>The</strong> song “<strong>The</strong> Man I Love” was cut from the original production)


1968<br />

THE BEGGAR’S OPERA (Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Apollo <strong>The</strong>atre, September 12 th (32 Performances)<br />

Music: Trad (arranged David Turner)<br />

Book: John Gay<br />

Director: Toby Robertson<br />

Producer: Richard Pilbrow & Harold Prince<br />

Cast: Peter Gilmore (Macheath), James Cossins (Peachum),<br />

Hy Hazell (Mrs Peachum), Jan Waters (Polly),<br />

Angela Richards (Jenny Diver), Frances Cuka (Lucy Lockit)<br />

21<br />

Notes: This was a “modernised” version, with completely new<br />

dialogue and up-to-date musical arrangements and had been first<br />

produced at the Edinburgh Festival. It was generally liked by the<br />

critics and the cast was highly praised, but lasted a few weeks<br />

only .<br />

VIVA! VIVA!<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Arts <strong>The</strong>atre, September 18 th (17 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: William Thacker & Trevor T. Smith<br />

Book: Ian Lindsay<br />

Director: Ian Lindsay<br />

Choreographer: Doremy Vernon<br />

Musical Director: Gerald Gouriet<br />

Cast: Julia Stanton (Sofronia), Nerys Hughes (Dona), Donald Layne-Smith (Nicomaco),<br />

Gerald Moon (Pyro), Alec Bregonzi (Friar)<br />

Story: <strong>The</strong> original story told of a father and son, both enamoured of Clizia, a ward in their home. (Clizia never<br />

actually appears). <strong>The</strong> father plans to marry her off to one of his servants who can then be forced to share her<br />

with his master. <strong>The</strong> son wants to marry her himself but his mother will not permit it since Clizia is an orphan<br />

and her family background is unknown, thus making her an unsuitable wife. <strong>The</strong> mother, disgusted with her<br />

love-sick husband, substitutes a male servant for the bride at the wedding, thus humiliating her husband when<br />

he tries to bed the “bride”. Clizia’s father suddenly appears, proving she is of noble birth, and can therefore<br />

marry the son.<br />

Notes: Adapted from Machiavelli’s “Clizia”, this version was described by one critic as “lust of the lavatory<br />

and codpiece variety” and another said “Like a dutiful mortuary attendant I stayed to the end”. It came off very<br />

quickly.<br />

HAIR<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Shaftesbury <strong>The</strong>atre, September 27 th<br />

(1,198 Performances)<br />

Music: Galt MacDermot<br />

Lyrics: Gerome Ragni & James Rado<br />

Director: Tom O’Horgan<br />

Choreographer: Julie Arenal<br />

Musical Director: Derek Wadsworth<br />

Producer: Robert Stigwood,<br />

David Conyers & John Nasht<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>London</strong> “Tribe”<br />

Unknown credit


HAIR<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Shaftesbury <strong>The</strong>atre, September 27 th (1,198 Performances)<br />

Music: Galt MacDermot<br />

Lyrics: Gerome Ragni & James Rado<br />

Director: Tom O’Horgan<br />

Choreographer: Julie Arenal<br />

Musical Director: Derek Wadsworth<br />

Producer: Robert Stigwood, David Conyers & John Nasht<br />

Cast: Paul Nicholas (Claude), Oliver Tobias (Berger), Michael Feast (Woof),<br />

Peter Straker (Hud), Annabel Leventon (Sheila), Linda Kendrick (Jeannie),<br />

Marsha Hunt (Dionne)<br />

Songs: Aquarius, Ain’t Got No, Frank Mills, Where Do I Go, Easy to be Hard,<br />

Good Morning Starshine, Let the Sunshine In.<br />

1968<br />

22<br />

Story: <strong>The</strong> emotional turmoil of the Vietnam War Years co-incided with the “Flower-Power” generation of<br />

hippies and their anti-war, anti-draft, anti-Establishment, anti work-ethic, and their pro-drugs, pro-anarchy,<br />

and, above all, pro free-sex philosophy. A group of New York hippies including “Rinso-white” Berger, black<br />

Hud, gay Woof, campaigning Sheila, pregnant Jeannie and others fail to persuade Claude to reject the USA<br />

army draft, and they see their dreams of love and peace shattered when Claude is brought back from Vietnam<br />

in a coffin.<br />

Notes: Very much a piece of its time, this self-styled “American Tribal Love-Rock Musical” was a significant<br />

milestone in the history of musical theatre. On September 26 th 1968 British <strong>The</strong>atre Censorship was finally<br />

abolished after nearly 400 years. Bang on cue, the following night saw the opening of “Hair”. For the first<br />

time ever on the English stage the performers regularly used a whole range of four-letter words and ended the<br />

first half by throwing off their clothes and dancing naked.<br />

However, more than that, the show gave voice to a whole new generation of young people, and its anti-war<br />

message was powerful<br />

and influential. Each<br />

performance ended<br />

with the audience<br />

invited onto the stage<br />

to dance along with the<br />

cast for up to another<br />

hour or so. <strong>The</strong> show<br />

was a consistent sellout,<br />

and plans were<br />

being made for a<br />

special party to<br />

celebrate its 2,000 th<br />

performance.<br />

Photo by Michael Butler<br />

However, during the<br />

night following the<br />

1,998 th performance<br />

the ceiling of the<br />

theatre collapsed into<br />

the stalls. <strong>The</strong> theatre<br />

closed and the show<br />

came to an abrupt end.<br />

(See June 1974 for the<br />

first revival)<br />

Paul Nicholas<br />

as Claude


MAN WITH A LOAD OF MISCHIEF<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Comedy <strong>The</strong>atre, December 9 th (25 Performances)<br />

Music: John Clifton<br />

Lyrics: John Clifton & Ben Tarver<br />

Book: Ben Tarver<br />

Director: Tad Danielewski<br />

Cast: Leon Eagles (Innkeeper), Julia McKenzie (Wife), Paul Dawkins (Nobleman),<br />

Valentine Palmer (Manservant), Lady (Roberta d’Esti)<br />

1968<br />

23<br />

Songs: Wayside Inn, Rescue, Once You’ve Had a Little Taste, Hulabaloo-balay, Come to the Masquerade,<br />

Make Way for My Lady.<br />

Story: A tale of romance and intrigue set in a country inn in early 19 th century England. A coach accident<br />

forces four travelers to spend the night at the inn: a lovely Lady and her maid, and a handsome Nobleman and<br />

his manservant. <strong>The</strong> Lady turns out to be a former actress who has become a royal mistress and has decided to<br />

run away from her lover, the Prince. <strong>The</strong> nobleman thinks he could earn some money and royal favour if he<br />

returns the Lady to the Palace. After much intriguing by the Innkeeper and his wife, the Lady ends up in love<br />

with the manservant, and after a series of complicated misunderstandings they determine to lead a life together<br />

free from the false pride and the foppish posturing of their shallow society.<br />

Notes: Based on the 1924 play by Ashley Dukes, this small-scale musical had a successful off-Broadway run of<br />

241 performances. It was compared in style to “<strong>The</strong> Fantasticks” and its somewhat “twee” humour did not<br />

appeal to British audiences.<br />

MR AND MRS<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Palace <strong>The</strong>atre, December 11 th (44 performances)<br />

Book, music & lyrics: John Taylor<br />

Director: Ross Taylor<br />

Choreographer: Norman Maen & Ross Taylor<br />

Musical Director: Derek New<br />

Producer: George W. George & Frank Granat<br />

Cast: John Neville (Henry Gow), Honor Blackman (Doris),<br />

Hylda Baker (Mrs Rockett), Liz Edmiston (Elsie), Alan Breeze (Albert Godby)<br />

Songs: Millions of People, Happy<br />

Family, I Want to Dance, Big Wide<br />

World, If the Right Man Should Ask<br />

Me, Give Us a Kiss<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong>se were two separate musicals. “Mr” was adapted<br />

from Noel Coward’s “Fumed Oak” about the hen-pecked Henry<br />

Gow who finally asserts himself,. “Mrs” was adapted from<br />

“Still Life” which had earlier been the basis for the film “Brief<br />

Encounter”. <strong>The</strong> adaptations were by Ross Taylor.<br />

Photo by Reg Wilson<br />

<strong>The</strong>se intimate and much-loved one-act plays were expanded<br />

and blown-up in a way that proved they did not need nor want<br />

the musical and stage treatment they got. <strong>The</strong>y were updated and<br />

and vulgarised, and came in for a great deal of criticism. <strong>The</strong><br />

show lasted just 44 performances.<br />

Alan Breeze & Hylda Baker


THE YOUNG VISITERS<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Piccadilly <strong>The</strong>atre, December 23 rd (63 Performances)<br />

Music: Ian Kellam<br />

Lyrics & Book: Michael Ashton<br />

Director: Martin Landau<br />

Choreographer: Malcolm Clare<br />

Musical Director: Alexander Faris<br />

Producer: Martin Landau<br />

1968<br />

24<br />

Cast: Alfred Marks (Mr Ashford/Mr Salteena), Jan Waters (Miss Ethel Monticue),<br />

Vivienne Ross (Nancy/Bessie Topp), Anna Sharkey (Maud/Rosie Topp), Frank Thornton (Butler) , Tom Chatto<br />

Songs: Daisy Ashford’s Written a Book, First and Last Love, My Young Visiters and Me, <strong>The</strong> Kitchens at<br />

Rickamere Hall, An English Gentleman, Crystal Palace, Belted Early, In Love with the Girl I See.<br />

Story: <strong>The</strong> musical opens with a Prologue announcing that Daisy Ashford has written a story, and her family<br />

members then assume the characters in this story of “<strong>The</strong> Young Visiters”. In the story, the lovely Miss Ethel<br />

Monticue is pursued by Mr Salteena, who is not quite a gentleman, and his persistence takes them through the<br />

surroundings of Rickamere Hall even<br />

up to Buckingham Palace. However,<br />

Mr Salteena is ultimately obliged to<br />

settle for the hand of the maidservant,<br />

Rosie Topp.<br />

Photo by Houston Rogers<br />

Notes: Based on the book written in<br />

1919 by the nine-year-old Daisy<br />

Ashford. Its gentle, delicate child-like<br />

style was a bit lost in a large theatre,<br />

and it did not run very long. However,<br />

it did have something of an after-life in<br />

smaller venues, especially as a family<br />

show around Christmas times.<br />

Frank Thornton (Butler) and Anna<br />

Sharkey (extreme right)

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