My Favorite Year (musical)

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My Favorite Year
Original Production Poster
Music Stephen Flaherty
Lyrics Lynn Ahrens
Book Joseph Dougherty
Based upon 1982 film My Favorite Year
Productions 1992 Broadway

My Favorite Year is a musical with a book by Joseph Dougherty, music by Stephen Flaherty, and lyrics by Lynn Ahrens.

Based on the film of the same name, it is set in the 1950s and centers on Benjy Stone, a sketch writer for a television variety show starring Sid Caesar-like King Kaiser. Signed for a guest appearance is Errol Flynn-like Alan Swann, a one-time movie idol whose career was disrupted by his addiction to alcohol and loose women. The task of keeping him sober and celibate until airtime falls to Benjy, who soon finds himself involved in a sequence of shenanigans unlike any he ever experienced before.

After 45 previews, during which the creative team constantly reworked the troubled production, the show, directed by Ron Lagomarsino and choreographed by Thommie Walsh, opened on December 10, 1992 at Lincoln Center's Vivian Beaumont Theatre, where it ran for 36 performances. The opening night cast included Evan Pappas, Tim Curry, Katie Finneran, Andrea Martin, Josh Mostel, and Lainie Kazan, who reprised the role of Benjy's mother she had played in the film.

My Favorite Year received mixed-to-negative reviews. The New York Times's Frank Rich called the musical "a missed opportunity, a bustling but too frequently flat musical that suffers from another vogue of the 1950s, an identity crisis,"[1] and disapproved of the melodramatic turn taken in the show's second act, while Time magazine condemned it as a "barren Broadway musical."[2]

Despite the show's failure, several of its stars garnered attention during awards season, and an original cast recording was released on the RCA Victor label.

In March 2007, The Chicago Sun-Times revealed that Flaherty and Ahrens were "reworking the show with an eye on a new Broadway production."[3] Flaherty said that, "In hindsight, I think our decision to paint the musical in somewhat darker colors was a mistake." Among the revisions made to the show are two new songs, which were incorporated into a March 2007 repertory production of the show.

Contents

[edit] Songs

Act I
  • Twenty Million People - Benjy Stone and Company
  • Larger Than Life - Benjy
  • The Musketeer Sketch - Benjy, Sy Benson, King Kaiser, Alice Miller, K. C. Downing, Leo Silver and Herb Lee
  • Waldorf Suite - Benjy
  • Rookie in the Ring - Belle Steinberg Carroca
  • Manhattan - Alan Swann, Benjy and Ensemble
  • Naked in Bethesda Fountain - Sy, Alice, Leo, Herb and K. C.
  • The Gospel According to the King - King Kaiser, Alan and Company
  • The Musketeer Sketch Rehearsal - Benjy, Alan and Ensemble
  • Funny / The Duck Joke - K. C. and Alice
  • The Musketeer Sketch Rehearsal (Part II) - King Kaiser, Alan and Ensemble
  • Welcome to Brooklyn - Uncle Morty, Rookie Carroca, Belle Steinberg Carroca, Aunt Sadie, Benjy, Alan and Neighbors
  • If the World Were Like the Movies - Alan
Act II
  • Exits - Alan
  • Shut Up and Dance - K. C. and Benjy
  • Professional Showbizness Comedy - Alice, King Kaiser and Ensemble
  • The Lights Come Up - Alan and Benjy
  • Maxford House - Maxford House Girls
  • The Musketeer Sketch Finale - Company
  • My Favorite Year - Benjy and Company

[edit] Awards and Nominations

  • Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical (Curry, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Martin, winner and Kazan, nominee)
  • Theatre World Award (Martin, winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical (Mostel, nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical (Martin, winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Orchestrations (nominee)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Rich, Frank. "Review: A Rosy View of a Golden Age", The New York Times, 1992-12-11. Retrieved on 2007-04-03. 
  2. ^ "A Favorite No More", Time, 1992-12-21. Retrieved on 2007-04-03. 
  3. ^ Weiss, Hedy. "A new 'Year': Playwrights breathe livelier life into musical", Chicago Sun-Times, 2007-03-09. Retrieved on 2007-04-03. 

[edit] External links