Lend an Ear

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Lend an Ear

Original theatre program
Music Charles Gaynor
Lyrics Charles Gaynor
Book Charles Gaynor
Joseph Stein and Will Glickman, additional sketches
Productions 1948 Broadway
1959 Off-Broadway revival

Lend an Ear is a musical revue with a book, music, and lyrics by Charles Gaynor and additional sketches by Joseph Stein and Will Glickman.[1]

Productions

Background

Lend an Ear was commissioned by Frederick Burleigh, and played as a small revue in April 1941 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at the Pittsburgh Playhouse, directed by Burleigh with the performers from Carnegie Tech[2] and in a "straw hat" theatre, but plans to produce the show in New York ended. After World War II ended, it was decided to proceed with the revue, and it began rehearsals in May 1948 in Los Angeles, California. Gower Champion became involved and went from advisor to choreographer to being credited as "Dances and Musical Numbers Staged by..." Lend an Ear premiered at the Las Palmas Theatre, Los Angeles, on June 14, 1948. Rehearsals for a New York opening began on July 26, 1948 at the Coronet Theatre (now the Eugene O'Neill Theatre). The show went to Boston for its tryout, opening at the Majestic Theatre in August 1948.[3][4]

Broadway

Lend an Ear opened on Broadway on December 16, 1948 at the National Theatre[5] and moved three times before closing on January 21, 1950 after 460 performances.[6] "The brilliant revue "Lend an Ear" moved in [to the Brooks Atkinson Theatre (Broadway)] from another theatre in 1949 and played for three months." [7]

Directed by Hal Gerson, with musical staging by Gower Champion and assistant to the choreographer Marge Champion; the costumes, setting and lighting were by Raoul Pene DuBois. The cast featured Carol Channing, Yvonne Adair, Jennie Lou Law, Gloria Hamilton, Gene Nelson, Bob Scheerer, and William Eythe.[1][5][6] Channing, Nelson, and Scheerer won the Theatre World Award,[8] and Gower Champion won the Tony Award for Best Choreography.[9][10]

The musical gave Carol Channing her break "where the wide-eyed beauty displayed her fabulous comic talents and vocal abilities".[11] This led to her being cast, the following year, in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.[12]

No cast album was made.

Revival

A revival was produced Off-Broadway at the Renata Theatre by Steven Slane and Jenny Lou Law in September 1959, with direction by Law and choreography by Bill Hooks. The cast featured Elizabeth Allen, Charles Nelson Reilly, and June Squibb.[13]

Revue sketches and songs overview

The sketch topics included psychoanalysts, gossip columnists, Santo Domingo as seen by a tourist, silent screen stars, a poor opera company that has no orchestra, and "The Gladiola Girl".[6] The most famous sketch was the first act finale, "The Missing Road Company", featuring an imaginary lost touring troupe of the 1925 musical hit The Gladiola Girl, which was a spoof of 1920s musicals.[4][14] In the sketch "Friday Dancing Class" a young man's (Gene Nelson) mother makes him go to a dance class; when he misbehaves and is forced to dance alone, he is saved by one of the young ladies.[14] Channing played "such diverse characters as a French movie star, a British Christian Scientist, and 1920s flapper."[12]

Songs included "Who hit me?",[15] "Neurotic you and psychopathic me",[16] "Where is the She for Me?".,[4] "Give Your Heart a Chance to Sing", "Doin' the Old Yahoo Step, and "Molly O'Reilly".[6]

The sketches and songs

Source:[1]

Act 1
  • After Hours - The Company
  • Give Your Heart a Chance to Sing - Dorothy Babbs (The Girl); Robert Dixon, Arthur Maxwell, Bob Hergert, Tommy Morton, Bob Scheerer (The Boys)
  • Neurotic You and Psychopathic Me - Lee Stacy (The Nurse), Anne Renee Anderson (The Patient), William Eythe (The Doctor)
  • I'm Not in Love - Arthur Maxwell (The Boss Who Dictates); Yvonne Adair (The Secretary Who Sings); Gene Nelson, Tommy Morton, Bob Scheerer (The Bosses Who Dance)
  • Do It Yourself - William Eythe, Al Checco, Jenny Lou Law, Hal Hackett
  • Friday Dancing Class - Gene Nelson and Company
  • Ballade - Anne Renee Anderson
  • When Someone You Love Loves You - Sung by: Gloria Hamilton and Robert Dixon; Danced by: Antoinette Guhlke and Gene Nelson
  • The Missing Road Company (The Gladiola Girl) - William Eythe (Announcer) and Company

Act 2
  • Santo Domingo - Arthur Maxwell (Travel Agent), Yvonne Adair (The Tourist), The Company (Santo Domingans)
  • I'm On the Lookout - Gloria Hamilton
  • Three Little Queens of the Silver Screen - Lee Stacy, Anne Renee Anderson, Carol Channing
  • Molly O'Reilly - Dancers: Bob Scheerer, Dorothy Babbs; Sung by: Jenine Smith, Gloria Hamilton, Beverly Hosier, Robert Dixon, Arthur Maxwell, Larry Stewart
  • All the World's - Arthur Maxwell (Announcer), William Eythe (Mr. Playgoer), Carol Channing (Mrs. Playgoer), George Hall (A Bartender)
  • Who Hit Me? - Sung by: Yvonne Adair; Danced by: Gene Nelson
  • Words Without Song - Arthur Maxwell, Carol Channing, Anne Renee Anderson, George Hall, William Eythe and Chorus
  • Finale

Response

Brooks Atkinson, in his New York Times review, wrote that "Gaynor's intimate musical is a model of skill and taste in this style of fooling, and it is performed by some fresh-grown youngsters whose talents have not been corrupted yet...He is lightly satirizing some of the more palatable follies of the day, and he is so neat in his touch that he does not have to clever...At the end of the first act Mr. Gaynor offers a very funny burlesque of old-time musical comedy-'The Gladiola Girl'".[5]

According to Playbill.com, "In December 1948, a delirious revue, "Lend an Ear," entirely written by Charles Gaynor, set the town on its ear. Carol Channing was an overnight success as a loony, wide-eyed blonde in such numbers as "The Gladiola Girl" and "Opera Without Music, " and Yvonne Adair, William Eythe, Gene Nelson, and the rest of the cast made this one of the theatre's best revues of all time."[17]

Television

Excerpts of the musical appeared on the first episode of the CBS Television series Tonight on Broadway in 1948. Highlights of the revue were recreated for the October 28, 1954 broadcast of the CBS monthly variety series Shower of Stars.[14]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Gaynor, Charles.Lend an Ear:An Intimate Musical Revue(google books), Samuel French, Inc., 1948, ISBN 0-573-68028-0
  2. "Gaynor Revue Opens Tonight"Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (google books), April 26, 1941
  3. Payne-Carter, David; McNamara, Brooks; Nelson, Stephen.Gower Champion: dance and American musical theatre, google books, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999, ISBN 0-313-30451-3, p. 34-35
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lend an EarLife Magazine, (google books), Vol. 26, No. 9 ISSN 0024-3019, Published by Time Inc., February 28, 1949
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Atkinson, Brooks, "At the Theatre", The New York Times, December 17, 1948, p. 38
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Green, Stanley and Green, Kay.Broadway Musicals Show By Show, 'Lend an Ear'Broadway Musicals Show By Show (google books). Hal Leonard Corporation, 1996, ISBN 0-7935-7750-0, p. 139
  7. "At This Theatre: Brooks Atkinson Theatre (Broadway)" playbill.com, retrieved March 6, 2010
  8. "Theatre World Awards" (see 1948-49) theatreworldawards.org, retrieved March 6, 2010
  9. "Gower Champion biography" pbs.org, retrieved March 6, 2010
  10. "Lend an Ear Tony Award, 1949" tonyawards.com, retrieved March 6, 2010
  11. "Carol Channing Biography" dlife.com, March 19, 2009
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Carol Channing biography" Turner Classic Movies, retrieved March 6, 2010
  13. Smith, Michael.Theatre:Lend an EarThe Village Voice (google books), September 30, 1959
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Mandelbaum, Ken.Obscure Videos: Two Revues broadway.com, November 18, 2005
  15. Song from Lend an Ear, Bib ID 3602284, Soutrhern Music Publishing, c1948 National Library of Australia, retrieved March 6, 2010
  16. Song from Lend an Ear, Bib ID 3602274, Soutrhern Music Publishing, c1949 National Library of Australia, retrieved March 6, 2010
  17. At This Theatre, Nederlander Theatre (Broadway) playbill.com, retrieved March 6, 2010

External links

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