Neighboring widowers plot to romantically unite their son and daughter by pretending to feud and forbidding the two children to associate with each other. Their scheme works and the two youn... Read allNeighboring widowers plot to romantically unite their son and daughter by pretending to feud and forbidding the two children to associate with each other. Their scheme works and the two youngsters fall head-over-heels in love. To end their "feud" the fathers hire a bandit and his... Read allNeighboring widowers plot to romantically unite their son and daughter by pretending to feud and forbidding the two children to associate with each other. Their scheme works and the two youngsters fall head-over-heels in love. To end their "feud" the fathers hire a bandit and his henchmen to fake an abduction and allow the son to rout the assailants. The plan works, b... Read all
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First off, Ricardo Montalban as El Gallo can't really sing. Neither can the fathers, as portrayed by Bert Lahr and Stanley Holloway. That they can't sing doesn't matter so much since they are characters parts, but there's no harmonizing and no chemistry. John Davidson as Matt is fine, but Susan Watson as Luisa is just plain awful and her high notes are weak and often sour. It doesn't help that the music drowns out the singers on several occasions.
Listen to the 1960 soundtrack from the original show if you want to really hear the terrific score by Harvey Schmidt and Tom Jones (no not THAT Tom Jones). The original production utilized a piano, harp, and xylophone. This TV production's full orchestra is too big and loud.
Jerry Orbach was the original Gallo and he had a good singing voice. Likewise Kenneth Nelson as Matt. Their numbers together featured two strong voices and nice harmonizing. Rita Gardner as Luisa had a great soprano voice and held her own with the men as well as being able to hold those high notes.
Major victim here is the elimination of "It Depends on What You Pay," in which Gallo sells the fathers on the idea of a rape (abduction) so that the boy can save the girl. They mutter a few lines in place of the song. "Rape Ballet" has already (this is 1964) been renamed "Abduction Ballet" and played confusingly. Also, the "Round and Round" number is cut in half and badly filmed in an artsy out-of-focus way.
As bad as this TV production is, the 2008 feature film was even worse. If you want to experience "Try to Remember," "Soon It's Gonna Rain," and "They Were You," by the CD of the original 1960 show.
Rita Gardner, Kenneth Nelson, and Jerry Orbach stand supreme in this one-of-a-kind musical.
Montalban was excellent casting for El Galo. As an actor; he found effective, sometimes unusual ways to act the poetic text. His singing was passable, though inferior to those who've usually played the part.
Fun to see Lahr and Holloway ham it up as the fathers, though they seemed under rehearsed.
Negatives: Using a full orchestra, playing cliche'd, mushy orchestrations, was a mistake which hindered the vocals. All the charming lightness of the original instrumental accompaniment was gone.
A lot of material was cut out of this one hour version of the play. Some I didn't miss, but some I did. It seemed to me that some of the text was new, not necessarily bad, but needless revision to the original.
This production's staging is note-perfect: on a spacious indoor set that convincingly depicts a rural outdoor setting in autumn. (As the beautiful opening song notes, this is September.) I was surprised by the elimination here of the top-hatted character known in the stage play as the Mute, somewhat equivalent to the Property Man in Chinese drama. Two other minor roles have been incorporated into the roles of the fathers, Hucklebee and Bellomy. A press release issued at the time this special was broadcast on American TV stated that this was "to make the fathers' roles fatter and funnier".
And, oh, those fathers! The boy's father Hucklebee is played by the great Bert Lahr, whilst the girl's father (a slightly more difficult role) is tackled by the great Stanley Holloway. Lahr and Holloway had never worked together before, yet here they convince us that they've been cronies for years (despite their wildly diverse accents). Their harmonising on the comic duet "Never Say 'No'" is hilarious. Also, Ricardo Montalban is splendid and quietly dignified as El Gallo, the pimp of the rape that's not a rape.
As for the young lovers ... as the boy, John Davidson is, well, squeaky-clean. I was much more interested in seeing the performance of Susan Watson as the girl. It's amazing that Susan Watson is today so obscure. In the early 1960s, Watson was a vitally important Broadway performer: the bridge between Barbara Cook (before her) and Bernadette Peters (after her). Watson was the generic ingenue, starring in several Broadway musicals: among others, she played the Ann-Margret role in the stage version of 'Bye Bye Birdie'. Seeing her vivacious performance here, I'm surprised that she never translated her stage stardom into screen stardom. I'll rate this excellent chamber musical 9 out of 10.
That said, and even agreeing that for a one-hour presentation, something must be cut, I really wish they hadn't cut "It Depends on What You Pay" or "This Plum Is Too Ripe." I understand the reason for the first one, since this was broadcast in Prime Time as part of the Hallmark Hall of Fame; but these two songs appeal to my cynical sense of humor. Still, what survives is very well done. And I can always hear these two fine songs on my copy of the original cast album.
Did you know
- TriviaBased on the longest playing musical in NY theater history.
- Quotes
[first lines]
El Gallo: Let me tell you a few things before we begin the play. First of all, the characters: a boy, a girl, two fathers. It is hard to know what is most important or how it all began. The boy was born, the girl was born, they grew up - quickly - went to school, became shy in their own ways and for different reasons. Read romances, studied cloud formations in the lazy afternoon and instead of reading textbooks tried to memorize the moon.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hallmark Hall of Fame (1951)
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