1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Mike Nichols & Elaine May in "The Red Mill" - Dupont Show of the Month 1958 ., 17 May 1999
Author:
Joseph B. Scully (thisshow@aol.com) from Tarzana, CA, USA
Watching and listening to Mike and Elaine together in the back -seat of a
Rolls Royce limmo, singing Victor Herbert's "Why do I love You? Why do you
Love me?" to each other, remains for their "humble" Casting
Director/Associate Producer a vivid career-highlight memory all these
forty
one years later. Memory loses a lot in time, yet I find great, easy
pleasure
in recalling/ replaying their performance in this mind and
heart.
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Cole Porter's Aladdin: disappointingly mundane children's play with "adult" songs squeezed in, 30 May 2004
Author:
Robert Armstrong (elbob-o@webtv.net) from Chicago, Illinois USA
After more than forty years of owning and enjoying the record album of Cole
Porter's final musical Aladdin, I was finally given the opportunity to see
the show itself via the (apparently) live broadcast of February 1958. I must
say, even after due warnings of how the show was "summarily dismissed" by
critics at the time, that it is a tremendous entertainment
letdown.
Cyril Ritchard, probably most famous for his portrayal of Mr. Darling/Capt.
Hook in the Broadway and television productions of Peter Pan, is placed in
the unenviably silly role of narrator and villain Sui Generis (a pun on
"chop suey," I assume), who goes through the opening patter song Come to the
Supermarket (the show is a bit topheavy with comic novelty songs) in a
stereotypically Chinese attitude with hands hidden in sleeves and hopping up
and down to music's rythm. Other numerous celebrities in respective roles
(Dennis King, Basil Rathbone, Una Merkel and Howard Morris, plus Sal Mineo
in the title role, Anna Maria Alberghetti as his Princess and Geoffrey
Holder as the Genie) don't fare much better with the childlike level of
dialog provided by S J Perelman.
If it were a children's play, then fine, but the relative sophistication of
the Cole Porter songs make an uncomfortable transition to music. The
well-known story
of Aladdin and his magic lamp remains intact, if somewhat truncated, but
with nowhere near the musical and dramatic dimensions of Disney's (okay,
Eisner's) animated film of later years, nor even the contemporaneous Aladdin
film "starring" Mr. Magoo. Porter's own deteriorating involvement in the
show due to his increasingly painful leg problems and upcoming operation may
help to explain the so-so level of integration between songs and
plot.
I still strongly recommend the cast album from CBS, more recently rereleased
as a compact disc -- and in stereo -- but it seems that its performances and
arrangements are not at all representative of the show itself. I conclude
that Mr. Porter had arranged for this "concept album" to be produced with
the dramatic and musical continuity of a legit stage musical, on the
speculation that a remounting on Broadway might result from the positive
exposure. In fact there was a London stage production a few years later, for
which a record album was also released.
To be fair, I must say that Aladdin's songs are not equally admired by all
listeners, although a few consistently stand out, such as the aforementioned
Come to the Supermarket (covered by Streisand in her '63 solo album), and
two other comic numbers for Ritchard.
Dennis King gets two reprises of a pretty-nice Trust Your Destiny to Your
Star, and Mineo's love song I Adore You has a catchy simplicity I like to
compare to Rodgers' and Hammerstein's last song together, Edelweiss (others
may find the Porter song a bit __too__ simple). By the way, Porter's own
last song ever written, Wouldn't it Be Fun, is only on the album and not in
the show itself.
I was aware, from the rather pessimistic account given in the liner notes of
the CD release, that Aladdin was either genuinely bad or simply considered
unworthy by critics because of the wholesale quality and production values
attributed to television; nevertheless I'd had hopes that Cole Porter's
Aladdin would show potential as a musical on a level with other shows of
that period. I will always like it to a fair extent, and I think others will
too, but will never again attach to it the youthful wonder that I'd once had
for the show as I thought I'd known it.
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"The DuPont Show of the Month" (1957)
1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-
Mike Nichols & Elaine May in "The Red Mill" - Dupont Show of the Month 1958 ., 17 May 1999
Author: Joseph B. Scully (thisshow@aol.com) from Tarzana, CA, USA
Watching and listening to Mike and Elaine together in the back -seat of a Rolls Royce limmo, singing Victor Herbert's "Why do I love You? Why do you Love me?" to each other, remains for their "humble" Casting Director/Associate Producer a vivid career-highlight memory all these forty one years later. Memory loses a lot in time, yet I find great, easy pleasure in recalling/ replaying their performance in this mind and heart.
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Cole Porter's Aladdin: disappointingly mundane children's play with "adult" songs squeezed in, 30 May 2004
Author: Robert Armstrong (elbob-o@webtv.net) from Chicago, Illinois USA
After more than forty years of owning and enjoying the record album of Cole Porter's final musical Aladdin, I was finally given the opportunity to see the show itself via the (apparently) live broadcast of February 1958. I must say, even after due warnings of how the show was "summarily dismissed" by critics at the time, that it is a tremendous entertainment letdown.
Cyril Ritchard, probably most famous for his portrayal of Mr. Darling/Capt. Hook in the Broadway and television productions of Peter Pan, is placed in the unenviably silly role of narrator and villain Sui Generis (a pun on "chop suey," I assume), who goes through the opening patter song Come to the Supermarket (the show is a bit topheavy with comic novelty songs) in a stereotypically Chinese attitude with hands hidden in sleeves and hopping up and down to music's rythm. Other numerous celebrities in respective roles (Dennis King, Basil Rathbone, Una Merkel and Howard Morris, plus Sal Mineo in the title role, Anna Maria Alberghetti as his Princess and Geoffrey Holder as the Genie) don't fare much better with the childlike level of dialog provided by S J Perelman.
If it were a children's play, then fine, but the relative sophistication of the Cole Porter songs make an uncomfortable transition to music. The well-known story of Aladdin and his magic lamp remains intact, if somewhat truncated, but with nowhere near the musical and dramatic dimensions of Disney's (okay, Eisner's) animated film of later years, nor even the contemporaneous Aladdin film "starring" Mr. Magoo. Porter's own deteriorating involvement in the show due to his increasingly painful leg problems and upcoming operation may help to explain the so-so level of integration between songs and plot.
I still strongly recommend the cast album from CBS, more recently rereleased as a compact disc -- and in stereo -- but it seems that its performances and arrangements are not at all representative of the show itself. I conclude that Mr. Porter had arranged for this "concept album" to be produced with the dramatic and musical continuity of a legit stage musical, on the speculation that a remounting on Broadway might result from the positive exposure. In fact there was a London stage production a few years later, for which a record album was also released.
To be fair, I must say that Aladdin's songs are not equally admired by all listeners, although a few consistently stand out, such as the aforementioned Come to the Supermarket (covered by Streisand in her '63 solo album), and two other comic numbers for Ritchard. Dennis King gets two reprises of a pretty-nice Trust Your Destiny to Your Star, and Mineo's love song I Adore You has a catchy simplicity I like to compare to Rodgers' and Hammerstein's last song together, Edelweiss (others may find the Porter song a bit __too__ simple). By the way, Porter's own last song ever written, Wouldn't it Be Fun, is only on the album and not in the show itself.
I was aware, from the rather pessimistic account given in the liner notes of the CD release, that Aladdin was either genuinely bad or simply considered unworthy by critics because of the wholesale quality and production values attributed to television; nevertheless I'd had hopes that Cole Porter's Aladdin would show potential as a musical on a level with other shows of that period. I will always like it to a fair extent, and I think others will too, but will never again attach to it the youthful wonder that I'd once had for the show as I thought I'd known it.
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