Du Barry Was a Lady
Du Barry Was a Lady | |
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Music | Cole Porter |
Lyrics | Cole Porter |
Book | Herbert Fields and B.G. DeSylva |
Productions | 1939 Broadway 1942 West End 1993 and 2001 London staged concert 1996 Encores! |
Du Barry Was a Lady is a Broadway musical, with music and lyrics by Cole Porter, and the book by Herbert Fields and B.G. DeSylva.[1] The musical starred Bert Lahr, Ethel Merman and Betty Grable, and the song "Friendship" was one of the highlights. The musical was made into a 1943 Technicolor film, DuBarry Was a Lady, starring Red Skelton, Lucille Ball, and Gene Kelly.
Plot
A washroom attendant, Louis Blore, has won a sweepstakes, and subsequently quits his job. He is in love with the nightclub singer May Daly, but she is in love with Alex Barton. Alex is the brother of her friend Alice, who is in love with Harry Norton. Meanwhile, Alex is unhappily married to Ann. Charley, Louis's replacement, suggests that Louis slip Alex a Mickey Finn. While trying to do so, Louis inadvertently drinks the Mickey Finn, falls asleep, and dreams he is King Louis XV of France, and that May is Madame du Barry. In his dream, Charley becomes the Dauphin (later Louis XVI) and Harry becomes the captain of the guard, with Ann as Du Barry's lady-in-waiting, and Alex as a peasant who wrote a rude song about The King and Du Barry (the title song: Du Barry Was A Lady). Eventually after various entanglements (including the Dauphin shooting the King in the posterior with a bow and arrow), Louis wakes up and realises that Alex is the man for May. He uses the last of his winnings to pay for Alex's divorce from Ann, and (with Charley having just quit his job) goes back to being a washroom attendant.
Productions
1939 Broadway
The musical opened on Broadway at the 46th Street Theatre on December 6, 1939, transferred to the Royale Theatre on October 21, 1940 and closed December 12, 1940, after 408 performances. It was directed by Edgar MacGregor, choreographed by Robert Alton, with the orchestrations of Robert Russell Bennett and Ted Royal. The cast featured Bert Lahr as Louis Blore, Ethel Merman as May Daly, Betty Grable as Alice Barton, Benny Baker as Charley, Ronald Graham as Alex Barton and Charles Walters as Harry Norton. Gypsy Rose Lee and Frances Williams later played the part of May Daly.[1][2]
West End
The show opened in the West End at Her Majesty's Theatre[3] on 22 October 1942 and ran for 178 performances.[4] It was directed by Richard Bird. The cast featured Arthur Riscoe as Louis Blore, Frances Day as May Daly, Frances Marsden as Alice Barton, Jacky Hunter as Charley, Bruce Trent as Alex Barton and Teddy Beaumont as Harry Norton.
Later productions
The show has been produced in concert form several times, in both the US and the UK. The two UK productions, in 1993 and 2001, were by the "Discovering Lost Musicals Charitable Trust" and featured Louise Gold as "May Daly" with Barry Cryer as Louis in 1993 and Desmond Barrit in 2001.[5][6] The May 1993 production was at the Barbican Centre. The November 2001 concert was (like the original London production) at Her Majesty's Theatre, recorded for radio by the BBC (it was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 during Christmas 2002).[7]
New York City Center Encores! presented a staged concert in February 1996 with Robert Morse (Louis) and Faith Prince (May).[8]
The song Give Him the Ooh-La-La was performed by Carol Burnett in one of her earliest TV appearances in 1956, as part of the Omnibus program The American Musical Comedy.[9]
The show later appeared on the BBC Radio with Louise Gold and Desmond Barrit singing the lead roles.
Du Barry Was A Lady received a fully staged production in May 2014 by San Francisco's 42nd Street Moon Company starring Bruce Vilanch in the Bert Lahr role, directed and choreographed by Zack Thomas Wilde.[10][11]
Songs
In an early shared credit, the songwriting duo of Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane handled the vocal arrangements for the original Broadway production.
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Reception
Brooks Atkinson wrote in the New York Times review: "Although Miss Merman is jaunty and Mr. Lahr is funny, they have a hard time keeping this show merry. The authors have struck a dead level of Broadway obscenity that does not yield much mirth. As the music-maker Mr. Porter has written a number of accomplished tunes in the modern idiom and one excellent romantic song, "Do I Love You?" but the lyrics are no more inspired than the book; they treat all humor as middling. The performers supply more pleasure than the authors and composer. Betty Grable and Charles Walters, who would also be featured in a free society, dance and sing with remarkable dash."[12]
Life Magazine praised the performers, especially Betty Grable "who can dance and sing like a May breeze" and Merman and Lahr "two musical comedy veterans...in top form."[13]
Film
The film was released by MGM on May 30, 1943. It was directed by Roy Del Ruth. It used very little of the original Cole Porter score.
References
- ^ a b "'Du Barry Was a Lady'" sondheimguide.com, accessed February 15, 2010
- ^ Green, Stanley and Green, Kay. "DuBarry Was a Lady" Broadway Musicals, Show By Show (5 ed.), Hal Leonard Corporation, 1996, ISBN 0-7935-7750-0, p. 109
- ^ The name of the theatre changes with the sex of the monarch, called His Majesty's Theatre in 1942
- ^ London Shows Chronology, 1942" guidetomusicaltheatre.com, accessed January 12, 2011
- ^ "Du Barry Was A Lady (1993 Production)", qsulis.demon.co.uk, accessed February 15, 2010
- ^ "Du Barry Was A Lady (2001 Production)" accessed February 15, 2010
- ^ Koenig, Rhoda."Dubarry was a Lady, Her Majesty's Theatre, London",The Independent, 22 November 2001
- ^ Brantley, Ben."Theater Review: Du Barry Was No Lady, In 1939 or Even TodayThe New York Times, February 17, 1996
- ^ "Omnibus" (1952) {The American Musical Comedy (#5.1)}". Retrieved 6 March 2013.
- ^ [1] sfgate.com, 2013
- ^ Du Barry 42ndstmoon.org
- ^ Atkinson, Brooks. "Bert Lahr and Ethel Merman in 'DuBarry Was a Lady' With Cole Porter's Music" New York Times, December 7, 1939
- ^ (no author). "Old and New Stars Make "DuBarry Was a Lady' Cole Porter's Latest Hit" Life Magazine, December 11, 1939, p. 59