Marty (lost musical based on 1955 film; 2002): Difference between revisions
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{{ | {{InfoboxLost | ||
|title=Marty | |title=<center>Marty</center> | ||
|image=81-V9p3ndWL. AC UF1000,1000 QL80 .jpg | |image=81-V9p3ndWL. AC UF1000,1000 QL80 .jpg | ||
|imagecaption=Program cover for the musical, along with a ticket stub for the November 15 production | |imagecaption=Program cover for the musical, along with a ticket stub for the November 15 production | ||
|status= | |status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | ||
}} | }} | ||
''Marty'' began life as a 1953 installment of the ''Goodyear Television Playhouse'' written by Paddy Chayefsky, before becoming a 1955 film that won four Oscars out of eight nominations. It tells the story of the titular character, a thirtysomething butcher living with his mother in the Bronx, having resigned himself to the fact that he will remain single while everyone around him is finding love. All that changes when, at a dance, he comes across Clara, a young woman who has also resigned herself to the same thing, and a romance blossoms between them. | ''Marty'' began life as a 1953 installment of the ''Goodyear Television Playhouse'' written by Paddy Chayefsky, before becoming a 1955 film that won four Oscars out of eight nominations. It tells the story of the titular character, a thirtysomething butcher living with his mother in the Bronx, having resigned himself to the fact that he will remain single while everyone around him is finding love. All that changes when, at a dance, he comes across Clara, a young woman who has also resigned herself to the same thing, and a romance blossoms between them. | ||
In addition to the 1953 and 1955 versions, '''a stage musical version was created''', directed by Mark Brokaw with a book by Rupert Holmes (who replaced Aaron Sorkin), music by Lee Adams, and lyrics by Charles Strouse, and starring John C. Reilly as Marty. It ran from October 18 to November 24, 2002 at the Huntington Theatre in Boston<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20130103043719/http://www.huntingtontheatre.org/season/2002-2003/Marty/ Huntington Theatre's archived listing of their production]. Retrieved | In addition to the 1953 and 1955 versions, '''a stage musical version was created''', directed by Mark Brokaw with a book by Rupert Holmes (who replaced Aaron Sorkin), music by Lee Adams, and lyrics by Charles Strouse, and starring John C. Reilly as Marty. It ran from October 18 to November 24, 2002 at the Huntington Theatre in Boston<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20130103043719/http://www.huntingtontheatre.org/season/2002-2003/Marty/ Huntington Theatre's archived listing of their production]. Retrieved 23 Jul 2023</ref>, though readings were held as early as 2000.<ref>[https://nypost.com/2001/05/30/melodies-for-marty-strouse-and-adams-team-up-for-new-musical/ New York Post article about a reading.] Retrieved 23 Jul 2023</ref> The director intended to have the show come to Broadway, however, this was not to be.<ref>[https://www.playbill.com/article/musical-marty-with-john-c-reilly-coming-to-broadway-next-season-com-111716 Playbill article about the show's potential Broadway run.] Retrieved 23 Jul 2023</ref> | ||
Despite the pedigree of its creators and star, very little information about the show exists online and no video or audio recordings, even professional ones, have surfaced over twenty years later. Only a few photos have surfaced and some of the song titles are known through articles. | Despite the pedigree of its creators and star, very little information about the show exists online and no video or audio recordings, even professional ones, have surfaced over twenty years later. Only a few photos have surfaced and some of the song titles are known through articles. | ||
Line 24: | Line 20: | ||
* Why Not You and Me? | * Why Not You and Me? | ||
* Wish I Knew A Love Song | * Wish I Knew A Love Song | ||
==Personnel== | |||
Per Variety:<ref>[https://variety.com/2002/legit/reviews/marty-4-1200545026/ Variety article about the Boston production.] Retrieved October 29, 2023</ref> | |||
'''Cast''' | |||
* Marty - John C. Reilly | |||
* Clara - Anne Torsiglieri | |||
* Mrs. Pilletti - Barbara Andres | |||
* Aunt Catherine - Marilyn Pasekoff | |||
* Mrs. Fusari - Cheryl McMahon | |||
* Angie - Jim Bracchitta | |||
* Tilio/Bandleader - Alexander Gemignani | |||
* Virginia - Jennifer Frankel | |||
* Thomas - Evan Pappas | |||
* Patsy - Frank Aronson | |||
* Joe - Joey Sorge | |||
* Ralph - Robert Montano | |||
* Leo - Matt Ramsey | |||
* Bartender/Andy - Tim Douglas | |||
* Father DiBlasio - Michael Allosso | |||
* Mary Feeney - Kate Middleton | |||
* Mr. Ryan - Michael Walker | |||
* Keegan - Kent French | |||
* Rita - Shannon Hammons | |||
* Dance hall patrons - Jim Augustine, Bethany J. Cassidy | |||
'''Crew''' | |||
* Director - Mark Brokaw | |||
* Choreography - Rob Ashford | |||
* Musical director - Eric Stern | |||
* Sets - Robert Jones | |||
* Costumes - Jess Goldstein | |||
* Lighting - Mark McCullough | |||
* Sound - Kurt Eric Fischer | |||
* Orchestrations - Don Sebesky and Larry Hochman | |||
* Production stage manager - James FitzSimmons | |||
* Stage manager - Thomas M. Kauffman | |||
* Huntington Theater Co. artistic director - Nicholas Martin | |||
==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
[[Category:Lost music]] | |||
[[Category:Lost recordings of real incidents]] | |||
[[Category:Completely lost media]] |
Latest revision as of 14:44, 29 October 2023
Marty began life as a 1953 installment of the Goodyear Television Playhouse written by Paddy Chayefsky, before becoming a 1955 film that won four Oscars out of eight nominations. It tells the story of the titular character, a thirtysomething butcher living with his mother in the Bronx, having resigned himself to the fact that he will remain single while everyone around him is finding love. All that changes when, at a dance, he comes across Clara, a young woman who has also resigned herself to the same thing, and a romance blossoms between them.
In addition to the 1953 and 1955 versions, a stage musical version was created, directed by Mark Brokaw with a book by Rupert Holmes (who replaced Aaron Sorkin), music by Lee Adams, and lyrics by Charles Strouse, and starring John C. Reilly as Marty. It ran from October 18 to November 24, 2002 at the Huntington Theatre in Boston[1], though readings were held as early as 2000.[2] The director intended to have the show come to Broadway, however, this was not to be.[3]
Despite the pedigree of its creators and star, very little information about the show exists online and no video or audio recordings, even professional ones, have surfaced over twenty years later. Only a few photos have surfaced and some of the song titles are known through articles.
Known Songs
Note: the songs are listed in alphabetical order and do not reflect their order within the show.
- Life Is Sweet
- My Star
- Niente Da Fare
- Saturday Night Girl
- Whaddya Feel Like Doin’ Tonight
- Why Not You and Me?
- Wish I Knew A Love Song
Personnel
Per Variety:[4]
Cast
- Marty - John C. Reilly
- Clara - Anne Torsiglieri
- Mrs. Pilletti - Barbara Andres
- Aunt Catherine - Marilyn Pasekoff
- Mrs. Fusari - Cheryl McMahon
- Angie - Jim Bracchitta
- Tilio/Bandleader - Alexander Gemignani
- Virginia - Jennifer Frankel
- Thomas - Evan Pappas
- Patsy - Frank Aronson
- Joe - Joey Sorge
- Ralph - Robert Montano
- Leo - Matt Ramsey
- Bartender/Andy - Tim Douglas
- Father DiBlasio - Michael Allosso
- Mary Feeney - Kate Middleton
- Mr. Ryan - Michael Walker
- Keegan - Kent French
- Rita - Shannon Hammons
- Dance hall patrons - Jim Augustine, Bethany J. Cassidy
Crew
- Director - Mark Brokaw
- Choreography - Rob Ashford
- Musical director - Eric Stern
- Sets - Robert Jones
- Costumes - Jess Goldstein
- Lighting - Mark McCullough
- Sound - Kurt Eric Fischer
- Orchestrations - Don Sebesky and Larry Hochman
- Production stage manager - James FitzSimmons
- Stage manager - Thomas M. Kauffman
- Huntington Theater Co. artistic director - Nicholas Martin
Gallery
References
- ↑ Huntington Theatre's archived listing of their production. Retrieved 23 Jul 2023
- ↑ New York Post article about a reading. Retrieved 23 Jul 2023
- ↑ Playbill article about the show's potential Broadway run. Retrieved 23 Jul 2023
- ↑ Variety article about the Boston production. Retrieved October 29, 2023