Banjo Eyes

Banjo Eyes is a musical based on the play Three Men on a Horse by John Cecil Holm and George Abbott. It has a book by Joseph Quinlan and Izzy Ellinson, music by Vernon Duke, and lyrics by John La Touche and Harold Adamson.

Banjo Eyes
Page from souvenir program
MusicVernon Duke
LyricsJohn La Touche
Harold Adamson
BookJoseph Quinlan
Izzy Elinson
Productions1941 Broadway

Produced by Albert Lewis and staged by Hassard Short, the Broadway production opened on December 25, 1941 at the Hollywood Theatre, where it ran for 126 performances. The cast included Eddie Cantor, Lionel Stander, William Johnson, and, in a small role, future novelist Jacqueline Susann (Valley of the Dolls).[1]

Although Cantor was known as "Banjo Eyes," the title referred not to his character but to a talking race horse, played in costume by the vaudeville team of Morton and Mayo.[2] In dream sequences, Banjo Eyes would give Cantor's character tips on which horses were going to win different races, but warned him his supposed talent for picking the winners would vanish if he ever placed a bet himself. The book was a very loose adaptation of its source, and the World War II anthem "We Did It Before (And We Can Do It Again)" by Charles Tobias and Cliff Friend was interpolated into the score for no apparent reason other than to stir up patriotism among audience members. Cantor closed the show by singing a medley of his hits in his customary blackface. The show closed when its star suffered a medical emergency.[3]

Song list

gollark: A gollarious neural network *would* have many practical applications.
gollark: I was telling lyricly to do so.
gollark: Look, if you want, you can send me your entire discord data package and I can train GPT-2 on you.
gollark: I assume it's just getting GCed more aggressively now.
gollark: 307MB.

References

  1. Banjo Eyes [n.d.] IBDB Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved January 4, 2017.
  2. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/3717799/interview_with_andy_mayo/
  3. Mordden, Ethan, Beautiful Mornin': The Broadway Musical in the 1940s. Oxford University Press 1999. ISBN 0-19-512851-6, p. 26
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.