Man on the Moon (musical)

Man on the Moon is a 1975 musical written by John Phillips of the Mamas & The Papas, produced by Andy Warhol and directed by Paul Morrissey. The story concerns an American astronaut who leads a mission of interplanetary dignitaries to prevent the destruction of the universe by a bomb that has been placed on the moon by an evil scientist and primed to explode. Original illustration by Rudy Cardenas of Detroit, MI

Man On The Moon
Original Ad Illustrated by Andy Warhol
MusicJohn Phillips
LyricsJohn Phillips
BookJohn Phillips
Productions1975 Little Theatre, New York

The original production ran at the Little Theatre in New York for 43 preview performances (beginning December 27, 1974), opened on January 29, 1975 and closed two days later, on February 1, after disastrous opening night reviews.

Background

Soon after completing work on his debut album John, the Wolf King Of L.A., John Phillips came up with the idea for a space-themed musical project, inspired by his viewing of the July 1969 TV broadcast of the Apollo 11 moon landing. The initial title for the project was simply Space. Phillips worked on a script and wrote songs for Space over a period of two years with his third wife, Geneviève Waïte. Phillips envisioned that the lead role of the astronaut would be played by either Elvis or Ricky Nelson, both of whom he was friendly with.

Initial funding for the project came from producer Michael Butler, who had brought the stage musical Hair to Broadway. Butler hired a young director called Michael Bennett to work on the project, but he and Phillips did not gel and Bennett resigned during dress rehearsals for the production at the Aquarius Theater in Los Angeles. Phillips then attempted to generate interest in a film version of the book with the help of real estate heir Leonard Holzer (a producer on the Stones documentary, Gimme Shelter and the former husband of Warhol superstar, Baby Jane Holzer). Holzer took the project to Ray Stark, producer of Funny Girl, who brought the script to the attention of Barbra Streisand, while Holzer tried to hook Jack Nicholson for the male lead. In 1972, Phillips also got a copy of the script to director George Lucas through his daughter Mackenzie Phillips, who was one of the stars of Lucas's film American Graffiti. Phillips would later maintain that Lucas got the idea to make Star Wars from Space.[1][2]

When financing for the film seemed to be going nowhere, Phillips and Waïte focused their energy into making the musical happen again. They went to New York to raise money, performing the songs to potential backers as part of their pitch. Waite managed to persuade Andy Warhol to come on board as producer. Warhol's manager and film-making collaborator Paul Morrissey signed on as director of the production, which was then renamed Man On The Moon. Rehearsals took place at Andy Warhol's Factory. Morrissey, concerned about the script, hired Michael O'Donoghue to rewrite much of the dialogue, though these revisions were ultimately not used.[3]

Musical numbers

Phillips recorded demo versions of many of these songs, which were issued for the first time on a 2009 CD entitled Andy Warhol Presents Man on the Moon. Some were also recorded by Geneviève Waïte for her 1974 album Romance Is on the Rise (namely, "Girls", "American Man On The Moon" and "Love Is coming Back". Versions of "Star Stepping Stranger", "Penthouse of Your Mind" and "Yesterday I Left The Earth" appeared on the 2007 CD Jack of Diamonds.

Characters and original cast

The original cast (and preview performances) featured Denny Doherty as Dr. Bomb and John Phillips as King Can. Two weeks before the production opened, Phillips was taken out of the production and replaced by Denny Doherty (who was originally to play Dr. Bomb). Harlan Foss was hired to play Dr. Bomb.

Critical reception

The New York Times critic Clive Barnes reviewed the musical on its opening night. His write-up appeared the next day in the January 1975 edition of the newspaper. "For connoisseurs of the truly bad," he wrote, "Man On The Moon may be a small milestone." Barnes was particularly critical of Andy Warhol's involvement in the production ("Mr Warhol's artistic practice – if I have caught his drift aright - is to produce works of arts so inept that their ineptitude becomes their value") but he also decried Philips story as "naive" … Barnes' review was so scathing that the musical closed the next day.[4]

Newsday critic Allan Wallack said "Man on the Moon is the kind of show that ought to be reviewed on the obit page."[5]

Soundtrack

In 2009, a CD entitled Andy Warhol Presents Man on the Moon and credited to John Phillips was released by Varèse Sarabande as part of the John Phillips Presents series of CDs. It contained 22 previously-unreleased recordings of song demos from the musical recorded by Phillips, along with 6 songs taken from a recording made by Andy Warhol himself at one of the dress rehearsals for Man On The Moon. A multimedia portion of the CD also included an early script for Space, photos taken of the production and backstage as well as photos of the star-studded opening night party at NYC theatre hangout Sardi's and footage of two songs taken from a video of an early rehearsal of the show.

gollark: No, this is Minecraft.
gollark: GTech™ lunar railgun array.
gollark: This is true and not false.
gollark: If we play our cards right, APIONET could take over.
gollark: Where is "Greetings, foolish mortals"?

References

  1. "LONG LOST FOOTAGE OF MUSICAL PLAY BY JOHN PHILLIPS, PRODUCED BY ANDY WARHOL (1975)". Dangerous Minds. 2009-07-31. Archived from the original on 2009-08-03. Retrieved 2018-12-23.
  2. As reported in the liner notes for Andy Warhol Presents Man On The Moon by Chris Campion and Jeffrey A. Greenberg.
  3. Perrin, Mr. Mike: the Life and Work of Michael O'Donoghue, p. 270
  4. Theater, New York (2019-03-29). "Andy Warhol from A To Broadway: That Time Warhol Produced a Broadway Musical". New York Theater. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  5. ""Man on Moon" theatrical disaster, by Allan Wallach". Democrat and Chronicle. 1975-01-31. p. 19. Retrieved 2020-06-21.

Reviews of the 2009 CD release

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.