Monday, July 27, 2020

And Away We Go!

Okay, so that's a wrap on July...cuz as of August 2, I'm off on that mega bike trip, cautiously but confidently attacking hills and dales of Lake Michigan, on a bike, the kind you pedal, sans "e".



Here's the blog address (below), so you'll know how Carol Peterson and I are doing pedaling thru the vicissitudes of travel: Take out pizza, drippy weather, vague Google Map directives, questionable motels, and high-falutin' B&Bs. We'll be traveling thru Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin; hopefully, we're not "detained" at border check points (kidding)(sorta NOT kidding!).

https://bikelakemichigan2020.blogspot.com/

...which is also known as The Cycopaths Take On The Mighty Mishigamaa. Sounds impressive, right? Well, don't be impressed til it's over and done with, and we make it back home in whole bits.


 Me, autographing amidst the inner tubes.

I'll miss you on Broadway, but there WILL be pre-recorded shows every Sunday from 3-5pm on Jazz90.1, replayed on Fridays from 4-6 on Swing & Blues Radio. Maybe that will be enough Broadway to keep you humming/tapping/invigorated! A Bientot!


Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Divine Divas!

 I thought it would be fun to post
some glamour girl pics of some
of our Sunday songbirds.
But I tell ya,
nothing beats a good black and white shot
with LIGHTING! 
Above, Ethel Merman as not many folks remember her.
Below, the marvelous Betty Hutton.


 Maureen McGovern,
whose 71st birthday is July 27th.
Below, Georgia Engel,
who we lost just last year.
She would have turned 72 on July 28th.



 Gloria DeHaven,
born July 23rd, 1925,
and below, Gloria Swanson...
just look at those EYES!
1899 - 1983
 


 Doris Day, looking wonderful in
a 1951 Warner Brothers pic.
Doris passed away on May 12, 2019,
age 97.

And Laura Benanti,
who just turned 41 last week
on July 15.
Why do I want to see this in black and white
with noir-ish shadows?? :)

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Playlist For Sunday, July 26, 2020: Make mine SUNNY SIDE UP!

Seeing that I am presently FRESH OUT OF IDEAS for a blog, this'll be short, sweet, to the point, concise as all hell, and brief. My life is Bike-Full right now, in training (I probably should put that in quotes, like my kind of "training") for an August ride around Lake Michigan. Yeah, I know, not a great time to pedal thru x number of states, but going I AM! (The 18 wheelers frighten me more than "The Virus", in reality.)



So this FINAL LIVE edition of 2 On The Aisle (until my return in early September) has a Sunny Side Up theme...in fact there are a plethora of sunshine/sunbeam/sunny Broadway songs, almost as many as there are moon songs! Who the heck knew? Well, now WE DO, so grab that Coppertone and fashion-y shades and maybe a frozen pina colada or 7 and enjoy some Le Soleil. And along with that star of stars, we'll stop and (little) shop of Horrors, take in some lovely ballads by Maureen, Laura, and birthday gal Georgia, annnnnnd let Patti LuPone re-do a couple of iconic Bway tunes, re-doing it Her Way.


 What? No Farmer Tan?

Next week, I'll post a link to my cycling blog, and that way you can keep track of that biking Lake Michigan Mishegas that will be my August. A day by day accounting of where/when/how we'll make it 1000 miles around a big blue thing. Cheers!


I Got The Sun In The Morning (Ethel Merman, Annie Get Your Gun)
Sun On My Face (Tony Roberts, Robert Morse, Elaine Joyce, Sugar)
Sunshine (Yvonne Adair, Eric Brotherson, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes)
Sunny Side To Every Situation (Karen Prunczik, Ensemble, 42nd Street)
Sunrise Melody (Rhea Blackhurst, Emily Mikesell, Mike Craver, Radio Gals)
Sun's Gonna Shine (Carmen Cusack, Dee Hoty, Stephen Bogardus,
       Bright Star)
When The Sun Goes Down In The South (Rene Auberjonois, Daniel H.
       Jenkins, Bob Gunton, Big River)
Once Upon A Time (Maureen McGovern, The Pleasure Of His Company)
My Time Of Day (Laura Benanti, In Constant Search Of The Right Kind Of
       Attention)
I Remember Love (Georgia Engel, Edward Hibbert, The Drowsy Chaperone)
I Got The Sun In The Morning (Betty Hutton, Annie Get Your Gun)
The Sun Has Got His Hat On (Robert Longden, Ensemble, Me & My Gal)
Keep Your Sunny Side Up (Ole Kittleson, Good News)
Farmer Tan (Mark Hardwick, Debra Monk, Cass Morgan, Pump Boys
       And Dinettes)
Out Of The Sun (Tony Danza, Honeymoon In Vegas)
Prologue/Little Shop Of Horrors (Company, Little Shop Of Horrors)
Grow For Me (Hunter Foster, Little Shop Of Horrors)
Skid Row (Downtown)(Company, Little Shop Of Horrors)
Suddenly Seymour (Kerry Butler, Hunter Foster, Little Shop Of Horrors)
Suppertime (Michael Leon Wooley, Hunter Foster, Little Shop Of Horrors)
Spread A Little Sunshine (Charlotte d'Amboise, Pippin)
I'm Sailing On A Sunbeam (Frank Coughlan Orchestra, Des Toohey on vocals)
At Sundown (Doris Day, Love Me Or Leave Me)
Sun At My Window, Love At My Door (Ricardo Montalban, Gloria de Haven,
       Seventh Heaven)
A Lot Of Living' To Do (Paul Gautier, Susan Watson, Bye Bye Birdie)
A Lot Of Livin' To Do (Patti LuPone, Don't Monkey With Broadway)
Something's Coming (Larry Kert, West Side Story)
Something's Coming (Patti LuPone, Don't Monkey With Broadway)
Sunrise (Mandy Gonzalez, Christopher Jackson, In The Heights)
Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying ( Jerry Dixon, Doug Eskew, Milton
       Craig Nealy, Kevin Ramsey, Jeffrey D. Sams, Glenn Turner,
       Five Guys Named Moe)
There Will Be Sun (Ensemble, Groundhog Day)
I'm Ready For My Close Up (Gloria Swanson, Sunset Boulevard) 
Ethel Merman And Sunset Boulevard (Bryan Batt, Christine Pedi,
       Forbidden Broadway Strikes Back)
Sunrise, Sunset (Zero Mostel, Maria Karnilova, Fiddler On The Roof)
I Got The Sun In The Morning (Bernadette Peters, Annie Get Your Gun)
Tomorrow (Andrea McArdle, Annie)

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Sunday Brunch: New Yorkers, Songbirds, and La Ging!





The New Yorkers opened on Broadway in 1930,
inspired by a Peter Arno cartoon, a story by E. Ray Goetz,
 AND to promote the magazine.
The Music Maestro, Cole Porter, did the honors,
with a book by Herbert Field.
Jimmy Durante starred, and of course, he had to write
ALL of his own songs
(5 out of the 17 were all his...how did Cole put up with this?).
High Society meets Bootleggers,
that was the "plot" in a nutshell!
168 performances, so it was judged a hit,
by the standards of the day.


 Hopes of mounting a revival were challenged 
by the fact that most of the original material
was lost,
save for some rather sketchy notes by a stage manager.
So when Jack Viertel and the other Powers That Be
at Encores!
attempted to re-do this gem,
they had to insert/edit/rewrite and insert songs
(from other Porter shows). 
They also discovered some of those Durante creations 
in a Los Angeles archive. (Lucky us!)

 Robyn Hurder and Friends. 
(Dip, Louise! Dip!)


The 2017 production starred Scarlett Strallen, Tam Mutu (above)
Cyrille Aimée (below), and Kevin Chamberlain (below THAT, center).
 Cyrille got to do "Love For Sale",
and Kevin reprised the Jimmy Durante role/"songs".






  
Laura Benanti has a birthday this week...she turns 41 on July 15! 
 For her work in Gypsy, she received a 
Tony for Best Featured Actress In A Musical...
as Louise in the 2008 revival with Patti LuPone.
 Some of her many Broadway credits include:



 Eliza in the revival of My Fair Lady...



 Amalia in She Loves Me...


and Candela in David Yazbek's 
Women On The Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. 
 Evidently, Laura felt she was an "ugly duckling" growing up,
with a penchant for Sondheim musicals.
"I came out of the womb as a 40 year old", she's said.
Below, Laura in her recurring role as Melania Trump
on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.



Annnnnd Ginger's natal day on July 16!
Born in 1911 in Independence, MO, raised in Kansas City
and Forth Worth.
At 14, "Virginia" won a Charleston contest,
which started a vaudeville career,
which led to Broadway (Girl Crazy, 1930),
which brought her to Hollywood
 (for movies like 42nd Street, 1933
where she played Anytime Annie...
"the only time she said no, she didn't hear the question").
A "star overnight" aka 8 years!
Below, Ginger "in the money" in
Gold Diggers Of 1933.



Ginger did 9 films with Fred Astaire,
like Top Hat and Swing Time...
some of the biggest hits RKO would ever have.
After that pairing no longer drew crowds,
she did comedy and drama,
winning an Oscar for Kitty Foyle in 1941. 
In 1949, she reunited with Fred to do
The Barclays Of Broadway,
replacing Judy Garland who was originally cast.

 In Stage Door, 1937,
with "roomie" Katherine Hepburn
(love their scenes together!)
Comic-timing wise, who cared if Ginger could dance?
She could dish! 
(An FYI on this movie's script:
Though it was based on the Broadway play,
written by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber,
the storyline and characters were changed soooo much,
that George joked it should have been called "Screen Door.")

 Like many actresses of a "certain age",
Ginger took a turn playing Dolly Levi.
She directed, made movies, did television appearances, 
and wrote a semi-tell-all autobiography called
"Ginger: My Story"?? 
Come Ging, make with Zing!
She passed away in 1995, at the age of 83.






Monday, July 13, 2020

Playlist For Sunday, July 19, 2020: Golden-Throated/Butter-Creamy!

Any excuse for cake, right? Like when you have a birthday party, or someone gets a raise (or manages to hold on to a JOB) or visits from a safe state or it's Christmas and there's no 3rd wave (when other than just YOU are in attendance) or (WTH) when you're alllll alone quarantining or s.d.ing and you want a comforting/sugary thing to calm your nerves. Like when you really need cake. Well, we have LOTS of excuses for CAKE in this Sunday's 2 On The Aisle, so break out the Pillsbury box (or go all "from scratch" high falutin'/snooty and butter creamy) and make a cake. And eat it, too. Cuz sometimes CAKE.



It's the anniversary of Stop The World. And Two On The Aisle (the actual musical, not the radio program). And the birthday of Laura Benanti, Ginger Rogers, and Dorothy Fields. Who could live without any of them? It seems just EVERYTHING happens in July. Or not. But CAKE!


I've never seen Stop The World. Didn't know a thing about it, except for the songs to outlive it. Seems that Little Chap (that's the protagonist, played of course by Anthony Newley) has a super power: Whenever he faces some obstacle or difficult time in the course of his life, he yells "Stop the world!" and it stops. And then he talks out his problem(s) with the audience (like a raked, semi-captivated therapist). Wouldn't that be a sublime super power? Better perhaps than invisibility or flying or never putting on weight? I'll say! The songs? Meh, with the exception of a couple of Newley signature anthems that got so overplayed in the 60s and 70s, even an 11 year old Beatle fan knew them by heart. But an interesting, timely concept. Like can I stop it NOW!?!

Wonder if it's Ginger Cake?
Ms. Rogers's birthday with the cast of The Gay Divorcee:  
Mark Sandrich, Fred Astaire, Ginger, 
Erik Rhodes, Alice Brady and Edward Everett Horton.

So stop the world, if you're able. And have cake. And songs by that golden-throated Laura and lyrics that tease by Dorothy and sexy backward dancing by La Ging! As we muscle thru a truly strange summer and lean back on a chaise of Broadway past.


The Strip (Laura Benanti, Gypsy)
Take Me Back To Manhattan (Tam Mutu, Company, The New Yorkers)
Say It With Gin (Matt Bauman, Sam Bolen, Brian Flores, Cody Williams,
       The New Yorkers)
Love For Sale(The Three Girlfriends, The New Yorkers)
The Hot Patata (Kevin Chamberlain, Clyde Alves, Jeffrey Schecter,
       The New Yorkers)
The Little Things You Do Together (Patti LuPone, Ensemble,Company)
You Could Drive A Person Crazy (George Blagden, Richard Fleeshman,
       Matthew Seadon-Young, Company)
Barcelona (Rosalie Craig, Richard Fleeshman, Company)
Have I Got A Guy For You (Patti LuPone, Daisy Maywood, Jonathan
       Bailey, Ensemble, Company)
Once In A Lifetime (Anthony Newley, Stop The World - I Want To Get Off)
Lumbered (Anthony Newley, Stop The World - I Want To Get Off)
Someone Nice Like You (Anthony Newley, Anna Quayle, Stop The World -
       I Want To Get Off)
What Kind Of Fool Am I (Anthony Newley, Stop The World - I Want To Get Off)
Who Put The Rhythm In The Rhythm Kings (The Manhattan Rhythm Kings)
Let Yourself Go (Ginger Rogers, Follow The Fleet)
Music Makes Me (Ginger Rogers, Flying Down To Rio)
Happy Feet (The Manhattan Rhythm Kings)
Show Train (Ensemble, Two On The Aisle)
Hold Me, Hold Me, Hold Me (Dolores Gray, Two On The Aisle)
The Clown (Bert Lahr, Two On The Aisle)
If You Hadn't, But You Did (Dolores Gray, Two On The Aisle)
Wouldn't It Be Loverly? (Laura Benanti, Songs From My Fair Lady)
Vanilla Ice Cream (Laura Benanti, She Loves Me)
Just You Wait (Laura Benanti, Songs From My Fair Lady)
Model Behavior (Laura Benanti, Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Break
       Down)
The Way You Look Tonight (Fred Astaire, Swing Time!)
I'm In The Mood For Love (Ann Miller, Sugar Babies)
On The Sunny Side Of The Street (Judy Garland)
He Had Refinement (Shirley Booth, A Tree Grows In Brooklyn)
Charity's Soliloquy (Gwen Verdon, Sweet Charity)
Let's Fly Away (Scarlett Strallen, Kevin Chamberlin, Clyde Alves,
       Ensemble, The New Yorkers)
I Happen To Like New York (Scarlett Strallen, Company, The New Yorkers)
Take Me Back To Manhattan (Tam Mutu, Company, The New Yorkers)

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

It's a BIZNESS!




 Crazy For You,
the "New" Gershwin musical,
opened in 1992
and won the Best Musical Tony...
not quite an original musical, but not a true revival of
Girl Crazy either.
Yup, that's one of the original stars below,
Ginger Rogers,
making her Broadway debut in 1930.
Also debuting in Girl Crazy...Ethel Merman. 




 The Cowboy Trio above
is not from the Broadway production,
but they sho do give you an insight, right?
Below, and duded up,
The Manhattan Rhythm Kings
who played the cowboys in the 1992 edition;
  Brian Nelapka, Tripp Hanson, and Hal Shane were featured as 
 Mingo, Moose, and Sam.


 Harry Groener, Jodi Benson, Beth Leavel, and Bruce Adler starred.
Choreography by Susan Stroman,
costumes by William Ivey Long,
and they both won Tonys for their efforts. 

 If you're a 2 On The Aisle listener,
you know how much I love Curtains,
with music by Kander and Ebb (and Rupert Holmes,
who added his take when Fred Ebb passed away
mid writing process).
David Hyde Pierce, Debra Monk, Jill Paice, Daniel McDonald,
and Karen Ziemba starred. 


 We'll hear "It's A Business" with Debra,
ravishing in red.
Plus "Coffee Shop Nights" with David...
and the opening number "What Kind Of Man?"
with the company, including Karen Ziemba!

 Inkeeping (Inn Keeping?)
with our theme of Takin' Care of Business",
we'll hear 2 renditions of 
"There's No Business Like Show Business":
One from the original Annie Get Your Gun musical
done in 1946
with Ethel Merman (over 1,100 performances!)
and another from the 1999 revival (Best Tony Revival winner that year)
with Bernadette Peters.
Above Tom Wopat who played the part of Frank Butler
in the remake,
and there's Bernadette (his Miss Annie)
below. 


Ethel's "Doin' What Comes Naturally" above,
and takin' off the safety with Ray Middleton, below.


 And one more Broadway Bizness musical,
The Producers,
Best Musical of 2001;
soooo good (or at least sooo popular), it went on to be a movie musical.
That's Nathan Lane on the left above,
with Susan Stroman (director/choreographer),
Matthew Broderick,
and Mel Brooks...composer/lyricist.
Susan's husband, Mike Ockrent, was slated to direct,
but passed away in the middle of production planning,
so Susan took up the reins.
It broke records for Tony Award wins (12!)
and ran for over 2,500 performances. 


 Mel first approached Jerry Herman to write the music
for the show,
but he demurred, saying that Mel should write it himself.
No easy feat for a guy who could NOT read (or write) music,
but I guess with a little help from our friends,
nothing is impossible.
Below, a very dramatic moment with Gary Beach (center)
as Roger De Bris,
and all in black on the right is
Roger Bart as Carmen Ghia.
(Mr. Bart would later star as Dr. Frankenstein 
in Mel's Young Frankenstein).


Sunday, July 5, 2020

Playlist For Sunday, July 12, 2020: There's no busines like...well, YOU know!

Sooooo, I am presently recovering from a bacchanal of food and drink, thanks to the prodigal daughter's visit and a national(ized?) holiday. So let the health (and Broadway) regime begin anew, folks, starting this week! Can't say I don't like a bit of P.C. (Post-Covid) normalcy and routine upon occasion...like carving 2 On The Aisle playlists, biking to and fro (mostly fro), lawn mowing, and strong-coffee sipping. Such is the rest of my July, and proud we are of all the little Lebowskis that do that. I am one.


Because I am back to work! Yes, after mega months of stay-cationing under pandemic stress, I now have to tote that there barge. And what's really awful is that I definitely miss that part of quarantine, the "couldn't go to work if you tried", "get paid anyway" time. So now I am one bizzy bee (with a mask!). Or gypsy moth (yes, they're back and I've actually seen them in caterpillar form, crossing country roads, and YES I'm aiming at them with my ROAD TIRES!!! You chose the wrong road, buddies!).

 Yup, I'm mowing these suckers DOWN on Center Rd.!


So the theme of this Sunday's 2 On The Aisle will be Taking Care Of Business, or She Works Hard For The Money, or stuff to do with JOBS. I guess I should save this for my Labor Day edition, but being an overly impatient kind of person, SOONER is better than LATER. How to Succeed, It's A Business, Workin' It Out, All The Live Long Day...it's all here, along with minimum wage, ascetic health care benefits, and pretending to WHISTLE while we do all this. We also have a quick Gershwin corner and a LAZY lemonade/Long Island Ice Tea break for those with less aerobic capacity and a sexier style....so, as usual, we cover all bases.



So please join me for WORK and LAZE and wonderful music on Jazz 90.1. I promise to cajole, comfort, and caress via Broadway, despite this and that and to and fro. Huzzah to FRO. By all means, FRO! :)


There's No Business Like Show Business (Ethel Merman, Annie Get Your
       Gun)
Opening Night (Usherettes, Company, The Producers)
I Wanna Be A Producer(Matthew Broderick, The Producers)
Where Did We Go Right?(Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick, The Producers)
What Kind Of Man? (Company, Curtains)
Coffee Shop Nights (David Hyde Pierce, Curtains)
It's A Business (Debra Monk, Curtains)
Slap That Bass (Harry Groener, Crazy For You)
Naughty Baby (Jodie Benson, Crazy For You)
What Causes That (Harry Groener, Bruce Adler, Crazy For You)
How To (Robert Morse, How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying)
Been A Long Day (Claudette Sutherland, Robert Morse, Bonnie Scott,
       How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying)
I Believe In You (Robert Morse, Ensemble, How To Succeed In
       Business Without Really Trying)
The Company Way (Reprise)(Charles Nelson Reilly, Company, How To
       Succeed In Business Without Really Trying)
Lazy Afternoon (Kaye Ballard, The Golden Apple)
Goona-Goona (Bibi Osterwald, The Golden Apple)
Up A Lazy River (Nick Cordero, Bullets Over Broadway)
Lazy Moon (Ensemble, Sail Away)
Lazy (Marilyn Monroe, Donald O'Connor, Mitzi Gaynor, There's No
       Business Like Show Business)
Sleepy Man (Ahna O'Reilly, Ensemble, The Robber Bridegroom)
Millworker (Patti LuPone, Don't Monkey With Broadway)
Workout (Instrumental, Golden Boy)
It Needs Work (Kay McClelland, City Of Angels)
Workin' It Out (Robert Klein, Lucy Arnaz, They're Playing Our Song)
Nice Work If You Can Get It (Matthew Broderick, Kelli O'Hara, Nice Work
       If You Can Get It)
All The Live Long Day (Company, Working)
Whistle While You Work (Adriana Caselotti, Snow White And The
       Seven Dwarfs)
Doing Good (Bob Holiday, It's A Bird, It's A Plane, It's Superman)
T'aint Nobody's Bizness If I Do (Nick Cordero, Bullets Over Broadway)
If I Could've Been (Company, Working)
Something To Point To (Company, Working)
There's No Business Like Show Business (Tom Wopat, Ron Holgate,
       Valerie Wright, Company, Annie Get Your Gun)