LOG IN / REGISTER



Threaded Order Chronological Order

re: Christine Ebersole and Paper Moon the musical
Posted by: EmeraldAisle 09:14 pm EDT 04/06/18
In reply to: re: Christine Ebersole and Paper Moon the musical - bicoastal 07:22 pm EDT 04/06/18

It’s a great number. Faith Prince recorded it on a live album. I found it on ITunes.
reply to this message


re: Christine Ebersole and Paper Moon the musical
Posted by: CCentero 08:36 pm EDT 04/07/18
In reply to: re: Christine Ebersole and Paper Moon the musical - EmeraldAisle 09:14 pm EDT 04/06/18

Saw the show in Washington and while it was entirely professional, nothing about it really stood out. It might have benefitted from stronger performances from the leads, but I don't think the actors really were to blame. The young actress who played Imogene really stood out and had some of the best material in the show.

The movie has the great casting of the O'Neals against each other and just enough brilliant moments from Madeline Kahn. The songs in the show seemed to be marking time and didn't evoke the period as well as the standards in the movie. Somehow they made the characters too self-aware for the good of the piece.
reply to this message


Larry Grossman on Broadway: Underrated composer or unluckiest, or both?
Last Edit: WaymanWong 04:15 pm EDT 04/07/18
Posted by: WaymanWong 04:07 pm EDT 04/07/18
In reply to: re: Christine Ebersole and Paper Moon the musical - EmeraldAisle 09:14 pm EDT 04/06/18

I haven't seen all of Larry Grossman's Broadway musicals, and, frankly, a couple were before my time.

I know only the lovely ''Mama, a Rainbow'' from ''Minnie's Boys''; have never heard anything from ''Goodtime Charley''; adore ''Learn to Be Lonely'' from ''A Doll's Life,'' and think ''Grind's'' score is an underrated treasure trove of gems. But all these shows have one thing in common: short runs.

* ''Minnie's Boys'' (1970), with lyrics by Hal Hackady: 80 performances
* ''Goodtime Charley'' (1975), with lyrics by Hal Hackady: 104 performances
* ''A Doll's Life'' (1982), with lyrics by Betty Comden & Adolph Green: 5 performances
* ''Grind'' (1985), with lyrics by Ellen Fitzhugh: 71 performances

(* ''Paper Moon'' (1993), with lyrics by Ellen Fitzhugh and Carol Hall: Never made it to Broadway; closed at Paper Mill)

Grossman's found far more success in TV, winning 6 Emmys (from 17 nominations). And he's done the Tonys, Oscars and variety specials galore.

Looking on YouTube, I found this rare clip of Grossman performing ''Turns Out,'' a beautifully rueful and reflective song from ''Paper Moon.''
Link Larry Grossman sings ''Turns Out'' from ''Paper Moon''
reply to this message | reply to first message


re: Larry Grossman on Broadway: Underrated composer or unluckiest, or both?
Last Edit: BroadwayTonyJ 08:12 pm EDT 04/07/18
Posted by: BroadwayTonyJ 08:11 pm EDT 04/07/18
In reply to: Larry Grossman on Broadway: Underrated composer or unluckiest, or both? - WaymanWong 04:07 pm EDT 04/07/18

He certainly deserves to be better unknown and he's definitely unlucky. I have never seen any of his Broadway musicals, although I have seen Snoopy!!!, the score of which unfortunately pales in comparison with that of "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown". I have the OCR CDs of his 4 Broadway shows and they all have worthy scores. Porchlight Theatre in Chicago is doing Minnie's Boys in May, 2019 so I'll finally be able to see one of his best shows.
reply to this message | reply to first message


Privacy Policy


Time to render: 0.011323 seconds.