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re: I never really thought about it before
Last Edit: peter3053 09:10 pm EDT 04/12/23
Posted by: peter3053 09:08 pm EDT 04/12/23
In reply to: re: I never really thought about it before - AlanScott 08:13 pm EDT 04/12/23

The Un allusion (as I see it) was definitely there at some point as per audio from the theater at the time, and also used in the Papermill Playhouse revival in (?) 1998 or thereabouts.

The only confirmation I have of Kennedy actually seeing it is from, as I recall, Frank Rich's book Ghostlight, who, as I recall, mentions a delay to the start and then turning around and seeing Kennedy slipping into a seat just behind him as the lights went down....

Of course, my memory may be going; it may not have been Rich, but someone tells the story.

The words were something like, "In a few hundred years from now, people will find out the world is round, like the table, and perhaps men will sit around this world together as we did at the table and work for peace and right and justice...." Something like that. And I remember thinking instantly of the UN.

I think it was Camelot. I think it was me. I think....
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re: I never really thought about it before
Posted by: AlanScott 10:33 pm EDT 04/12/23
In reply to: re: I never really thought about it before - peter3053 09:08 pm EDT 04/12/23

The line I see in the original Broadway script is Arthur saying to Pellinore, "What we did will be remembered. You'll see, Pelly." Those lines are not actually in the script from the first day of rehearsal. He also tells Tom, before he starts the final reprise, "And for as long as you live, you will remember what I, the King, tell you; and you will do as I command."

That's all I see, unless I'm missing something. I didn't go through the whole script. I just looked in the places where I thought such lines might occur.

Of course, there is the first scene in which Arthur comes up with the idea for the Round Table. but he says nothing about the world being round or about hundreds of years in the future.

As for JFK, I don't have the Rich book, but it simply didn't try out in D.C., where Rich grew up. And the tour didn't get to D.C. till 1964.
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re: I never really thought about it before
Posted by: peter3053 01:25 am EDT 04/13/23
In reply to: re: I never really thought about it before - AlanScott 10:33 pm EDT 04/12/23

Yes, I never saw it in any script, the published one or the one I used from the liscensors when I produced a school production long ago.

But the words were spoken by Burton, and were used in the Papermill revival (I had a friend in that one).

I suspect the words were cut in the whole business of cutting the show down along the way. I swear to you with my hand held over a stack of Sondheim CDs (a solemn oath), the words were spoken. Arthur said that Merlin, who lived backwards, had told him of that future vision.
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re: I never really thought about it before
Last Edit: AlanScott 01:37 am EDT 04/13/23
Posted by: AlanScott 01:35 am EDT 04/13/23
In reply to: re: I never really thought about it before - peter3053 01:25 am EDT 04/13/23

Those lines are actually in the script that was licensed by Tams-Witmark (at least in the copy I have) and later by MTI. Thanks for bringing this up!

I'm sure I have heard those lines, but I had forgotten.

So it seems like perhaps, just perhaps, those lines were added after the opening.
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re: I never really thought about it before
Last Edit: PlayWiz 09:31 pm EDT 04/12/23
Posted by: PlayWiz 09:30 pm EDT 04/12/23
In reply to: re: I never really thought about it before - peter3053 09:08 pm EDT 04/12/23

I'm not sure how much Broadway JFK saw in general or while he was President, but he apparently made headlines for when he saw "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" on the order of "President Kennedy Learns: How to Succeed". I don't think anything like that was documented about "Camelot" other than Jackie saying after his death that they listened to the recording, and he especially liked it and was inspired by it to some extent.
Link JFK - How to Succeed headline
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re: I never really thought about it before
Posted by: EveryLittleChore 09:45 pm EDT 04/12/23
In reply to: re: I never really thought about it before - PlayWiz 09:30 pm EDT 04/12/23

And to put a final nail in the JFK CAMELOT coffin, Jackie finally confessed that she fabricated the story of hubby's loving the final track, "Don't let it be forgot,..." She just wanted to attribute a noble story to him.
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re: I never really thought about it before
Last Edit: AlanScott 10:34 pm EDT 04/12/23
Posted by: AlanScott 10:34 pm EDT 04/12/23
In reply to: re: I never really thought about it before - EveryLittleChore 09:45 pm EDT 04/12/23

Do you know where Jackie said the story was a fabrication? I have read suggestions that the story was something she made up, but not that she said so.
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