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I certainly haven't seen every musical based on or inspired by a movie, and in fairness am not considering those I haven't seen. But here in my opinion are the greatest and least of those I have seen to date either on Broadway, on tour or via a local production ...
THE GREATEST:
A Little Night Music: Not only the finest musical adapted from a film (Ingmar Bergman's Smiles of a Summer Night) I've ever seen, but my favorite musical period. Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler add alternately beautiful and witty music, lyrics and dialogue to already-superior source material, and not only don't diminish it but expand on its themes and characters. This is how these things should be done.
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Hairspray and Cry-Baby: The films of cult filmmaker John Waters seemed unlikely candidates for mainstream musicalization, but the Tony Award-winning Hairspray is one of the most appealing in the genre. I found Cry-Baby, which had a too-short run on Broadway and — criminally — hasn't received a cast recording to date, to be even funnier and more in keeping with Waters' off-color sensibilities from its opening "Anti-Polio Picnic" number on! Could Serial Mom be next?
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The Phantom of the Opera: Similarly, most people aren't as familiar with Gaston Leroux's 19th century romantic-horror tale as they are with its many film versions starring everyone from Lon Chaney to Claude Rains to (gulp) Robert Englund. Andrew Lloyd Webber mined them all to spectacular musical and visual effect, with a strong assist from master director Harold Prince and the original stage Phantom, Michael Crawford.
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Passion: Sondheim's second adaptation of a movie, in this case Ettore Scola's fairly obscure Passione d'Amore. Despite winning Tony Awards for Best Musical, Actress (Donna Murphy), Score and Book, Passion has, in my experience, many more critics than fans. I was completely taken, however, by its intelligent rumination on the definition of love. I highly recommend the DVD
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The Producers: The only musical comedy to leave me gasping for breath from laughing so hard. Mel Brooks' 1968 movie, which simultaneously spoofed the Broadway biz and the Third Reich, was funny on its own and won an Oscar for its screenplay. It can't hold a candle to the stage version, though, thanks to Susan Stroman's clever direction and choreography and the hysterical original cast headlined by Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick, who also star in the fine 2005 film of the musical.
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Reefer Madness: A delightfully campy take on one of the worst movies ever made, a 1930's propaganda piece about the evils of marijuana. The stage version is great, and not just because Jesus has a supporting role! Even better is the made-for-Showtime 2006 movie adaptation
THE LEAST:
I'm grateful I could only come up with five, and none of them is awful. Not having seen the reviled-at-the-time Carrie (not yet, anyway; Neil tells me he's found most of it online), these are the most unsuccessful musicals based on a movie that I could recall seeing:
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Sunset Boulevard: Lloyd Webber's score is very good, but it's hard to draw an audience to a story with no likeable characters. I saw Petula Clark play Norma Desmond on tour. Her voice and performance were good, but physically she was hardly the larger-than-life character Norma needs to be. Glenn Close, Patti LuPone and Betty Buckley were all better received in the role.
Footloose: The first real bubble-gum movie to become a bubble-gum stage production. I remember Walter Bobbie's staging and the energetic choreography to be quite good ... but that's all I remember apart from the songs previously made famous by the more enjoyable movie.
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Victor/Victoria: The splendid 1982 film arrived on Broadway nearly 15 years later. By that point, Julie Andrews was more than a little long-in-the-tooth and no longer in the best vocal condition to resurrect her Oscar-nominated performance. Leslie Bricusse padded his score for the film with one very good song — "Louis Says" — and one not very good song, "Paris Makes Me Horny." The latter was performed on Broadway by Rachel York, who will soon be starring as the immortal Cruella DeVille in a stage musical version of 101 Dalmatians (!).
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Tune in tomorrow for Neil's best and worst from screen to stage, and feel free to weigh in with your reactions and/or your personal picks in the comments section below!
Article by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.
Personally i am not an avid fan of too many musicals, but I must say that i did enjoy a good amount of these movies. One of my favorite musicals happens to be missing though.I believe that one of the best musicals i have seen, and possibly the most recent, would have to be "The Producers" by Mel Brooks. The actors are amazing, and the storyline is great. Thanks for the classics, and i look forward to seeing "The Producers" up there, in the future.
ReplyDeleteHi HP laptop lcd screen, and thanks for reading! Actually, both Neil & I included "The Producers" in our top 10.
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