The Fantasticks

The Fantasticks is a 1960 musical with music by Harvey Schmidt and book and lyrics by Tom Jones. It tells an allegorical story, loosely based on the 1894 play The Romancers (Les Romanesques) by Edmond Rostand, concerning two neighboring fathers who trick their children, Luisa and Matt, into falling in love by pretending to feud.

The Fantasticks
Original Off-Broadway cast album cover
MusicHarvey Schmidt
LyricsTom Jones
BookTom Jones
BasisLes Romanesques
by Edmond Rostand
Productions

The show's original off-Broadway production ran a total of 42 years (until 2002) and 17,162 performances, making it the world's longest-running musical.[1] The musical was produced by Lore Noto. It was awarded Tony Honors for Excellence in Theatre in 1991. The poetic book and breezy, inventive score, including such memorable songs as "Try to Remember", helped make the show durable. Many productions followed, as well as television and film versions. The Fantasticks has become a staple of regional, community and high school productions since its premiere, with approximately 250 new productions each year. It is played with a small cast, two- to three-person orchestra and minimalist set design.

The show was revived off-Broadway from 2006 to 2017. As of 2010, its original investors had earned 240 times their original investments.[2] The musical has played throughout the US and in at least 67 foreign countries.[3]

Background

The 1954 Marc Blitzstein adaptation of The Threepenny Opera, which ran for six years, showed that musicals could be profitable off-Broadway in a small-scale, small orchestra format. This was confirmed in 1959 when a revival of Jerome Kern and P. G. Wodehouse's Leave It to Jane ran for more than two years. The 1959–1960 off-Broadway season included a dozen musicals and revues including Little Mary Sunshine, The Fantasticks, and Ernest in Love, a musicalization of Oscar Wilde's 1895 hit The Importance of Being Earnest.[4]

The musical is based loosely on The Romancers (Les Romanesques) by Edmond Rostand,[5] which draws elements from the story of Pyramus and Thisbe, Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore.[6][7]

Productions

Early productions

Jones, together with John Donald Robb of the University of New Mexico, first adapted the Rostand play as a Western titled Joy Comes to Deadhorse.[8] The play premiered at the University of New Mexico in the spring of 1956. It was set in the American West, and featured a "half-breed Apache" as the show's antagonist.[9] Jones was not happy with this instantiation and subsequently teamed with Schmidt.[10]

The script was substantially rewritten by Jones and Schmidt, with the character of Mortimer now "not really an Indian" but playing one during the "Rape Ballet" sequence.[9] The Wild West setting was abandoned, as was most of the script. All but a few songs in the score were also jettisoned, and the staging of the play was changed to a thrust stage.[11] Tom Jones says that the name of the play came from George Fleming's 1900 adaptation of the Rostand play, which used the name The Fantasticks.[11][12] Harley Granville-Barker's book, On Dramatic Method, provided the idea of using a series of images to help weave a unifying theme to the play.[13] Thornton Wilder's Our Town gave Jones the idea of using a narrator, the staging of Carlo Goldoni's Servant of Two Masters provided the concept of having actors sit stage-side when not acting, and John Houseman's production of The Winter's Tale and Leonard Bernstein's Candide suggested the use of sun, moon, frozen action, and incidental music.[14] The song "Try to Remember" was added at this time. Harvey Schmidt says he wrote it in a single afternoon, after it emerged in almost complete form after a fruitless afternoon attempting to compose other songs.[15]

The revamped play appeared on a bill of new one-act plays at Barnard College for one week in August 1959.[9][16]

Original off-Broadway production

The Fantasticks premiered at the Sullivan Street Playhouse, a small off-Broadway theatre in New York City's Greenwich Village, on May 3, 1960, with Jerry Orbach as El Gallo, Rita Gardner as Luisa, Kenneth Nelson as Matt, and librettist Tom Jones (under a pseudonym) as the Old Actor, among the cast members.[17] The sparse set and semicircular stage created an intimate and immediate effect. The play is highly stylized and combines old-fashioned showmanship, classic musical theatre, commedia dell'arte and Noh theatrical traditions. The original production was directed by Word Baker and was produced on a very low budget. The producer spent $900 on the set[18] and $541 on costumes, at a time when major Broadway shows would cost $250,000. The original set designer, costumer, prop master, and lighting designer was Ed Wittstein, who performed all four jobs for a total of only $480 plus $24.48 a week.[19] The set was similar to that for Our Town; Wittstein designed a raised stationary platform anchored by six poles.[18] It resembled a traveling players' wagon, like a pageant wagon. For a curtain, he hung various small false curtains across the platform at various times during the play. He also made a sun/moon out of cardboard. One side was painted bright yellow (the sun) and the other was black with a crescent of white (the moon). The sun/moon was hung from a nail in one of the poles and is referred to in the libretto. The orchestra consists of a piano and sometimes also a harp, with the harpist also sometimes playing some percussion instruments.

The production closed on January 13, 2002, after 17,162 performances. It is the world's longest-running musical and the longest-running uninterrupted show of any kind in the United States.[20][21][22] Other notable actors who appeared in the off-Broadway and touring production throughout its long run included Liza Minnelli, Elliott Gould, F. Murray Abraham, Glenn Close, Keith Charles, Carole Demas, Kristin Chenoweth, Bert Convy, Eileen Fulton, Lore Noto (the show's longtime producer), Dick Latessa, and Martin Vidnovic.[23]

1961, 1969 and 1990 productions

The musical ran at London's Apollo Theatre from September 7, 1961, and ran for 44 performances.[24] In 1990, another production was given in London's Regent's Park at the Open Air Theatre there.[25]

It toured in Vietnam in 1969–70, presented by the Command Military Touring Shows, a unit of Army Special Entertainment branch of the US Army Special Services. The company was made up of military personnel.[26]

Off-Broadway revival

On August 23, 2006, a revival of The Fantasticks opened at the off-Broadway The Theater Center, New York City where it closed on June 4, 2017 after an additional run of 4,390 performances.[27] It was directed by lyricist Jones, who also appeared in the role of Henry, The Old Actor, under the stage name Thomas Bruce. The original cast of the revival also included Burke Moses (El Gallo), Leo Burmester (Hucklebee), Martin Vidnovic (Bellomy), Santino Fontana (Matt), Sara Jean Ford (Luisa), Robert R. Oliver (Mortimer), and Douglas Ullman, Jr. (the Mute).[28] A cast recording of this production was released by Ghostlight Records.

Anthony Fedorov played the role of Matt in 2007. Margaret Anne Florence played Luisa in 2008.[29] Lewis Cleale played El Gallo between 2008 and 2010.[30][31] Jones left the cast in 2010, after the musical had celebrated its 50th anniversary.[32] Pop star Aaron Carter joined the cast as Matt in 2011.[33] In memory of the original El Gallo, the theatre hosting the revival was renamed the Jerry Orbach Theater.[2]

Washington, D.C. production

The musical was presented by the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. from November 20, 2009, to January 10, 2010, at the Lincoln Theatre. The well-received production replaced the conventional "mysterious bandit" interpretation of El Gallo with a kindly carnival magician character. Washington Post theatre critic Peter Marks wrote, "they have been reconditioned to conceal the telltale signs of age and yield a diversion that feels fresh and alive again".[34][35]

2010 West End production

The Fantasticks played for a short period in London's West End at the Duchess Theatre, opening on June 9, 2010, following previews from May 24, 2010.[36][37] The production was directed by Amon Miyamoto, designed by Rumi Matsui with lighting by Rick Fisher and starred Clive Rowe, Edward Petherbridge and David Burt.[38][39] The production received mostly poor reviews. Critic Michael Billington, for example, wrote, "the time for this kind of faux-naïf, sub Commedia dell'Arte diversion has passed".[38][39]

The musical closed on June 26, 2010, less than three weeks into its run; it had been booking to September 5.[40][41]

International productions

The Fantasticks has been seen in at least 67 countries, and It has been translated into many languages [42]

2014 US national tour

A non-equity national tour, in a steampunk-inspired version, began at the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center on January 17, 2014.[43]

Other productions

According to The New York Times, "The Fantasticks is one of the most widely produced [musicals] in the world, with more than 11,000 productions, by 2010, in 3,000 cities and towns in all 50 states, as well as in 67 countries.[44] The Fantasticks has been performed at The White House, for the Peace Corps in Africa, at the Shawnee Methodist Mission in Kansas, the Menninger Foundation, Yellowstone National Park and the White Sands Missile Range.[17] It was performed in Mandarin by the Peking Opera, and in 1990 under the auspices of the United States State Department it played for the first time in Russia.[42] Famous actors, other than those listed above, who have performed in productions of the show include David Canary, Robert Goulet, Richard Chamberlain, John Carradine and Ed Ames.[17]

In 2022, Flint Repertory Theatre in Flint, Michigan, premiered a sex-changed version adapted by Jones and director Michael Lluberes that included LGBT themes; among other things, it changed the female lead, Luisa, to a male character, Lewis, and the fathers became mother characters.[45][46]

Television and film

An abbreviated version of the show was broadcast by the Hallmark Hall of Fame on October 18, 1964. The cast included John Davidson, Stanley Holloway, Bert Lahr, Ricardo Montalbán and Susan Watson, who had appeared in the original Barnard College production. The roles of the old actor and Mortimer were cut for time, and some of their lines were assigned to the fathers, who indulged in some "amateur theatrics".[47]

A feature film directed by Michael Ritchie was completed in 1995 but not released until 2000. It starred Joel Grey, Brad Sullivan, Jean Louisa Kelly, Barnard Hughes, Jonathon Morris and Joey McIntyre and included some changes to the book. It was both a critical and box office failure.[48]

Plot

Act I

Two houses are separated by a wall (portrayed by a mute actor) in an unspecified American town.

A mysterious bandit, El Gallo, tells about the kind of September "when love was an ember about to billow" ("Try to Remember"). He begins to narrate the plot of the play. Two young people, Matt and Luisa, live next door to each other and fall in love. However, their fathers are feuding and order them not to speak to each other. Luisa fantasizes about the experiences she wants to have in her life ("Much More"). Matt then delivers a speech about his love for Luisa, calling over the wall to her in a mock literary/heroic way ("Metaphor"). Matt and Luisa climb to the top of the wall and speak secretly of Luisa's romantic vision of Matt saving her from kidnapping. Matt's father, Mr. Hucklebee, then appears and tells about his philosophy of life and gardening (don't over-water). He orders Matt to go inside the house. Luisa's father, Mr. Bellomy, arrives and gives a contrasting philosophy of life and gardening (plenty of water). He orders Luisa inside. He then calls to Hucklebee, and the two old friends boast about their cleverness in pretending to feud as a means to ensure that their children fall in love. They note that to manipulate children you need merely to say "no" ("Never Say No"). Hucklebee tells Bellomy of his plan to end the feud by having Luisa "kidnapped" by a professional abductor so that Matt can "rescue" her and appear heroic.

The hired professional, El Gallo, appears and offers the fathers a menu of different varieties of "rape" – in the literary sense of an abduction or kidnapping – that he can simulate ("It Depends on What You Pay"). Deciding to spare no expense for their beloved children (within reason), the fathers agree to a "first class" abduction scene. A disheveled old actor with a failing memory, Henry Albertson, arrives with his sidekick, Mortimer, a Cockney dressed as an American Indian. El Gallo engages them to help with the staged kidnapping. Matt and Luisa return to speak of their love and hint at physical intimacy ("Soon It's Gonna Rain"). El Gallo and the actors burst in and carry out the moonlit abduction scenario; Matt "defeats" the three ("Rape Ballet"). The feud is ended and the wall between the houses torn down, with the children and the fathers joined in a picturesque final tableau ("Happy Ending"). El Gallo collects the stage properties used in the "abduction" and wonders aloud how long the lovers and their fathers will be able to maintain their elaborately joyful poses. He and The Mute leave.

Act II

The children and fathers are discovered in the same poses but are visibly exhausted by the effort. El Gallo observes that what seemed romantic by moonlight may lose its charm when exposed to the harsh light of day. He exchanges his moon for a blazing sun. The fathers and lovers begin to complain about one another, noticing all the flaws that have become glaringly visible by daylight ("This Plum Is Too Ripe"). The children try to recreate their romantic mood from the previous night and mock their fathers. Eventually, in a fit of pique, Hucklebee reveals that the kidnapping and the feud were fake. Matt and Luisa are mortified, and the fathers' mutual recrimination quickly escalates into a real feud; they storm off to their respective houses. Matt sees El Gallo and, in a desperate attempt to regain his honor and Luisa's love, challenges him to a duel. El Gallo easily disarms Matt and leaves him embarrassed. Matt and Luisa then argue; she calls him a poseur, while he calls her childish.

Matt is eager to leave the provincial town. He and El Gallo discuss his gleaming vision of adventure ("I Can See It"). Henry and Mortimer return and lead Matt off to see the world. A month passes, and the fathers have rebuilt the wall. They meet and speak sadly of their children; Luisa is like a statue and does nothing but sit and dream; Matt still hasn't returned. They then sing about the uncertainties of raising children, as compared with the reliability of vegetable gardening ("Plant a Radish"). Luisa sees El Gallo watching her and is intrigued by the handsome, experienced bandit. Impulsively, she asks him to take her away to see the world. In a long fantasy sequence, they preview a series of romantic adventures through a mask of unreality, while in the background Matt is being abused and beaten by Henry and Mortimer portraying a series of unpleasant exotic employers. Luisa's fantasies become increasingly frenzied, exhausting and darkly underscored ("Round and Round").

El Gallo tells Luisa to pack her things for the journey, but before she goes inside to do so, he asks her to give him her treasured necklace, a relic of her dead mother, as a pledge that she will return. As she goes inside, El Gallo promises her a world of beauty and grandeur; at the same time, Matt approaches, giving a contrasting version of the cruel experiences that one can suffer ("I Can See It" (reprise)). As Luisa disappears, El Gallo turns to leave, the injured Matt makes a pitiful attempt to stop him from hurting Luisa, but El Gallo knocks him away and disappears. Luisa returns to find that El Gallo has left with her necklace, and she sits in tears. El Gallo, as the narrator, explains poetically that he had to hurt Matt and Luisa, and also himself in the process. Matt comforts Luisa, and he tells her a little about his experiences, and the two realize that everything they wanted was each other ("They Were You"; "Metaphor" (reprise)), but that they now understand that more deeply. The Fathers return joyfully and are about to tear down the wall, when El Gallo reminds them that the wall must always remain ("Try to Remember" (reprise)).

Casts

Character Barnard College
(1959)
Off-Broadway
(1960)
West End
(1961)
TV special
(1964)
Film
(1995)
Off-Broadway revival
(2006)
West End revival
(2010)
El Gallo (the Narrator/Bandit) Jonathan Farwell Jerry Orbach Terence Cooper Ricardo Montalbán Jonathon Morris Burke Moses Hadley Fraser
Matt (the Boy) Crayton Rowe Kenneth Nelson Peter Gilmore John Davidson Joey McIntyre Santino Fontana Luke Brady
Luisa (the Girl) Susan Watson Rita Gardner Stephanie Voss Susan Watson Jean Louisa Kelly Sara Jean Ford Lorna Want
Hucklebee (the Boy's father) Ron Leibman William Larsen Timothy Bateson Bert Lahr Brad Sullivan Leo Burmester Clive Rowe
Bellomy (the Girl's father) Lee Croghan Hugh Thomas David Bauer Stanley Holloway Joel Grey Martin Vidnovic David Burt
Henry (the Old Actor) Dick Burnham Thomas Bruce John Wood Barnard Hughes Thomas Bruce Edward Petherbridge
Mortimer (the man who dies) Bill Tost George Curley David Suchet Teller Robert Oliver Paul Hunter
The Mute
(who at times acts the part of the Wall)
George Morgan Richard Stauffer John Gower Douglas Ullman Jr. Carl Au

Musical numbers

Controversy

After the initial success of the musical, The Fantasticks came under criticism for the repeated use of the word "rape" in the scene preceding the song "It Depends on What You Pay" and in the lyrics of the song. In the original production, when El Gallo offers to stage the phony kidnapping of Luisa, he refers to the proposed event as a "rape", although he states that he uses the word in its literary sense of "abduction", noting that classical works such as Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock use the word in this sense. (See raptio and bride kidnapping.) In his song "It Depends on What You Pay" he describes different kidnapping scenarios, some comic or outlandish, that he classifies as the "Venetian rape", the "Gothic rape", the "Drunken rape", etc. However, as women’s rights advocates began drawing attention to rape and sexual assault in the US during the play's long run, many audience members objected to the repeated use of the word, arguing that it minimizes the damage to women and families caused by sexual crimes.[49][50]

To deal with changing audience perceptions, the musical's book is usually edited to replace the word "rape", in most instances, with alternatives such as "abduction" and the similar-sounding "raid". In 1990, Jones and Schmidt wrote an optional replacement piece called "Abductions", which uses the music of the "Rape Ballet", although this song did not replace "It Depends on What You Pay" at the Sullivan Street Playhouse, where, with the edits made in the book, audiences accepted the song.[49] An edited version of "It Depends on What You Pay" was used in the long-running Jerry Orbach Theater version of the show.[51] MTI (Music Theater International), which licenses the show, offers "Abductions" as an alternative choice.[52]

Notes

  1. Official Website. Accessed June 16, 2010
  2. Cochran, Jason. "'The Fantasticks' earned its investors a 24,000% return ... and counting". WalletPop.com, April 27, 2010
  3. Gollust, Shelley and Jerilyn Watson. "The Fantasticks at 50". VOANews.com, May 23, 2010
  4. Suskin, Steven. "On the Record: Ernest In Love, Marco Polo, Puppets and Maury Yeston" Archived September 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Playbill.com, August 10, 2003
  5. Edmond Rostand (1903) Les Romanesques: comédie en trois actes, en vers (Google eBook) (in French)
  6. The Fantasticks. MusicalHeaven.com
  7. Edmond Rostand (1915) The Romancers: Comedy in Three Acts, Samuel French (Google eBook)
  8. Jones and Schmidt, p. 5
  9. Weaver, p. 115
  10. Jones and Schmidt, p. 7
  11. Jones and Schmidt, p. 8
  12. Edmond Rostand, George Fleming (1900) The Fantasticks: a romantic comedy in three acts, R.H. Russell, New York (Google eBook)
  13. Jones and Schmidt, p. 10
  14. Jones and Schmidt, pp. 10–11
  15. Jones and Schmidt, pp. 11–12
  16. Jones and Schmidt, pp. 12–15
  17. "The Fifth Decade!" Official Website, accessed June 16, 2010
  18. Farber and Viagas, p. 158
  19. Farber and Viagas, p. 157
  20. BWW News Desk. "London's 'The Fantasticks' to Close Early, 6/26". Westend.broadwayworld.com, June 14, 2010
  21. "'The Fantasticks' listing" thefantasticks.com, retrieved June 16, 2010
  22. Hernandez, Ernio. "Long Runs on Broadway", February 17, 2009, accessed June 16, 2010
  23. Replacements list at official website, accessed June 16, 2009
  24. The Fantasticks. BroadwayWorld, accessed June 16, 2010
  25. Thisistheatre "'The Fantasticks' at the Duchess Theatre". Thisistheatre.com, retrieved June 16, 2010
  26. Grills, Matt. "All the War's a Stage", The American Legion, July 22, 2013, accessed March 15, 2019
  27. "Off-Broadway's The Fantasticks to Close this June", BroadwayWorld.com, March 21, 2017; and Viagas, Robert. "Fantasticks Writer Makes One Last Rewrite Before the Show Closes", Playbill, June 2, 2017
  28. "The_Fantasticks Welcome Back Old Friend". Broadwayworld.com, August 24, 2006
  29. Hetrick, Adam. "Florence and Nostrand Join Cast of Off-Broadway's Fantasticks" Archived October 3, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Playbill.com, July 21, 2008, accessed August 16, 2010
  30. "Cleale Returns to The Fantasticks, McDaniel Joins on June 29, BroadwayWorld.com, June 29, 2009
  31. Edward Watts is Fantasticks' New El Gallo; Cleale Departs 3/14, BroadwayWorld.com, March 9, 2010
  32. Hetrick, Adam. "Tom Jones to Depart The Fantasticks Off-Broadway June 6". Playbill.com, June 4, 2010
  33. Hetrick, Adam. "The Fantasticks Welcomes Aaron Carter Nov. 7 Off-Broadway" Archived November 12, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, November 7, 2011
  34. Marks, Peter (November 30, 2009). "A 'Fantasticks' lesson in love". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 19, 2009.
  35. Adams, Mark Lee (December 1, 2009). "Arena Stage The Fantasticks". ShowBizRadio. Retrieved December 19, 2009.
  36. Shenton, Mark. "'The Fantasticks'". Thestage.co.uk, June 10, 2010
  37. Guilfoyle, Lizzie. "The Fantasticks posts closing notices". Indielondon.co.uk, retrieved June 16, 2010
  38. Billington, Michael. "'The Fantasticks'". The Guardian, June 10, 2010
  39. Taylor, Paul. "'The Fantasticks', Duchess Theatre, London". The Independent, June 11, 2010
  40. "Fantasticks Posts Closing Notices at Duchess" whatsonstage.com, June 13, 2010
  41. Shenton, Mark. "London's New Fantasticks to Shutter June 26". Playbill.com, June 14, 2010
  42. Vincents, M.: "Amazing Facts About The Fantasticks", Go Articles, January 13, 2010
  43. "National Tour of Steampunk-Inspired The Fantasticks Opens Jan. 17 in Rapid City". Playbill.
  44. Healy, Patrick. "Fantasticks Pays Back for 50 Years". The New York Times, May 2, 2010
  45. Peter Filichia (June 19, 2022). "The Fantasticks: The Boys Next Door". Broadway Select. Retrieved June 20, 2022.
  46. Redman, Bridgette M. "Tender and Callow Fellows: Flint Rep’s Gay Fantasticks", American Theatre, June 8, 2022
  47. "Hallmark Hall of Fame – The Fantasticks" Archived April 3, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, Fantasticks on Broadway, accessed March 23, 2015
  48. "The Fantasticks: Sprinkling Stardust and a Dollop of Magic Over a Pair of Lovebirds", The New York Times, September 22, 2000, accessed March 23, 2015
  49. Schmidt, p. 120
  50. Proulx, Lisa. "Fantasticks: Still controversial", The Gazette, October 4, 2007, accessed July 18, 2014
  51. Theatre program, The Fantasticks, Terzetto LLC producer, Jerry Orbach Theater, New York City, September 5, 2015
  52. Fowler, Nancy. "The Fantasticks: Is it ever OK to have fun with the word 'rape'?" Archived July 20, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, St. Louis Beacon, March 25, 2010, accessed July 18, 2014

References

  • Farber, Donald C. and Viagas, Robert. The Amazing Story of 'The Fantasticks': America's Longest-Running Play, Hal Leonard Corporation, 2005, ISBN 0-87910-313-2
  • Jones, Tom with Schmidt, Harvey. The Fantasticks. New York: Applause Theatre Book Publishers, 1990.
  • Schmidt, Harvey. Fantasticks, Hal Leonard Corporation, 1992, ISBN 1-55783-141-6
  • Weaver, Jace. Other Words: American Indian Literature, Law, and Culture. Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001.
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