The Fig Leaves Are Falling

The Fig Leaves Are Falling is a musical with a book and lyrics by Allan Sherman and music by Albert Hague. It was inspired by Sherman's 1966 divorce following 21 years of marriage.[1]

The Fig Leaves Are Falling
MusicAlbert Hague
LyricsAllan Sherman
BookAllan Sherman
Productions1969 Broadway

Production

The musical opened on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theatre on January 2, 1969, and closed on January 6 after four performances and 17 previews. Directed by George Abbott and choreographed by Eddie Gasper, the scenic design was by William and Jean Eckart, costume design was by Robert Mackintosh, and lighting design was by Tharon Musser.[2]

Loudon won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance and was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical.

A revised version by Ben West, who also directed, was presented by the UnsungMusicalsCo. in January 2013 at the Off-Off-Broadway Connelly Theater.[3]

Background

The first director, Jack Klugman, left the production prior to rehearsals, and George Abbott was then hired as director. The cast included Jules Munshin, who left during the out of town tryout in Philadelphia. Ben West noted that during the tryout period "substantial structural changes persisted, with multiple musical numbers being assigned to different characters while others were eliminated altogether..." [4]

Original cast and characters

Character Broadway (1969)[5]
Lillian Stone Dorothy Loudon
Harry Stone Barry Nelson
Pookie Chapman Jenny O'Hara
Mr. Mittleman Jay Barney
Cecilia Louise Quick
Billy Stone David Cassidy
Gelb Frank De Sal
Mrs. Stone Helon Blount
Mary, Queen of Scots Anna Pagan
Le Roy Alan Weeks
Mimsy Marilyne Mason
Elizabeth Marsden Pat Trott

Songs

Critical response

Clive Barnes in his review for The New York Times, wrote: "There is nothing much wrong ...that a new book, new music, new lyrics, new settings, new direction, new choreography and a partially new cast would not quite possibly put right."[3]

Daniel M. Gold, reviewing the 2013 production for The New York Times, wrote: "...in the end the songs and their chronicle of temptation disappoint. There is little of the snap or crackle of Sherman’s best lyrics, and Hague’s music is forgettable."[3]

References

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