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Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Mr. Nowack Profile Photo
Mr. Nowack
#1Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 1:14am

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

This classic show opened on the 12th of October 1950, 65 years ago today.

 

Imagine the anticipation for this show, the new Irving Berlin musical starring Ethel Merman! The score is delightful, despite the infamous lack of a true original cast album, not sure how the political satire would land today however.

 

Elaine Stritch got her 'big break" starring in the National Tour, and the show was a popular choice for stock companies for many years. Merman starred in the film several years later and even took the show out on the road herself in the 70's I believe. 

 

Anyone have any fond memories of the show?

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary

Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary


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Fantod
#2Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 3:14am

I love Ethel's dresses in these photos. Main Bocher designed them specifically for her. Ethel Merman: A Life has some really interesting stuff on the show. It's a shame that a full cast recording with Ethel was never made, though the film soundtrack is a good listen, despite its horrible sound quality. Great spread as always, Nowack.

aj88
#3Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 9:30am

I have always really liked this show and hoped it would be brought back. I could even see it being a good vehicle for someone like Jane Lynch, if they wanted to try to get someone who could potentially help sell tickets.

You're Just in Love has always been my favorite duet. It isn't earth shattering but I have loved it from a very young age.

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GavestonPS
#4Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 5:26pm

aj88 said: "I have always really liked this show and hoped it would be brought back. I could even see it being a good vehicle for someone like Jane Lynch, if they wanted to try to get someone who could potentially help sell tickets.

 

You're Just in Love has always been my favorite duet. It isn't earth shattering but I have loved it from a very young age.

 

"

Most of the humor is political and relates to the Cold War. I saw it as recently as 10 years ago (with Karen Morrow and Hugh Panaro) and it already seemed a museum piece. I think a major revival would either play as nostalgia for senior citizens or require a major "revisal". But the basic premise no longer has the same bite now that few remember that Sally Adams (Ethel Merman's role) is based on the real-life Pearl Mesta, Washington hostess and ambassadress to Luxembourg.

 

***

 

Re the national tour mentioned by the OP, I believe he refers to the tour of 1966-67. (In the 1970s, Merman was busy touring for her disco album.) It was to have been a tour of the Lincoln Center revival of ANNIE GET YOUR GUN (1965), but Merman changed to MADAM when the reviews in New York all talked about how she was too old to play Annie Oakley.


I saw the tour twice, in Fort Lauderdale and a week later in Miami. (My ticket for the former cost $1.95 for the last row on the extreme right, but since I was 12, it still took me two months to save up for two tickets, the second for my grandmother who drove me.)

 

Even from the back row, Merman was absolutely thrilling! It's really hard to explain her appeal (and God knows I tried over 15 years of teaching musical theater) to generations who are used to body mikes. In 1966, there were only general floor or ceiling mikes and the orchestra usually dropped its volume to a hush whenever anyone sang. Not so with Merman, who could be heard even over a pit band playing full out.

 

At a Saturday matinee of senior citizens in Ft. Lauderdale, Merman and Russell Nype (the latter also in the role he created) got 7 curtain calls for "You're Just in Love". The audience simply would not let them continue the show.

 

Finally, Merman was indeed what Sondheim calls her: " a great low comedienne". As I've written elsewhere, she did at least five minutes "in one" as her character tried to figure out how to walk in a dress with a train. I was on the floor laughing, even though physical comedy isn't usually a favorite of mine.

 

And, yes, she gave the EXACT same performance in Miami, even though the rest of the company adjusted to a different house and even a somewhat different set.

Mr. Nowack Profile Photo
Mr. Nowack
#5Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 5:37pm

Thanks for the year correction Gaveston, I was thinking of your oft-relayed reminisces about that tour when I mentioned it. Late sixties makes more sense really. 

 

I would love to hear Karen Morrow sing the score, wonder if there is a boot out there.


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GavestonPS
#6Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 6:24pm

Mr. N, I'm embarrassed to say I can feel my heart beating faster just to recall Merman's MADAM. It's been 50 years; I ought to have calmed down by now, eh? LOL.

 

CORRECTION: In my post above I implied that body mikes didn't exist in 1966 and I believe that is incorrect. Now that I think of it, I believe I read an early version of the technology was used on Helen Traubel in PIPE DREAM on Broadway a decade earlier. But they were still primitive, even up through the early 1970s, and had an unfortunate tendency to pick up police radios. I later worked for a number of years at the theater where I first saw MADAM and we still weren't using body mikes when I left in 1977. (It is a 1200-seat house. In the mid-70s, we used body mikes on all principals at our 3,000 seat theater in Miami Beach.)

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Mr Roxy
#7Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 6:28pm

God a musical with a star who did 8 a week .She would have to have been literally tied up to stop her from doing it. Another thing I pine for is a musical with real sets and not one using the back brick wall of a theater.


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GavestonPS
#8Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 6:40pm

Ah, but Mr. R, remember how we used to sit in the dark while the orchestra played reprises so that they could get those hard sets in place? What audience would have the patience today?

 

R&H were certainly the masters of speeding up shows by alternating scenes "in one" before a show curtain with full stage scenes. Yet if you listen to the "full recording" of SOUTH PACIFIC (the one with Paige O'Hara as Nellie), it's amazing how much time is devoted to "incidental music" while the sets are changed.

 

***

 

Confidential to Mr. Nowack: since I obviously have such fond memories of Merman, I thought I might be disappointed with Morrow. I needn't have worried. She was phenomenal and made the role her own. Panaro is also a favorite of mine and those two big voices on "You're Just in Love" brought down the house!

Updated On: 10/12/15 at 06:40 PM

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Mr. Nowack
#9Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 8:53pm

I especially love the backdrops of the Lichtenburg countryside, it has a very storybook feel.

 

Morrow's voice for me is always a wham-bang powerhouse so I'm sure she annihilated the score in the best way. 


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GavestonPS
#10Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 11:00pm

What a shame we only have (as far as I know) the two OBC recordings (GRASS HARP and I HAD A BALL) of Morrow. The odd thing is that while she has a Merman-size instrument, she's actually very insecure, even about her own abilities. (She and I taught at the same university for years, but we have a close friend in common which is where I get most of my information.)

 

I complimented her on the encore she and Panaro got with "You're Just in Love" (a real encore as opposed to the pre-scheduled encores that theater normally employed) and all she did was complain about how it threw her off and she didn't know what to do when people kept yelling for more. (Fortunately, Panaro just started singing again.)

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Mr. Nowack
#11Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 11:22pm

Sadly on Broadway she only did five shows, all flops and only two recorded. There are of course bootlegs of them (as well as her turn as Carlotta in the Long Beach revival of FOLLIES) but piss poor quality most of them. The other commercial recording you missed is the 1963 Off-Broadway BOYS FROM SYRACUSE revival which she's excellent on. There's also a privately pressed LP of a musical called WHISPERS ON THE WIND featuring her David Cryer and Nancy Dassault. 

 

There's something about her voice that just fills me up.


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Updated On: 10/12/15 at 11:22 PM

Mr Roxy Profile Photo
Mr Roxy
#12Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/12/15 at 11:27pm

She had a  pivotal role in the movie Mad World as the mother in law from hell. She also had a cameo in Airplane. Her TV highlight was as Lola Lasagna in the old Batman TV series.


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MrsSallyAdams
#13Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/13/15 at 9:53am

Watching the "Call Me Madam" film was a surreal experience. The musical numbers were terrific. The book scenes were odd. When Ethel wasn't the focus of a scene the lights went out in her eyes. She stood with a plastered on grin waiting for her next line.

My favorite Ethel Merman moment was in a live televised performance of "Anything Goes." Frank Sinatra played Billy and Ethel played a hybrid of Reno and Hope. After a duet Ethel froze into her grin for applause. Sinatra tried to kiss her on the cheek and she shoved him away, never losing her frozen grin. I haven't found a clip of that moment online but it seared into my memory. I'll always see that "applaud but don't touch me" moment as the essence of Ethel Merman.


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PalJoey
#14Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/13/15 at 10:10am

 


Here's Merman singing "You're Just in Love" with Tab Hunter:


 


 


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PalJoey
#15Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/13/15 at 10:12am

 


And here's Stritch doing it with Russell Nype:


 


 


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goldenboy
#16Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/13/15 at 12:29pm

Thanks for the Tab Hunter Ethel version!!!! Heavenish hilarity. That was Ethel doing what she does best.

Singing and clowning. Dont miss that clip!

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Mr. Nowack
#17Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/13/15 at 1:00pm

Both those clips are amazing! The Ethel one is so silly, the song comes completely out of nowhere but it's still a joy of a number.


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EricMontreal22
#18Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/14/15 at 4:12am

Gaveston said: "R&H were certainly the masters of speeding up shows by alternating scenes "in one" before a show curtain with full stage scenes. Yet if you listen to the "full recording" of SOUTH PACIFIC (the one with Paige O'Hara as Nellie), it's amazing how much time is devoted to "incidental music" while the sets are changed."

Funny you say that--SP was notable as being one of the first major musicals and certainly the first R&H one (if we discount Allegro's reliance on projections and sliding panels,) that tried to get away from "in one" scenes.  Josh Logan's original staging was remarked upon for being so cinematic and having scenes that would "wipe" (to use the movie term) into the next scene and how quickly it all flowed.  The video of the Mary Martin London production shows this in spades.  Of course by the time of King and I they were back to doing scenes in one.

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Mr. Nowack
#19Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/14/15 at 4:41pm

I think Gaveston might have been contrasting SOUTH PACIFIC from the more "in one" heavy R&H shows.


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StageStruckLad
#20Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/15/15 at 11:33am

Mr. Nowak, your photo-laden trips down memory lane are always amazing. Thank you so much!

 

Every time I watch the movie of "Call Me Madam" I totally understand why Ethel never had a major film career. She always seemed to be working so hard and never was never able to relax and let the camera come to her. It must have driven her crazy with jealousy when she made "There's No Business..." with Marilyn Monroe, who of course was the master at making love to the camera.

 

That said, Jack Warner was crazy to film "Gypsy" without her!

Updated On: 10/15/15 at 11:33 AM

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jayinchelsea
#21Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/15/15 at 11:56am

Saw the Tyne Daly one at Encores, and she was great fun (but hard to understand how she inherited two of Merman's signature roles). So glad the film exists so we can all enjoy her performance, which apparently was pretty much what she did on stage.

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madbrian
#22Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/15/15 at 12:22pm

As an FYI for Comcast customers, the movie version of Call Me Madam is now available free on demand.


"It does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are 20 gods or no god. It neither picks my pocket, nor breaks my leg." -- Thomas Jefferson

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CarlosAlberto
#23Remembering CALL ME MADAM on its 65th anniversary
Posted: 10/15/15 at 1:25pm

I performed "You're Just in Love" with my good friend Tresha for our high school talent show. Great song!