Whoopee! | |
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Music | Walter Donaldson |
Lyrics | Gus Kahn |
Book | William Anthony McGuire |
Basis | Owen Davis's play The Nervous Wreck |
Productions | 1928Broadway 1979Broadwayrevival |
Whoopee! is a 1928musical comedy play with abook based on Owen Davis's play,The Nervous Wreck. The musical libretto was written by William Anthony McGuire, with music by Walter Donaldson and lyrics by Gus Kahn. The musical premiered onBroadway in 1928, starringEddie Cantor, and introduced the hit song "Love Me or Leave Me", sung byRuth Etting.[1] Afilm version opened in1930.
Setting: Mission Rest,Arizona; Black Top Canyon; The Bar "M" Ranch; the Wilderness; the Desert.
Sheriff Bob Wells and the daughter of a rancher Sally Morgan are getting married. She is in love with Wanenis, whose part-Indian heritage presents social difficulties for their romance. Sally abandons Sheriff Bob and their wedding, catching a ride with Henry Williams. As ahypochondriac, Henry has problems of his own, but Sally adds to his problems when she leaves a note saying they have eloped. A chase ensues, with the jilted Bob; Mary, Henry's nurse who is in love with him; and a cast of others. Along the way they arrive at the Indian Reservation where Wanenis lives. The movie star Leslie Daw enters the proceedings and sings thetorchy, sentimental "Love Me, or Leave Me".[2]
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Whoopee! opened on Broadway at theNew Amsterdam Theatre on December 4, 1928, and closed on November 23, 1929, after 407 performances. It was produced byFlorenz Ziegfeld, directed bySeymour Felix, dialogue staged byWilliam Anthony McGuire, and dances and ensembles staged by Seymour Felix. The musical starredEddie Cantor as Henry Williams, Ruth Etting as Leslie Daw,Frances Upton as Sally Morgan, Jack Rutherford as Bob Wells, Paul Gregory as Wanenis andEthel Shutta as Mary (replacingRuby Keeler), and featuredBuddy Ebsen andPaulette Goddard in the chorus. George Olsen (Ethel Shutta's husband) and His Orchestra provided the music for both the stage production and the movie.
Donald J. Stubblebine reports, "It was still going strong after six months butSam Goldwyn, who bought the rights, closed it down to make the movie with Cantor."[3]Whoopee! was filmed in1930 as amusical comedyfilm. Although the plot followed the stage version closely, much of the music was changed.
A revival, based on aGoodspeed Opera House production, was presented at theANTA Playhouse from February 14, 1979, to August 12, 1979, for 204 performances and 8 previews. Directed byFrank Corsaro with choreography by Dan Siretta, the cast featuredCharles Repole (Henry Williams) Beth Austin (Sally Morgan), Carol Swarbrick (Mary) andSusan Stroman (Leslie Daw). This revival added Kahn/Donaldson songs not in the original 1928 show:"My Baby Just Cares For Me" (from the 1930 film version),"Yes, Sir, That's My Baby", and "You" (lyrics byHarold Adamson). Also, "Love Me or Leave Me" is sung by Mary and Henry rather than the essentially unrelated Leslie.
Brooks Atkinson, the theatre critic forThe New York Times, reviewed the 1928 Broadway production and called it "a gorgeous spectacle" with "long stretches of excellent comedy". He especially praised the comedic abilities of Eddie Cantor, "a comedian of deftness and appealing humor. He is sad; he is preoccupied; he is apprehensive or insinuating with those floating eyes...In the past he has been funny, clever and ludicrious. But he has never been so enjoyable." As to the music, "Walter Donaldson has composed an appropriate score worthy of better singing than it falls heir to."[4]
TheNew York Times critic Richard Eder called the 1979 Broadway revival a "frequent delight though not an unmitigated one...Most strikingly, it is a superabundance of songs. There is not a poor song in it, and its best ones — the lovely and musically witty "Makin' Whoopee", the jiggly "My Baby Just Cares for Me", and of course the irresistible "Yes Sir, That's My Baby" — are magnificent."[5]Walter Kerr, then the Times' Sunday critic, also reacted favorably to the show while calling attention to its nonsensical frivolity: he deemed it "light as a breeze, and just plain out of its head."Brendan Gill ofThe New Yorker, however, panned the show.
Repole received a nomination forDrama Desk Award,Outstanding Actor in a Musical, and Dan Siretta was nominated for theTony Award for Best Choreography.