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Guys and Dolls

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1950 musical by Frank Loesser, Jo Swerling, and Abe Burrows
This article is about the musical. For other uses, seeGuys and Dolls (disambiguation).
Guys and Dolls
Guys and Dolls window card starringVivian Blaine,Robert Alda andSam Levene from original 1950 Broadway production at the 46th Street Theatre
MusicFrank Loesser
LyricsFrank Loesser
BookJo Swerling
Abe Burrows
Basis"The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown"
byDamon Runyon
"Blood Pressure"
byDamon Runyon[1]
Productions
  • 1950Broadway
  • 1953West End
  • 1976 Broadway revival
  • 1982 London
  • 1984 West End revival
  • 1992 Broadway revival
  • 2005 West End revival
  • 2009 Broadway revival
  • 2015 West End revival
  • 2023 London revival
AwardsTony Award for Best Musical
Tony Award for Best Book
(1982)Olivier for Outstanding Musical
Tony Award for Best Revival
Drama Desk Outstanding Revival
(2005)Olivier for Outstanding Musical

Guys and Dolls is amusical with music and lyrics byFrank Loesser and book byJo Swerling andAbe Burrows. It is based on "The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown" (1933) and "Blood Pressure", which are two short stories byDamon Runyon,[1][2] and also borrows characters and plot elements from other Runyon stories, such as "Pick the Winner".[3]

The show premiered onBroadway on November 24, 1950,[4] where it ran for 1,200 performances and won theTony Award for Best Musical. The musical has had severalrevivals on both Broadway and theWest End, as well as a1955 film adaptation starringFrank Sinatra,Marlon Brando,Jean Simmons, andVivian Blaine, who reprised her role of Adelaide from Broadway.

Guys and Dolls is considered one of the greatest Broadway musicals. In 1998,[5]Vivian Blaine,Sam Levene,Robert Alda andIsabel Bigley, along with the original Broadway cast of the 1950Decca cast album, were inducted into theGrammy Hall of Fame.

Background

[edit]

Guys and Dolls was conceived by producersCy Feuer and Ernest Martin as an adaptation ofDamon Runyon's short stories.[6] These stories, written in the 1920s and 1930s, concerned gangsters, gamblers, and other characters of the New York underworld. Runyon was known for the unique comic dialect he employed in his stories; mixing highly formal language, without contractions, and colorful slang.[7] Frank Loesser, who had spent most of his career as alyricist for movie musicals, was hired as composer and lyricist.George S. Kaufman was hired as director. When the first version of the show'sbook, or dialogue, written byJo Swerling was deemed unusable, Feuer and Martin asked radio comedy writerAbe Burrows to rewrite it.[6][8]

Loesser had already written much of the score to correspond with the first version of the book.[7] Burrows later recalled:

Frank Loesser's fourteen songs were all great, and the [new book] had to be written so that the story would lead into each of them. Later on, the critics spoke of the show as 'integrated'. The wordintegration usually means that the composer has written songs that follow the story line gracefully. Well, we accomplished that but we did it in reverse.[9]

Abe Burrows specifically crafted[10] the role of Nathan Detroit around Sam Levene who signed for the project long before Burrows wrote a single word of dialogue, a similar break Burrows said he had when he later wroteCactus Flower forLauren Bacall. In "Honest, Abe: Is There Really No Business Like Show Business?", Burrows recalls "I had the sound of their voices in my head. I knew the rhythm of their speech and it helped make the dialogue sharper and more real". Although Broadway and movie veteran Sam Levene was not a singer, it was agreed he was otherwise perfect as Nathan Detroit; indeed, Levene was one of Runyon's favorite actors.[citation needed] Frank Loesser agreed it was easier adjusting the music to Levene's limitations than substituting a better singer who couldn't act.[11] Levene's lack of singing ability is the reason the lead role of Nathan Detroit only has one song, the duet "Sue Me".

Composer and lyricist Frank Loesser specifically wrote "Sue Me" for Sam Levene, and structured the song so he and Vivian Blaine never sang their showstopping duet together. The son of a cantor, Sam Levene was fluent inYiddish: "Alright, already, I'm just a no-goodnick; alright, already, it's true, so nu? So sue me." Frank Loesser felt[12] "Nathan Detroit should be played as a brassy Broadway tough guy who sang with more grits than gravy. Sam Levene sang "Sue Me" with such a wonderful Runyonesque flavor that his singing had been easy to forgive, in fact it had been quite charming in its ineptitude." "Musically, Sam Levene may have been tone-deaf, but he inhabited Frank Loesser's world as a character more than a caricature", says[13] Larry Stempel, a music professor atFordham University and the author ofShowtime: A History of the Broadway Musical Theater.

The character of Miss Adelaide was created specifically to fit Vivian Blaine into the musical, after Loesser decided she was ill-suited to play the conservative Sarah.[14] When Loesser suggested reprising some songs in the second act, Kaufman warned: "If you reprise the songs, we'll reprise the jokes."[15]

Characters

[edit]
  • Sky Masterson
  • Sarah Brown
  • Nathan Detroit
  • Miss Adelaide
  • Nicely Nicely Johnson
  • Benny Southstreet
  • Arvide Abernathy
  • Rusty Charlie
  • General Cartwright
  • Lieutenant Brannigan
  • Harry The Horse
  • Big Jule
  • Angie The Ox
  • Master of Ceremonies
  • Mimi
  • Agatha
  • Calvin
  • Martha
  • Liver Lips Louie
  • Ensemble

Synopsis

[edit]

Act I

[edit]

Apantomime of never-ceasing activities depicts the hustle and bustle of New York City ("Runyonland"). Three small-time gamblers, Nicely-Nicely Johnson, Benny Southstreet, and Rusty Charlie, argue over which horse will win a big race ("Fugue for Tinhorns"). The band members of the Save-a-Soul Mission, led by the pious and beautiful Sergeant Sarah Brown, call for sinners to "Follow the Fold" and repent ("Follow the Fold"). Nicely and Benny's employer, Nathan Detroit, runs an illegal floatingcraps game. Due to local policeman Lt. Brannigan's strong-armed presence, he has found only one likely spot to hold the game: the "Biltmore garage". Its owner, Joey Biltmore requires a $1,000 security deposit, and Nathan is broke ("The Oldest Established"). Nathan hopes to win a $1,000 bet against Sky Masterson, a notoriously lucky gambler willing to bet on virtually anything. Nathan proposes a bet he believes he cannot lose: Sky must take a woman of Nathan's choice to dinner in Havana, Cuba. Sky agrees, and Nathan chooses Sarah Brown.

At the mission, Sky attempts to make a deal with Sarah; offering her "one dozen genuine sinners" in exchange for the date in Havana. Sarah refuses, and they argue over whom they will fall in love with ("I'll Know"). Sky kisses Sarah, and she slaps him. Nathan goes to watch his fiancée of 14 years, Adelaide, perform her nightclub act ("A Bushel and a Peck"). After her show, she asks him to marry her once again, telling him that she has been sending her mother letters for twelve years claiming that they have been married with five children. She finds out that Nathan is still running the craps game. After kicking him out, she reads a medical book telling her that her long-running cold may be due to Nathan's refusal to marry her ("Adelaide's Lament").

The next day, Nicely and Benny watch as Sky pursues Sarah, and Nathan tries to win back Adelaide's favor. They declare that guys will do anything for the women they love ("Guys and Dolls"). General Cartwright, the leader of Save-a-Soul, visits the mission and explains that she will be forced to close the branch unless they succeed in bringing some sinners to the upcoming revival meeting. Sarah, desperate to save the mission, promises the General "one dozen genuine sinners", implicitly accepting Sky's deal. Brannigan discovers a group of gamblers waiting for Nathan's craps game, and to convince him of their innocence, they tell Brannigan their gathering is Nathan's "surprise bachelor party". This satisfies Brannigan, and Nathan resigns himself to eloping with Adelaide. Adelaide goes home to pack, promising to meet him after her show the next afternoon. The Save-A-Soul Mission band passes by, and Nathan sees that Sarah is not in it; he realizes that he lost the bet and faints.

In a Havana nightclub, Sky buys a "Cuban milkshake" for himself and Sarah. She doesn't realize that the drink containsBacardi rum, and she gets drunk and kisses Sky ("If I Were a Bell"). Sky realizes that he genuinely cares for Sarah, and he takes her back to New York. They return at around 4:00 a.m., and Sky tells Sarah how much he loves the early morning ("My Time of Day"). They both spontaneously admit that they're in love ("I've Never Been in Love Before"). A siren sounds and gamblers run out of the mission, where Nathan has been holding the craps game. Sarah assumes that Sky took her to Havana so Nathan could run the game in the mission, and she walks out on him.

Act II

[edit]

The next evening, Adelaide performs her act ("Take Back Your Mink"). Nathan doesn't show up for the elopement because he's still running the craps game. She soon realizes that Nathan has stood her up again ("Adelaide's Second Lament").

Sarah admits to Arvide, her grandfather and fellow mission worker, that she does love Sky, but she will not see him again. Arvide expresses his faith in Sky's inherent goodness and urges Sarah to follow her heart ("More I Cannot Wish You"). Sky tells Sarah he intends to deliver the dozen genuine sinners for the revival. She doesn't believe him and walks off, but Arvide subtly encourages him.

Nicely shows Sky to the craps game; now in the sewers ("The Crapshooters' Dance"). Big Jule, a gambler, has lost a large sum of money and refuses to end the game until he earns it back. Sky arrives and fails to convince the crapshooters to come to the mission. He gives Nathan $1,000 and claims that he lost the bet to protect Sarah. Sky makes a last-minute bet to get the sinners; if he loses, everyone gets $1,000, but if he wins, they go to the mission ("Luck Be a Lady"). He wins the bet. Nathan runs into Adelaide on his way there. She tries to get him to elope, but when he can't, she walks out on him. Nathan professes his love for her ("Sue Me"), then leaves.

Sarah is shocked to see that Sky carried through on his promise. The General asks the gamblers to confess their sins, and while some do, one of them admits the real reason they are even there. The General is thrilled that good can come from evil. Attempting to appear contrite, Nicely invents a dream that encouraged him to repent, and the gamblers join in with revivalist fervor ("Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat"). Brannigan arrives and threatens to arrest everyone for the craps game in the Mission, but Sarah clears them, saying that none of the gamblers were at the mission the previous night. After Brannigan leaves, Nathan confesses that they held the craps game in the mission. He also confesses to the bet he made with Sky about taking Sarah to Havana. He adds that he won the bet, to Sarah's shock, and she realizes that Sky wanted to protect her reputation and must genuinely care about her.

Sarah and Adelaide run into each other, and they commiserate and then resolve to marry their men anyway and reform them later ("Marry the Man Today"). A few weeks later, Nathan owns a newsstand and has officially closed the craps game. Sky, who is now married to Sarah, works at the mission band and has also stopped gambling. The characters celebrate as Nathan and Adelaide are married ("Guys and Dolls (Finale/Reprise)").

Musical numbers

[edit]

Act I

Act II

  • "Take Back Your Mink" – Adelaide, Hot Box Girls
  • "Adelaide's Second Lament" – Adelaide
  • "More I Cannot Wish You" – Arvide Abernathy
  • "The Crapshooters' Dance" – Orchestra
  • "Luck Be a Lady" – Sky, Guys
  • "Sue Me" – Adelaide, Nathan
  • "Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat" – Nicely, Company
  • "Marry the Man Today" – Adelaide, Sarah
  • "Guys and Dolls (Reprise)" – Company

Productions

[edit]

Original 1950 Broadway production

[edit]
New York Mirror "Theatre-Ticket Ordergram" featuring original Broadway starsVivian Blaine,Sam Levene andIsabel Bigley in 1950 Broadway productionGuys and Dolls at46th Street Theatre
Further information:Guys and Dolls (original Broadway cast recording)

The show had its pre-Broadway try-out at theShubert Theater inPhiladelphia, opening Saturday, October 14, 1950.[16] The musical premiered onBroadway at the 46th Street Theatre (nowRichard Rodgers Theatre) on November 24, 1950. It was directed byGeorge S. Kaufman, with dances and musical numbers byMichael Kidd, scenic and lighting design byJo Mielziner, costumes byAlvin Colt, and orchestrations byGeorge Bassman andTed Royal, with vocal arrangements byHerbert Greene.[17][better source needed] It starredRobert Alda (Sky Masterson),Sam Levene (Nathan Detroit),Isabel Bigley (Sarah) and Vivian Blaine (Miss Adelaide).Iva Withers was a replacement as Miss Adelaide. The musical ran for 1,200 performances, winning five 1951 Tony Awards, including the award for Best Musical.Decca Records issued the original cast recording on 78 rpm records, which was later expanded and re-issued on LP, and then transferred to CD in the 1980s.

1953: First UK production

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Vivian Blaine andSam Levene meetQueen Elizabeth after a Royal Command Variety Performance ofGuys and Dolls on November 2, 1953

The premiereWest End production ofGuys and Dolls opened at theLondon Coliseum on May 28, 1953, a few days before the 1953 Coronation and ran for 555 performances, including a Royal Command Variety Performance forQueen Elizabeth on November 2, 1953. Credited with above-the-title-billing the London cast co-starred Vivian Blaine as Miss Adelaide and Sam Levene as Nathan Detroit, each reprising their original Broadway performances; Jerry Wayne performed the role of Sky Masterson since Robert Alda did not reprise his Broadway role in the first UK production which co-starredLizbeth Webb as Sarah Brown. Before opening at the Coliseum,Guys and Dolls had an eight performance run at theBristol Hippodrome, where the show opened on May 19, 1953, and closed on May 25, 1953.[18][19] Lizbeth Webb was the only major principal who was British and was chosen to play the part of Sarah Brown by Frank Loesser. The show has had numerous revivals and tours and has become a popular choice for school and community theatre productions.

1955 First Las Vegas production

[edit]
Guys and Dolls program from 1st Las Vegas production which opened September 7, 1955, at theRoyal Nevada, performed twice daily starringVivian Blaine,Robert Alda andSam Levene, each reprising their original Broadway performances

Vivian Blaine as Miss Adelaide,Sam Levene as Nathan Detroit andRobert Alda as Sky Masterson recreated their original Broadway performances twice daily in a slightly reduced version ofGuys and Dolls when the first Las Vegas production opened a six-month run at theRoyal Nevada, September 7, 1955, the first time a Broadway musical was performed on theLas Vegas Strip.[20][failed verification]

1965 Fifteenth Anniversary production

[edit]

In 1965 Vivian Blaine and Sam Levene reprised their original Broadway roles as Miss Adelaide and Nathan Detroit in a 15th anniversary revival ofGuys and Dolls at the Mineola Theatre, Mineola, New York and Paramus Playhouse, New Jersey. Blaine and Levene performed the fifteenth anniversary production ofGuys and Dolls for a limited run of 24 performances at each theatre.

NYC Center 1955, 1965-66 revivals

[edit]

New York City Center mounted short runs of the musical in 1955, 1965 and 1966. A production starringWalter Matthau as Nathan Detroit,Helen Gallagher as Adelaide, Ray Shaw as Sky and Leila Martin as Sarah had 31 performances, running from April 20 to May 1, and May 31 to June 12, 1955.[21][22]

Another presentation at City Center, withAlan King as Nathan Detroit,Sheila MacRae as Adelaide,Jerry Orbach as Sky andAnita Gillette as Sarah, ran for 15 performances from April 28 to May 9, 1965. A 1966 production, starringJan Murray as Nathan Detroit, Vivian Blaine reprising her role as Adelaide,Hugh O'Brian as Sky, and Barbara Meister as Sarah, ran for 23 performances, from June 8 to June 26, 1966.[23]

1976 Broadway revival

[edit]
Libretto and vocal book,Music Theatre International (1978), rented out to actors

An all-black cast staged the first Broadway revival ofGuys and Dolls opened on July 10, 1976, in previews, officially on July 21, atThe Broadway Theatre. It starredRobert Guillaume as Nathan Detroit,Norma Donaldson as Miss Adelaide,Jimmy Randolph as Sky,Ernestine Jackson as Sarah Brown, andKen Page as Nicely-Nicely Johnson. Guillaume and Jackson were nominated for Tony and Drama Desk Awards, and Page won aTheatre World Award.

This production featuredMotown-style musical arrangements by Danny Holgate and Horace Ott, and it was directed and choreographed by Billy Wilson. The entire production was under the supervision ofAbe Burrows, and musical direction and choral arrangements were byHoward Roberts.

The show closed on February 13, 1977, after 12 previews and 239 performances. A cast recording was released subsequent to the show's opening.

1982 London; 1984 West End revival

[edit]

Laurence Olivier wanted to play Nathan Detroit, and began rehearsals for a planned 1971 London revival ofGuys and Dolls for theNational Theatre Company then based at theOld Vic. However, due to poor health he had to stop, and his revival never happened.[24]

In 1982,Richard Eyre directed a major revival at London's National Theatre. Eyre called it a "re-thinking" of the musical, and his production featured a neon-lit set design inspired by Rudi Stern's 1979 bookLet There Be Neon,[25] and brassier orchestrations with vintage yet innovative harmonies.[26][27] The show's choreography byDavid Toguri included a large-scale tap dance in the finale, performed by the principals and entire cast. The revival opened March 9, 1982, and was an overnight sensation,[28] running for nearly four years and breaking box office records.[29][30] The original cast featuredBob Hoskins as Nathan Detroit,Julia McKenzie as Adelaide,Ian Charleson as Sky andJulie Covington as Sarah.[31][32] The production won fiveOlivier Awards, including Best Musical.

Replacements in the cast includedTrevor Peacock as Nathan,Paul Jones as Sky,Belinda Sinclair andFiona Hendley as Sarah, andImelda Staunton as Adelaide. The production closed in late 1983.[33][full citation needed] Eyre's production returned to the National from April through September 1984, this time starringLulu,Norman Rossington,Clarke Peters andBetsy Brantley.[34][full citation needed][35] After a nationwide tour, the production transferred to the West End at thePrince of Wales Theatre, where it ran from June 1985 to April 1986.[36][37] Following Ian Charleson's death fromAIDS in 1990 two reunion performances ofGuys and Dolls, with almost all of the original 1982 cast and musicians, were given at the National Theatre as a tribute to him. The tickets sold out immediately, and the dress rehearsal was also packed. The proceeds were donated to the Ian Charleson Day Centre HIV clinic at theRoyal Free Hospital, and to scholarships in Charleson's name atLAMDA.[38]

1992 Broadway revival

[edit]
DVD cover of the 1992 cast-album recordingdocumentary,Guys and Dolls: Off the Record, starringPeter Gallagher,Josie de Guzman,Nathan Lane, andFaith Prince

The 1992 Broadway revival was the most successful American remounting of the show since the original Broadway production which ran for 1,200 performances. Directed byJerry Zaks, it starredNathan Lane as Nathan Detroit (from whom Lane had taken his stage name),Peter Gallagher as Sky,Faith Prince as Adelaide andJosie de Guzman as Sarah. This production played at theMartin Beck Theatre from April 14, 1992, to January 8, 1995, with 1,143 performances.

The production received a rave review fromFrank Rich inThe New York Times, stating "It's hard to know which genius, and I do mean genius, to celebrate first while cheering the entertainment at the Martin Beck."[39] It received eightTony Award nominations, and won four, including Best Revival, and the show also won theDrama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival. This revival featured various revisions to the show's score, including brand new music for the "Runyonland", "A Bushel and a Peck", "Take Back Your Mink" and "Havana". The orchestrations were redesigned byMichael Starobin, and there were new dance arrangements added to "A Bushel and a Peck" and "Take Back Your Mink".

A one-hour documentary film captured the recording sessions of the production's original cast album. TitledGuys and Dolls: Off the Record, the film aired onPBS'sGreat Performances series in December 1992, and was released on DVD in 2007. Complete takes of most of the show's songs are featured, as well as coaching from director Zaks, and commentary sessions by stars Gallagher, de Guzman, Lane and Prince on the production and their characters.

Lorna Luft auditioned for the role of Adelaide in this production. Faith Prince ultimately played the role, and Luft later played the role in the 1992 National Tour.[40]

1996 London revival

[edit]

Richard Eyre repeated his 1982 success with another National Theatre revival of the show, this time in a limited run. It starredHenry Goodman as Nathan Detroit,Imelda Staunton returning as Adelaide,Clarke Peters returning as Sky andJoanna Riding as Sarah.Clive Rowe played Nicely-Nicely Johnson, and David Toguri returned as choreographer. The production ran from December 17, 1996, through March 29, 1997 and from July 2, 1997, to November 22, 1997.[41][42] It received threeOlivier Award nominations, winning one: Best Supporting Performance in a Musical went to Clive Rowe.[43] Richard Eyre won theCritics' Circle Theatre Award for Best Director, and the production won Best Musical.

2005 West End revival

[edit]

The 2005West End revival opened at London'sPiccadilly Theatre in June 2005 and closed in April 2007. This revival, directed byMichael Grandage, starredEwan McGregor as Sky,Jenna Russell as Sarah,Jane Krakowski as Adelaide, andDouglas Hodge as Nathan Detroit.[44] During the run,Nigel Harman,Adam Cooper, Norman Bowman andBen Richards took over as Sky;Kelly Price,Amy Nuttall andLisa Stokke took over as Sarah;Sarah Lancashire,Sally Ann Triplett,Claire Sweeney, Lynsey Britton andSamantha Janus took over as Adelaide; andNigel Lindsay,Neil Morrissey,Patrick Swayze,Alex Ferns andDon Johnson took over as Nathan Detroit. This production added the song "Adelaide" that Frank Loesser wrote for the 1955 film adaptation. According to a September 2007 article inPlaybill, this West End production was scheduled to begin previews for a transfer toBroadway in February 2008, but this plan was dropped.[45]

2009 Broadway revival

[edit]

A Broadway revival of the show opened on March 1, 2009, at theNederlander Theatre. The cast includedOliver Platt as Nathan Detroit,Lauren Graham, in her Broadway debut, as Adelaide,Craig Bierko as Sky andKate Jennings Grant as Sarah.Des McAnuff was the director, and the choreographer wasSergio Trujillo.[46] This version of the show moved the setting from the 1950s to the 1940s and added Damon Runyon himself as a non-speaking character. The show opened to generally negative reviews.[47]The New York Times called it "static" and "uninspired",[48] theNew York Post said, "How can something so zippy be so tedious?"[49] andTime Out New York wrote, "Few things are more enervating than watching good material deflate."[50] However, the show received a highly favorable review fromThe New Yorker,[51] and the producers decided to keep the show open in hopes of positive audience response. TheNew York Post reported on March 4 that producerHoward Panter "[said] he'll giveGuys and Dolls at least seven weeks to find an audience".[52] The revival closed on June 14, 2009, after 28 previews and 113 performances.[53]

2015 London revival

[edit]

A new production directed byGordon Greenberg was originally presented atChichester Festival Theatre in Summer 2014 before moving theSavoy Theatre on December 10, 2015, for previews with a full opening on January 6, 2016, running until March 12, 2016 (following preview runs at thePalace Theatre, Manchester andAlexandra Theatre, Birmingham in November 2015). The production starredDavid Haig as Nathan,Sophie Thompson as Adelaide,Jamie Parker as Sky, Siubhan Harrison as Sarah and Gavin Spokes as Nicely.[54] The production then transferred to thePhoenix Theatre, withOliver Tompsett as Sky,Samantha Spiro as Adelaide,Billy Boyle as Arvide, andRichard Kind as Nathan. On June 28, 2016, the role of Miss Adelaide was taken over byRebel Wilson, and Nathan Detroit was played bySimon Lipkin.[55] The production also toured around UK cities and Dublin starringMaxwell Caulfield as Nathan,Louise Dearman as Miss Adelaide,Richard Fleeshman as Sky andAnna O'Byrne as Sarah.[56]

2017 UK all-black production

[edit]

Talawa Theatre Company and Manchester'sRoyal Exchange Theatre produced the UK's first all-blackGuys and Dolls in 2017. The production opened on December 2, 2017, and following an extension ran to February 27, 2018, at the Royal Exchange in Manchester.[57][58][59][60][61] The cast includedRay Fearon as Nathan Detroit, Ashley Zhangazha as Sky Masterson, Abiona Omonua as Sarah Brown, and Lucy Vandi as Miss Adelaide.[62][63]

In this production, the musical was relocated toHarlem, 1939, with the music referencing jazz, and gospel. DirectorMichael Buffong said, "Pre-war Harlem was all about the hustle. The creativity of that era was born from a unique collision of talent and circumstance as people escaped the agricultural and oppressive south via the 'underground railroad' into the highly urbanised and industrialised north. Much of our popular culture, from dance to music, has its roots in that period. OurGuys and Dolls brings all of this to the fore."[57][64]

Reviews particularly praised the music, relocation to Harlem, and sense of spectacle.Lyn Gardner inThe Guardian wrote that "the gamblers ... are a bunch of sharp-suited peacocks clad in rainbow hues."[65]Ann Treneman inThe Times commented, "Whoever had the idea of moving this classic musical from one part of New York to another bit, just up the road, needs to be congratulated. This version of Frank Loesser's musical, which swirls around the lives of the petty gangsters and their 'dolls' who inhabit New York's underbelly, moves the action to Harlem at its prewar height in 1939. It is a Talawa production with an all-black cast and it is terrific from the get-go."[66] Clare Brennan inThe Observer stated, "Relocated to Harlem, this fine new production of Frank Loesser's classic musical retains a threat of violence under a cartoon-bright exterior."[67]

2023 London revival

[edit]

A new revival directed byNicholas Hytner, choreographed byArlene Phillips and James Cousins and designed byBunny Christie began previews at theBridge Theatre inLondon on March 3, 2023, with an opening night on March 14. Similar to Hytner's productions ofJulius Caesar andA Midsummer Night's Dream at the Bridge, the production has an immersivein-the-round staging where audience members in the pit stand and the stage platforms rise around them involving audience participation. The cast includedDaniel Mays as Nathan Detroit,Celinde Schoenmaker as Sarah Brown,Marisha Wallace as Miss Adelaide, Andrew Richardson as Sky Masterson andCedric Neal as Nicely Nicely Johnson.[68][69][70]

A new cast recording was released digitally on September 29, 2023, and was physically released on October 27, 2023, byBroadway Records. This album features several bonus tracks including a pop remix of "Luck Be A Lady", sung byMarisha Wallace, which is played after the curtain call and the Hi-Hi Boys' (Cedric Neal with Simon Anthony, Jordan Castle, Ryan Pidgen) versions of "I'll Know", "I've Never Been in Love Before" and "If I Were A Bell" which is performed during the interval.[71]

Owain Arthur took over from Mays as Nathan Detroit from July 17 to October 14 while Mays undertook filming commitments before returning to the role on October 16 with George Ioannides replacing Richardson as Sky Masterson. From February 28, 2024, a new cast took over including Arthur returning as Nathan Detroit, Timmika Ramsay as Miss Adelaide, Jonathan Andrew Hume as Nicely Nicely Johnson with Schoenmaker and Ioannides remaining as Sarah Brown and Sky Masterson.[72]Gina Beck took over from Schoenmaker as Sarah Brown from 2 September 2024.[73] Following numerous extensions due to popular demand, the production closed at the Bridge Theatre on January 4, 2025.[74]

Other productions

[edit]

Reception

[edit]

The original Broadway production ofGuys and Dolls opened to unanimously positive reviews, one of only eight musicals opening on Broadway between 1943 and 1964 that did so.[102] This was a relief to the cast as they had a 41-performance pre-Broadway tryout in Philadelphia where each performance was different. Critics praised the musical's faithfulness to Damon Runyon's style and characterizations.Richard Watts of theNew York Post wrote "Guys and Dolls is just what it should be to celebrate the Runyon spirit...filled with the salty characters and richly original language sacred to the memory of the late Master".[103] William Hawkins of theNew York World-Telegram & Sun stated "It recaptures what [Runyon] knew about Broadway, that its wickedness is tinhorn, but its gallantry is as pure and young asLittle Eva".[103] Robert Coleman of theNew York Daily Mirror wrote "We think Damon would have relished it as much as we did".[103]

The book and score were greatly praised as well;John Chapman, then Chief Theatre Critic, of theNew York Daily News wrote "The book is a work of easy and delightful humor. Its music and lyrics, byFrank Loesser, are so right for the show and so completely lacking in banality, that they amount to an artistic triumph".[103] Coleman stated "Frank Loesser has written a score that will get a big play on the juke boxes, over the radio, and in bistros throughout the land. His lyrics are especially notable in that they help Burrows's topical gags to further the plot". InThe New York Times,Brooks Atkinson wrote "Mr. Loesser's lyrics and songs have the same affectionate appreciation of the material as the book, which is funny without being self-conscious or mechanical".[104]

Multiple critics asserted that the work was of great significance to musical theatre. John McClain of theNew York Journal American proclaimed "it is the best and most exciting thing of its kind sincePal Joey. It is a triumph and a delight."[103] Atkinson stated, "we might as well admit thatGuys and Dolls is a work of art. It is spontaneous and has form, style, and spirit."[104] Chapman asserted, "In all departments,Guys and Dolls is a perfect musical comedy".[103]

Film adaptations

[edit]

1955 film

[edit]
Main article:Guys and Dolls (film)

On November 3, 1955,the film version of the musical was released, starringMarlon Brando as Sky,Frank Sinatra as Nathan Detroit, andJean Simmons as Sarah, with Vivian Blaine reprising her role as Adelaide. The film was written and directed byJoseph L. Mankiewicz and produced bySamuel Goldwyn.

Levene lost the film role of Nathan Detroit to Sinatra even though Mankiewicz wanted Levene. "You can't have a Jew playing a Jew, it wouldn't work on screen," Goldwyn argued.[105] Frank Loesser felt Sinatra played the part like a "dapper Italian swinger".[106] Mankiewicz said "if there could be one person in the world more miscast as Nathan Detroit than Frank Sinatra that would be Laurence Olivier and I am one of his greatest fans; the role had been written for Sam Levene who was divine in it."[107] Sinatra did his best to give Nathan Detroit a few stereotyped Jewish gestures and inflections, but Frank Loesser hated "how Sinatra turned the rumpled Nathan Detroit into a smoothie. Sam Levene's husky untrained voice added to the song's charm, not to mention its believability."[108] Loesser died in 1969, still refusing to watch the film.[109]

Around the time of the film's release, American composer and lyricistStephen Sondheim wrote film reviews forFilms in Review. Sondheim (then aged 25) reviewed the film version ofGuys and Dolls, and observed: "Sinatra ambles through his role as Nathan Detroit as though he were about to laugh at the jokes in the script. He has none of the sob in the voice, and the incipient ulcer in the stomach, that the part requires and Sam Levene supplied so hilariously on the stage. Sinatra sings on pitch, but colorlessly; Levene sang off pitch, but acted while he sang. Sinatra's lackadaisical performance, his careless and left handed attempt at characterization not only harm the picture immeasurably but indicate an alarming lack of professionality."[110]

Three new songs written by Loesser were added to the film: "Pet Me Poppa"; "A Woman in Love"; and "Adelaide", which was written specifically for Sinatra. Five songs from the stage musical were omitted from the movie: "A Bushel and a Peck", "My Time of Day", I've Never Been In Love Before", "More I Cannot Wish You" and "Marry the Man Today". "A Bushel and a Peck" was later restored to the video release version.

Planned new adaptation

[edit]

20th Century Fox acquired the film rights to the musical in early 2013, and was said to be planning a remake.[111] In March 2019,TriStar Pictures acquired the remake rights, withBill Condon hired as director two years later.[112][113] In September 2024,Rob Marshall replaced Condon as the new director and co-wrote a new screenplay with his partnerJohn DeLuca, along withJohn Requa andGlenn Ficarra. Serving as producers are Marshall, DeLuca,John Goldwyn,Marc Toberoff andMarc Platt.[114][115]

Casts of major productions

[edit]

The following table shows the principal casts of the major productions ofGuys and Dolls:

Casts of major productions
CharacterBroadwayLondonOff-Broadway RevivalFirst Broadway RevivalFirst London RevivalSecond Broadway RevivalSecond London RevivalThird London RevivalThird Broadway RevivalFourth London RevivalFifth London Revival
19501953196519761982199219962005200920152023
Nathan DetroitSam LeveneAlan KingRobert GuillaumeBob HoskinsNathan LaneHenry GoodmanDouglas HodgeOliver PlattDavid HaigDaniel Mays
Sky MastersonRobert AldaJerry WayneJerry OrbachJimmy RandolphIan CharlesonPeter GallagherClarke PetersEwan McGregorCraig BierkoJamie ParkerAndrew Richardson
Sister Sarah BrownIsabel BigleyLizbeth WebbAnita GilletteErnestine JacksonJulie CovingtonJosie de GuzmanJoanna RidingJenna RussellKate Jennings GrantSiubhan HarrisonCelinde Schoenmaker
Miss AdelaideVivian BlaineSheila MacRaeNorma DonaldsonJulia McKenzieFaith PrinceImelda StauntonJane KrakowskiLauren GrahamSophie ThompsonMarisha Wallace
Nicely-Nicely JohnsonStubby KayeJack De LonKen PageDavid HealyWalter BobbieClive RoweMartyn EllisTituss BurgessGavin SpokesCedric Neal
Benny SouthstreetJohnny SilverJoey FayeChristophe PierreBarrie RutterJ.K. SimmonsWayne CaterCory EnglishSteve RosenIan HughesMark Oxtoby
Arvide AbernathyPat RooneyErnest ButcherClarence NordstromEmett "Babe" WallaceJohn NormingtonJohn CarpenterJohn NormingtonNiall BuggyJim OrtliebNeil McCaulAnthony O'Donnell
Harry the HorseTom PediJohn RussellBill PatersonErnie SabellaSteven SpeirsNorman BowmanJim WaltonCornelius ClarkeJordan Castle
Big JuleB.S. PullyLew HerbertJake LaMottaWalter WhiteJim CarterHerschel SparberStanley TownsendSevan StephanGlenn FleshlerNic GreenshieldsCameron Johnson
Rusty CharlieDouglas DeaneRobert ArdenEd BeckerSterling McQueenKevin WilliamsTimothy ShewConnor ByrneAndrew PlayfootSpencer MosesCarl PatrickRyan Pidgen
Lieutenant BranniganPaul ReedRobert CawdronFrank CampanellaClark MorganHarry TowbSteve RyanColin StintonPatrick BrennanAdam LeFevreWilliam OxborrowCornelius Clarke
General Matilda B. CartwrightNetta PackerColleen CliffordClaire WaringEdye ByrdeIrlin HallRuth WilliamsonSharon D. ClarkeGaye BrownMary TestaLorna GayleKaty Secombe

Notable replacements

[edit]

Broadway (1950–1953)

[edit]

Off-Broadway revival (1965)

[edit]

London revival (1982–1986 and 1996–1997)

[edit]

Source:[116]

Broadway revival (1992–1995)

[edit]

London revival (2005–2007)

[edit]

Broadway revival (2009)

[edit]

London revival (2015–2016)

[edit]

London revival (2023–2025)

[edit]

Awards and honors

[edit]

Original Broadway production

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1951Tony AwardsBest MusicalWon
Best Actor in a MusicalRobert AldaWon
Best Featured Actress in a MusicalIsabel BigleyWon
Best ChoreographyMichael KiddWon
Best Direction of a MusicalGeorge S. KaufmanWon
New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards[117]Best MusicalFrank Loesser, Abe Burrows and Jo SwerlingWon

1965 New York City Center production

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1965Tony AwardsBest Performance by a Featured Actor in a MusicalJerry OrbachNominated

1976 Broadway revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1977Tony AwardsBest RevivalNominated
Best Actor in a MusicalRobert GuillaumeNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalErnestine JacksonNominated
Drama Desk AwardsOutstanding Actor in a MusicalRobert GuillaumeNominated
Outstanding Featured Actress in a MusicalErnestine JacksonNominated
Theatre World AwardKen PageWon

1982 London revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1982Critics' Circle Theatre Award[118]Best ActorBob HoskinsWon
Best DesignerJohn GunterWon
Evening Standard AwardsBest DirectorRichard EyreWon
Laurence Olivier AwardsBest Musical of the YearWon
Best Actor in a MusicalBob HoskinsNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalJulia McKenzieWon
Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a MusicalDavid HealyWon
Best DirectorRichard EyreWon
Best Set DesignJohn GunterWon

1992 Broadway revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1992Tony AwardsBest RevivalWon
Best Actor in a MusicalNathan LaneNominated
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a MusicalFaith PrinceWon
Josie de GuzmanNominated
Best Direction of a MusicalJerry ZaksWon
Best ChoreographyChristopher ChadmanNominated
Best Scenic DesignTony WaltonWon
Best Lighting DesignPaul GalloNominated
Drama Desk AwardsOutstanding RevivalWon
Outstanding Actor in a MusicalNathan LaneWon
Peter GallagherNominated
Outstanding Actress in a MusicalFaith PrinceWon
Outstanding Featured Actor in a MusicalWalter BobbieNominated
Outstanding Director of a MusicalJerry ZaksWon
Outstanding ChoreographyChristopher ChadmanNominated
Outstanding Set DesignTony WaltonWon
Outstanding Costume DesignWilliam Ivey LongWon
Outstanding Lighting DesignPaul GalloWon

1996 London revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
1996Critics' Circle Theatre AwardBest DirectorRichard EyreWon
1997Laurence Olivier AwardsBest Actress in a MusicalImelda StauntonNominated
Joanna RidingNominated
Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a MusicalClive RoweWon

2005 London revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2006Laurence Olivier Awards[119]Outstanding Musical ProductionWon
Best Actor in a MusicalDouglas HodgeNominated
Ewan McGregorNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalJane KrakowskiWon
Jenna RussellNominated
Best Theatre ChoreographerRob AshfordNominated
Best Sound DesignTerry Jardine and Chris FullNominated
Best Lighting DesignHoward HarrisonNominated

2008 Australian production

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2008Helpmann AwardsBest MusicalNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalMarina PriorNominated
Best Supporting Actor in a MusicalShane JacobsonWon
Best Direction in a MusicalMichael Grandage and Jamie LloydNominated
Best Choreography in a MusicalRob AshfordNominated
Best Sound DesignChris Full, John Scandrett and Nick ReichNominated

2009 Broadway revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2009Tony AwardsBest Revival of a MusicalNominated
Best Scenic DesignRobert BrillNominated

2015 London revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2015Laurence Olivier AwardsBest Musical RevivalNominated
Best Actor in a MusicalDavid HaigNominated
Jamie ParkerNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalSophie ThompsonNominated
Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a MusicalGavin SpokesNominated
Best Theatre ChoreographerCarlos Acosta &Andrew WrightNominated

2022 Kennedy Center production

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2023Helen Hayes Award[120]Outstanding Performer in a Visiting ProductionKevin ChamberlinWon
Steven PasqualeNominated
Phillipa SooNominated
Outstanding Visiting ProductionWon

2023 London revival

[edit]
YearAward CeremonyCategoryNomineeResult
2023Evening Standard Theatre Awards[121]Best MusicalWon
Best DirectorNicholas HytnerNominated
Best Musical PerformanceMarisha WallaceNominated
Emerging TalentAndrew RichardsonNominated
Best DesignBunny ChristieNominated
2024WhatsOnStage Awards[122]Best Musical RevivalWon
Best Performer in a MusicalMarisha WallaceNominated
Best Supporting Performer in a MusicalCedric NealNominated
Best Professional Debut PerformanceAndrew RichardsonNominated
Best DirectionNicholas HytnerNominated
Best Musical Direction/SupervisionTom BradyNominated
Best ChoreographyArlene Phillips & James CousinsNominated
Best Costume DesignBunny Christie & Deborah AndrewsNominated
Best Lighting DesignPaule ConstableNominated
Best Set DesignBunny ChristieWon
Best Sound DesignPaul ArdittiNominated
Best Graphic DesignMuse CreativeWon
Laurence Olivier Awards[123]Best Musical RevivalNominated
Best Actor in a MusicalDaniel MaysNominated
Best Actress in a MusicalMarisha WallaceNominated
Best Supporting Actor in a MusicalCedric NealNominated
Best ChoreographerArlene Phillips, James CousinsWon
Best Costume DesignBunny Christie, Deborah AndrewsNominated
Best Set DesignBunny ChristieNominated
Best Lighting DesignPaule ConstableNominated
Outstanding Musical ContributionTom Brady (Musical Supervision & Arrangements),Charlie Rosen (Orchestrations)Nominated

Recordings

[edit]
Further information:Guys and Dolls (original Broadway cast recording)

There are numerous recordings of the show's score. These include:

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abNadel, Ira Bruce.Double act: a life of Tom Stoppard. Methuen, 2002. p. 542.
  2. ^"Damon Runyon".Authors. The eBooks-Library. Retrieved2008-07-20.
  3. ^Stempel, 435
  4. ^"Guys and Dolls (Playbill)".Playbill.
  5. ^"GRAMMY Hall Of Fame".GRAMMY.com. 2010-10-18. Retrieved2019-10-31.
  6. ^abZolotow, Maurice "Guys, Dolls and Runyon".The New York Times, Nov. 12, 1950, Section 2, p. 1,3.
  7. ^abStempel, 434
  8. ^Suskin, 272–276
  9. ^Burrows, Abe (1980).Honest Abe. Boston: Atlantic-Little, Brown, p. 149, cited in Stempel, 434–435
  10. ^Levene, Joseph K. (2019-07-15)."Casting Guys and Dolls by Ron Fassler has factual errors and oversights concerning Sam Levene, the…".Medium. Retrieved2019-10-31.
  11. ^Gerabian, Keith (2002).The Making of Guys and Dolls. Ontario:Mosaic Press. pp. 93, 94.ASIN B01M1E9JZR.
  12. ^Loesser, Susan (2000).A Most Remarkable Fella: Frank Loesser and the Guys and Dolls in His Life: a Portrait by His Daughter. Hal Leonard Corporation.ISBN 9780634009273.
  13. ^"Impertinent Questions with Larry Stempel".National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Retrieved2019-10-31.
  14. ^Scott Simon (host). "Creation of the musicalGuys and Dolls,Weekend Edition Saturday, National Public Radio, November 2=pk2000
  15. ^"On a lighter note, Sam Levene and Vivian Blane made guest-star appearances on a New Year's Eve production ofThe Big Show, December 31, 1950, withTallulah Bankhead andJose Ferrer; Sam Levene and Vivian Blaine performed with Bankhead, satirizing the difficulty of getting theatre tickets to their standing-room-only Broadway musical,Guys and Dolls."Herrmann, Dorothy (1982).With Malice Toward All. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. pp. 60–61.
  16. ^Philadelphia Inquirer, Monday, October 16, 1950, p. 26
  17. ^Guys and Dolls. IBDB. Retrieved on 2012-05-21.
  18. ^"Listing, 1953".Guide to Musical Theatre. Retrieved March 5, 2010
  19. ^"The London Coliseum history, Programme".Arthur Lloyd.co.uk. Retrieved March 5, 2010
  20. ^"Sands and Royal Nevada. Las Vegas, September 1955".Vintage Las Vegas. Retrieved2019-10-31.
  21. ^Norton, Richard C. (2002).A Chronology of American Musical Theater: 1952–2001, Volume 3. Oxford University Press. p. 33.
  22. ^"Guys and Dolls (City Center Revival, 1955)".Broadway World. 2011. Accessed March 22, 2011.
  23. ^"Guys and Dolls (City Center Revival, 1966)".Broadway World
  24. ^Vermilye, Jerry (1992)."'Guys and Dolls'".The Complete Films of Laurence Olivier. Citadel Press.ISBN 0-8065-1302-0. p. 53
  25. ^Eyre, Richard (1982). "Directing the National TheatreGuys and Dolls". In: Loesser, Frank, et al.The Guys and Dolls Book. Methuen. p. 36.
  26. ^Mordden, Ethan (1988).Broadway Babies: The People Who Made the American Musical. Oxford University Press US. p. 230.
  27. ^The New Yorker, Volume 64, Issues 1–10. F-R Pub. Corp., 1988. p. 103
  28. ^Battersby, Kate (May 31, 2005)."The cast were in shock at the avalanche of appreciation".The Telegraph.
  29. ^Kullman, Colby H. and William C. Young (1986).Theatre Companies of the World, Vol. 1. Greenwood Press. p. 691.
  30. ^"Huge Team Help Stage Revival of Broadway'sGuys and Dolls".The Bath Chronicle. April 21, 2011.
  31. ^Shenton, Mark (23 January 2013)."Half a century of great musicals: Part Two, 1977 to 1992".The Stage. Retrieved3 January 2024.
  32. ^Kabatchnik, Amnon (2011).Blood on the Stage, 1950-1975: Milestone Plays of Crime, Mystery, and Detection.Scarecrow Press. p. 6.ISBN 978-0-8108-7784-9.
  33. ^Jensen, Gregory (February 22, 1984). "London's West End outscores Broadway with bonanza of hit-and-miss musicals", United Press International
  34. ^Wolf, Matt. "Musical on Jean Seberg Stirs Controversy in London", The Associated Press, November 11, 1983 (no page number)
  35. ^"Guys and Dolls (Royal National Theatre Production, 1984)".Broadway World
  36. ^Scottish Field, Volume 131. Holmes McDougall, 1985.
  37. ^"Guys and Dolls listing, Prince of Wales Theatre".thisistheatre.com, retrieved May 28, 2010
  38. ^Benedict, David (6 January 1995)."Good Night, Sweet Prince".The Independent.
  39. ^Rich, Frank (April 15, 1992)."Review/Theater: Guys and Dolls; Damon Runyon's New York Lives Anew".The New York Times
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  44. ^Nathan, John (14 April 2007)."Adelaide's Lament: London Guys and Dolls Closes April 14".Archived 2009-05-10 at theWayback Machine.Playbill.
  45. ^Gans, Andrew (September 11, 2007)."Guys and Dolls Revival Unlikely for Spring".Archived 2007-10-14 at theWayback Machine.Playbill.
  46. ^"'Luck Be a Lady': Guys and Dolls Returns to Broadway Feb. 5".Archived 2009-02-22 at theWayback Machine.Broadway.com.
  47. ^Review summary for 2009 "Guys and Dolls".New York Theatre Guide.
  48. ^Brantley (Ben March 2, 2009)."It's a Cinch That the Bum Is Under the Thumb of Some Little Broad".The New York Times.
  49. ^Vincentelli, Elisabeth (March 2, 2009)."This Revival is a Bad Bet:Guys & Dolls Bores in Broadway Return".New York Post.
  50. ^Feldman, Adam (March 5–11, 2009)."Review: Guys and Dolls"Archived 2009-03-10 at theWayback Machine.Time Out New York.
  51. ^Lahr, John (March 9, 2009)."Broadway Boogie-Woogie:Guys and Dolls Rolls the Dice Again".The New Yorker.
  52. ^Riedel, Michael (March 4, 2009). "Producer Backs Play The Critics Don't Like".The New York Post. p. 40.
  53. ^"Adelaide's New Lament: Broadway's Guys and Dolls to Close June 14".Archived 2009-06-12 at theWayback Machine.Playbill.
  54. ^"Full casting announced for Guys and Dolls at the Savoy Theatre in London's West End".London Theatre. Retrieved2016-01-15.
  55. ^"Review | Rebel Wilson in Guys and Dolls at London's Phoenix Theatre".Attitude. 2016-07-20. Archived fromthe original on 2017-01-17. Retrieved2016-08-07.
  56. ^"GUYS AND DOLLS Confirmed to Transfer to the Phoenix Theatre!".Broadway Would. Retrieved2016-01-29.
  57. ^abMasso, Giverny (October 18, 2017)."Cast announced for UK's first all-black 'Guys and Dolls'"The Stage.
  58. ^"Casting Revealed For UK's First All-Black GUYS AND DOLLS'".Broadway World. October 18, 2017
  59. ^Wiegand, Chris (June 7, 2017)."Jubilee Manchester Royal Exchange".The Guardian.
  60. ^Gans, Andrew (October 18, 2017)."Cast Announced for U.K.’s First All-Black Production of 'Guys and Dolls'".Playbill.
  61. ^Read-Dominguez, Jennifer (October 19, 2017)."Harry Potter and Strictly Come Dancing star joins first all-black cast of Guys and Dolls in the UK".Digital Spy.
  62. ^Eaton-Rutter, Claire (October 18, 2017)."Guys and Dolls musical announces UK's first ever all-black cast".Metro.
  63. ^Guys and Dolls.Talawa.
  64. ^Gilbey, Ryan (2017-11-13)."Harlem shake-up: How Guys and Dolls found its swing".The Guardian.
  65. ^Gardner, Lyn (2017-12-07)."Guys and Dolls review – swaggering Harlem grit rocks the Broadway boat".The Guardian.
  66. ^Treneman, Ann (2017-12-08)."Theatre review: Guys and Dolls at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester".The Times.
  67. ^Brennan, Clare (2017-12-10)."Guys and Dolls review – larger than life, but with a core of grit".The Observer.
  68. ^"'Guys & Dolls' to open at the Bridge Theatre".London Theatre. 10 June 2022. Retrieved2022-06-22.
  69. ^Thomas, Sophie (2022-11-28)."Marisha Wallace to lead 'Guys and Dolls' cast at the Bridge Theatre".London Theatre. Retrieved2022-11-29.
  70. ^"Owain Arthur to join Guys and Dolls at the Bridge Theatre".What's On Stage. 2023-07-04. Retrieved2023-07-06.
  71. ^Rabinowitz, Chloe."GUYS & DOLLS 2023 London Cast Recording to be Released This Month".Broadway World. Retrieved2023-09-20.
  72. ^"Guys and Dolls revival announces new casting". 2024-01-15. Retrieved2024-04-16.
  73. ^Galaszia, Charlotte (2024-06-18)."News: Gina Beck And Michael Simkins Join The Cast Of Guys & Dolls".The Theatre Cafe. Retrieved2024-06-21.
  74. ^"Guys and Dolls announces final extension and closing date". 2024-04-15. Retrieved2024-05-05.
  75. ^"Guys & Dolls".TAKAWIKI. RetrievedMay 25, 2024.
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  77. ^"ガイズ&ドールズ".Takarazuka Revue Official Website. Hankyu Corporation. RetrievedMay 25, 2024.
  78. ^"Guys & Dolls".TheatreGold.
  79. ^G&D Cast Seattle
  80. ^Butler, Michelle."Guys and Dolls: A Musical Fable of Broadway".Talkin' Broadway.
  81. ^Boehm, Mike (April 14, 2002)."A 'Guys and Dolls' Just Like Harlem".The Los Angeles Times.
  82. ^Jones, Kenneth, andSimonson, Robert (May 9, 2000)."Indian Ink, Cabaret Lead 2000 Helen Hayes Award Winners".Playbill.
  83. ^Simonson, Robert, and Ehren, Christine (January 23, 2001)."Arena Stage Guys and Dolls to Tour U.S. Starting Fall 2001; Goal Is Bway".Playbill.
  84. ^Simonson, Robert (May 10, 2001).“National Tour of Hines Guys and Dolls to Begin Aug. 28".Playbill.
  85. ^Jones, Kenneth, and Simonson, Robert (November 6, 2001)."Still Rockin' the Boat: Touring Guys and Dolls Gets Cast Album Nov. 6".Playbill.
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  89. ^Guys and Dolls in Concert
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  108. ^Nachman, Gerald (2016-11-01).Showstoppers!: The Surprising Backstage Stories of Broadway's Most Remarkable Songs. Chicago Review Press.ISBN 9781613731055.
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  113. ^Kroll, Justin (July 7, 2021)."'Guys And Dolls' Adaptation At TriStar Taps Bill Condon To Direct".Deadline Hollywood. RetrievedJuly 8, 2021.
  114. ^Franklin, Garth (September 6, 2024)."Rob Marshall To Direct "Guys and Dolls"".Dark Horizons. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2024.
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  124. ^Guys & Dolls: 1950 Original Broadway Cast Recording 2000 CD
  125. ^Guys and Dolls: 1955 Movie Soundtrack 2007 Blue Moon Imports CD
  126. ^Guys & Dolls: 1955 Movie Soundtrack 101 Distribution 2009 CD
  127. ^Guys and Dolls: 1976 Studio Recording (1976 date is incorrect) 1992 CD
  128. ^Guys and Dolls: 1976 Broadway Revival Cast Recording 1991 CD
  129. ^Guys and Dolls: Original 1982 London National Theatre Cast EMI 2007 CD
  130. ^Guys and Dolls: Original 1982 London National Theatre Cast Music for Pleasure 1992 CD
  131. ^Guys and Dolls: 1992 Broadway Revival Cast 2009 CD
  132. ^Guys and Dolls: 1995 Complete Studio Cast Recording 1996 2-CD set
  133. ^"Guys and Dolls revival planning new cast album". 2023-06-05. Retrieved2023-09-16.

References

[edit]

External links

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