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My Favorite Year (musical)

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Lyrics
  
Lynn Ahrens

Productions
  
1992 Broadway

Playwright
  
Joseph Dougherty

Composer
  
Stephen Flaherty

Book
  
Joseph Dougherty

First performance
  
10 December 1992

Lyricist
  
Lynn Ahrens

My Favorite Year (musical) Photo Gallery Marquis Players Present My Favorite Year News

Basis
  
1982 film My Favorite Year

Characters
  
Benjy Stone, King Kaiser, Alan Swann, K.C. Downing

Similar
  
Stephen Flaherty plays, Musicals

Cambrian players my favorite year


My Favorite Year is a musical with a book by Joseph Dougherty, music by Stephen Flaherty, and lyrics by Lynn Ahrens. It is based on the film of the same name.

Contents

My Favorite Year (musical) Duquesne University39s My Favorite Year YouTube

funny the duck joke from my favorite year


Production history

The musical opened on Broadway at Lincoln Center's Vivian Beaumont Theater on December 10, 1992 and closed on January 10, 1993 after 36 performances and 45 previews. The cast included Evan Pappas, Tim Curry, Tom Mardirosian, Katie Finneran, Andrea Martin (in her Broadway debut), Josh Mostel, and Lainie Kazan, who reprised the role of Benjy's mother she had played in the film. The show was directed by Ron Lagomarsino and choreographed by Thommie Walsh, with scenic design by Thomas Lynch, costume design by Patricia Zipprodt, and lighting design by Jules Fisher, with associate lighting designer Peggy Eisenhauer.

The creative team constantly reworked the troubled production during previews.

My Favorite Year (musical) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbb

My Favorite Year received mixed-to-negative reviews. The New York Times's Frank Rich called the musical "a missed opportunity, a bustling but too frequently flat musical that suffers from another vogue of the 1950s, an identity crisis," and disapproved of the melodramatic turn taken in the show's second act, while Time magazine wrote that is a "barren Broadway musical."

An original cast recording was released on the RCA Victor label.

My Favorite Year (musical) Twenty Million People My Favorite Year YouTube

In March 2007, The Chicago Sun-Times revealed that Flaherty and Ahrens were "reworking the show with an eye on a new Broadway production." Flaherty said that, "In hindsight, I think our decision to paint the musical in somewhat darker colors was a mistake." Among the revisions made to the show are two new songs, which were incorporated into a March 2007 repertory production of the show at the Bailiwick Repertory Theatre, Chicago.

Musicals Tonight! in New York City presented a staged concert in April 2003.

My Favorite Year (musical) My Favorite Year Second Neglected Musical for 2011 Stage Whispers

The York Theatre Company Musicals in Mufti in New York City presented a staged concert in December 2014. Lynn Ahrens reminisced about the first time Andrea Martin sang "Professional Showbizness Comedy" -- "It Bombed". However, "By the time we got done with our rewrites...she stopped the show."

Cast

Source: Internet Broadway Database

My Favorite Year (musical) My Favorite Year from the musical My Favorite Year YouTube

  • Evan Pappas as Benjy Stone
  • Tim Curry as Alan Swann
  • Tom Mardirosian as King Kaiser
  • Andrea Martin as Alice Miller
  • Lannyl Stephens as K.C. Downing
  • Lainie Kazan as Belle May Steinberg Carroca
  • Josh Mostel as Sy Benson
  • Ethan Phillips as Herb Lee
  • Paul Stolarsky as Leo Silver
  • Thomas Ikeda as Rookie Carroca
  • David Lipman as Uncle Morty
  • Mary Stout as Aunt Sadie
  • Katie Finneran as Tess
  • Plot

    In the 1950s Benjy Stone (a Mel Brooks-type), is a sketch writer for a live television variety show starring King Kaiser (a Sid Caesar-type). Signed for a guest appearance is Alan Swann (an Errol Flynn-type), a one-time movie idol whose career was disrupted by his addiction to alcohol and loose women. The task of keeping him sober and celibate until airtime falls to Benjy, who soon finds himself involved in a sequence of shenanigans unlike any he ever experienced before.

    Various characters, including Benjy's pushy mother Belle Steinberg Carroca and Alan Swann's estranged daughter Tess, complicate Benjy's task. The other writers, Sy, Alice and Herb, add to the chaos.

    Differences from the Original Movie

  • In the movie, there is a subplot surrounding King Kaiser angering a corrupt union boss. Neither this man, nor the sketch that angered him, is included in the plot of the musical.
  • In the movie, Swann agrees to finally meet his daughter, Tess, in person during the epilogue. In the musical, they meet in a scene where she is leaving a clam bake, which Swann was invited to by her. They also reunite in the final song.
  • In the movie, Swann revealed he'd been keeping tabs on his daughter for a while without ever meeting her face to face. In the musical, Swann revealed he hadn't seen Tess in three years.
  • In the movie, the Musketeer sketch is very minor to the plotline. In the musical, it is central to the plotline, being that it is the sketch Benjy wrote for Swann. Four of the show's songs are dedicated to it.
  • In the movie, it is revealed King's real first name is Stan. In the musical, King is Kaiser's real first name.
  • In the movie, Swann enters the women's bathroom. In the musical, the only man to enter the women's bathroom is Benjy.
  • Songs

    The album, My Favorite Year Original Cast Recording was released in 1993 with Andrea Martin, Lainie Kazan and Tim Curry on RCA Victor.

    Awards and nominations

  • Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical (Tim Curry, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Andrea Martin, winner and Lainie Kazan, nominee)
  • Theatre World Award (Andrea Martin, winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical (Josh Mostel, nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical (Andrea Martin, winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Orchestrations (nominee)
  • Songs

    1Overture / Twenty Million People
    2Larger Than Life
    3The Musketeer Sketch

    References

    My Favorite Year (musical) Wikipedia