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Dames at Sea

Dames at Sea is a 1966 musical with book and lyrics by George Haimsohn and Robin Miller and music by Jim Wise.

Dames at Sea
Original cast recording
MusicJim Wise
LyricsGeorge Haimsohn
Robin Miller
BookGeorge Haimsohn
Robin Miller
Productions1966 Off-Off-Broadway
1968 Off-Broadway
1969 West End
1973 Lake Forest, Illinois
1985 Off-Broadway revival
1989 West End revival
2004 Off-Broadway revival
2015 Broadway
Awards1968 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics

The musical is a parody of large, flashy 1930s Busby Berkeley-style movie musicals in which a chorus girl, newly arrived off the bus from the Midwest to New York City, steps into a role on Broadway and becomes a star. It originally played Off-Off-Broadway in 1966 at the Caffe Cino and then played Off-Broadway, starring newcomer Bernadette Peters, beginning in 1968 for a successful run. The show has enjoyed a London run, a television adaptation and a number of revivals, before its Broadway premiere in October 2015.

Production history edit

The musical was originally a short sketch,[1] based loosely on the Gold Diggers movies, written by George Haimsohn, Jim Wise, and Robin Miller. The character of "Ruby" was suggested by the Ruby Keeler-type from those early movies. It was lengthened to a 50-minute production,[1] and director Robert Dahdah prepared it for its first staging. After the original actress who was to play "Ruby" withdrew during rehearsals, choreographer Don Price recommended newcomer Bernadette Peters for the role. The show opened in May 1966 as Dames at Sea, or Golddiggers Afloat at the Caffe Cino, a small coffee house/performance space in New York City's Greenwich Village, where it continued for 148 performances. The original Caffe Cino cast featured Peters as Ruby, Joe McGuire as Frank, David Christmas as Dick, Jill Roberts as Joan, Norma Bigtree as Mona and Gary Filsinger as the Director and Captain. Peters was replaced by her sister, Donna Forbes (now DeSeta) during the run.[2]

Retitled simply Dames at Sea, the musical re-opened at the Bouwerie Lane Theatre on December 20, 1968,[3] and transferred to the larger Theater de Lys on April 22, 1969, and closed on May 10, 1970, after a total of 575 performances.[4] Directed and choreographed by Neal Kenyon, the show again featured Peters in the role of Ruby and David Christmas as Dick. The cast also featured Steve Elmore as the Captain, Tamara Long as Mona Kent, Joseph R. Sicari as Lucky, and Sally Stark as Joan.[4] After Peters left the show, the role of "Ruby" was played by Loni Ackerman, Bonnie Franklin, Janie Sell, Barbara Sharma, and Pia Zadora.[4][5]

On August 27, 1969, the show opened at London's Duchess Theatre,[6] where it ran for 127 performances. The West End production was filmed for the television program Theatre Date, and was broadcast on BBC1 on November 4, 1969.[7]

Peters appeared in a regional production at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey in early 1973.[8] In July 1973, Peters appeared again as Ruby at the Academy Playhouse, Lake Forest, Illinois.[9] Subsequent revivals have been staged at the Lamb's Theatre in Manhattan (1985) (with Stephen Flaherty playing the piano),[10] the Haymarket Theatre, Leicester, London (1989),[11] and at the theater where the musical first played off-Broadway, the Bouwerie Lane Theatre, produced by Jean Cocteau Repertory and directed by David Fuller, from September 3, 2004, to November 28, 2004.[12]

The show began previews on Broadway on September 24, 2015, and officially opened on October 22 at the Helen Hayes Theatre, with direction and choreography by Randy Skinner.[13][14][15] A workshop for this production was held in January 2014 with Laura Osnes, Rachel York, Mara Davi, John Bolton, Cary Tedder, and Danny Gardner.[16] The Broadway cast featured John Bolton as The Captain/Hennesey, Mara Davi as Joan, Danny Gardner as Lucky, Eloise Kropp as Ruby, Lesli Margherita as Mona Kent and Cary Tedder as Dick.[17] The show is described as "a tap-happy gem of a show that celebrates the golden era of movie musicals".[15] Among the producers are Infinity Theatre Company and Perry Street Theatricals. The show was produced in 2012 by Infinity Theatre Company, Annapolis, Maryland with direction and choreography by Randy Skinner.[18] This production closed on January 3, 2016, after 85 performances and 32 previews.[19][20][21]

The musical is popular for schools and has been produced in many countries.[5][22]

Plot edit

In the early 1930s, a Broadway musical is in rehearsal. Mona Kent is its temperamental diva star, Joan a wise-cracking chorus girl, and Hennesy the producer/manager/director. The naive Ruby arrives from Utah, with "nothing but tap shoes in her suitcase and a prayer in her heart",[23] determined to be a Broadway star. She promptly faints into the arms of Dick, a sailor and aspiring songwriter ("It's You"). Ruby gets a job in the chorus, but Hennesy informs the cast that the theater must be torn down, and they must find another place, which turns out to be a ship, for the show. Joan and Lucky, another sailor and her former boyfriend, renew their romance ("Choo-Choo Honeymoon") while Ruby admits her feelings for Dick ("The Sailor of My Dreams"). Dick and Lucky persuade their Captain to volunteer the use of their ship ("Dames at Sea"). Mona recognizes the Captain as a former boyfriend ("The Beguine"). When Mona kisses Dick, to persuade him to give her one of his songs, Ruby notices and becomes despondent ("Raining In My Heart"). Dick explains the misunderstanding and the couple make up ("There's Something About You"). While rehearsing on the actual ship, Mona becomes seasick ("The Echo Waltz"); Ruby steps in to save the show and becomes a star ("Star Tar"). The three couples decide to marry ("Let's Have A Simple Wedding").

Other elements edit

John Wilson in The New York Times pointed out that the music is a mixture of parody, such as the torch song "That Mister Man", pastiche ("Raining in My Heart"), and the real thing. Wilson wrote that "The pastiche songs, built around phrases borrowed from or close to actual songs of the genre, usually project an appealing period flavor."[24] The joke was that, while spoofing the large, lavish movie musicals, Dames at Sea did it with a cast of six, two pianos and percussion, and a tiny stage.[25]

In the 2015 Broadway production, director Randy Skinner noted that this was "the first time in New York that 'Dames at Sea' will be heard with an orchestra, and the show will have more dancing than ever before with all new dance and vocal arrangements by Rob Berman".[13] This production opened with movie credits projected onto a screen, reproducing exactly the font used by Warner Bros. in the early 1930s. Skinner received a 2016 Tony Award nomination for his choreography.

Musical numbers edit

[12][26]

Major Casts edit

Character Original Off-Off-Broadway (1966) Original Off-Broadway (1968) TV movie (1971) Workshop (2014) Original Broadway (2015)
Ruby Bernadette Peters Ann-Margret Laura Osnes Eloise Kropp
Dick David Christmas Harvey Evans Cary Tedder
Joan Jill Roberts Sally Stark Anne Meara Mara Davi
Lucky Joe McGuire* Joseph R. Sicari Dick Shawn Danny Gardner
Mona Norma Bigtree Tamara Long Ann Miller Rachel York Lesli Margherita
Hennessy/The Captain Gary Filsinger Steve Elmore Fred Gwynne John Bolton

*In this production, Lucky was called "Frank".

Critical response edit

In his review in The New York Times of the 1968 production, Clive Barnes wrote "'Dames At Sea' is a real winner, a little gem of a musical. The show is wonderfully helped by its cast. The star I suppose is Bernadette Peters as the wholly sweetly silly small-town chorine who taps her way from the bus station to stardom in 24 hours."[27] Walter Kerr, in his Sunday Times feature article, added "You'll find the show cheerful and ingratiating, I think ... Miss Peters is a real find ... She is extremely funny, and endearing on top of that."[23] The Time magazine review noted that the show had "three thoroughly engaging stars and some of the most ingenious staging currently on or off Broadway. Tamara Long, as the slinky heavy, brandishes a flaming Morganitic torch for her Mister Man, and Sally Stark, as Ruby's peroxided pal, belts a note almost as plangent as the great Merman's. The comic delight of the show, though, is Bernadette Peters, whose Ruby can simultaneously sing and dance up a storm that puts all New York (including Queen Mane of Rumania) at her feet."[28]

The review of the production at the Off-Broadway Bouwerie Lane Theatre (2004) in the Gay City News:

Director David Fuller has filled his production with such subtle touches, which make the show seem intriguingly contemporary, and far from the saccharine and serious treatments this chestnut usually receives, he's restored the true Off-Broadway spirit that used the establishment's own forms to tweak its foibles. First staged during the Vietnam War era, the musical seems more relevant than ever as it takes precise aim at the sunny outlook that comes from near-psychotic denial of reality.

The review praises the cast: "The cast does a great job ... Individually, Kathleen White as Ruby is deliciously comic, with expressions and physical comedies that recall Lucille Ball ... Chrysten Peddie as Joan has the tough dame attitude down cold. She's got a warm presence, is a great dancer and has a strong voice."[29]

The USA Today reviewer of the 2015 production wrote: "So why bring this trifle to Broadway, for the first time, 49 years after its downtown premiere? Never mind; just check your cares and pretensions at the door of the Helen Hayes Theatre, ... and prepare to be thoroughly charmed. Through it all, happily, Skinner keeps everyone dancing, providing exuberant tap routines that his cast executes with joyful facility."[30]

Steven Suskin, in reviewing for the Huffington Post wrote: "The surprise, today, is that the show remains viable; this first Broadway production is impeccably staged and loaded with entertainment, and should delight its target audience ... The songs ... hit all the bases, reminding us of all those wonderful Harry Warren songs; but they are mostly lightweight pastiches, never quite as memorable as the real thing. The show--which was heretofore performed with two pianos and a drummer--is now fully orchestrated."[31]

Television edit

An adaptation for television starred Ann-Margret as Ruby, Ann Miller as Mona, Anne Meara as Joan, Harvey Evans as Dick, Fred Gwynne as Hennesy and Dick Shawn as the Captain.[32][33] It was broadcast on the Bell System Family Theater on NBC on November 15, 1971. The cast had extra chorus girls and boys, and there were full production numbers, turning into the very thing it was spoofing. Ann Miller was singled out for praise, especially when "she was allowed to tap out her brassy impersonation of the temperamental star".[34]

Recording edit

The original off-Broadway Cast Recording was released in 1969 by Columbia Masterworks Records (Columbia OS 3330)[35] and issued on CD by Sony.[36] The Original London Cast Recording is also available on CD.

Awards and nominations edit

Original Off-Broadway production edit

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result
1968 Drama Desk Award[37] Outstanding Performance Bernadette Peters Won
Outstanding Director of a Musical Neal Kenyon Won
Outstanding Lyrics George Haimsohn and Robin Miller Won
Outer Critics Circle Award[38] Best Off-Broadway Musical Won

Broadway edit

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result
2016 Tony Award Best Choreography Randy Skinner Nominated
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Choreography Nominated
Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Nominated
Outstanding Choreography Randy Skinner Nominated
Fred and Adele Astaire Awards Outstanding Female Dancer in a Broadway Show Eloise Kropp Nominated
Mara Davi Nominated
Outstanding Choreographer in a Broadway Show Randy Skinner Nominated
Outstanding Ensemble in a Broadway Show John Bolton, Mara Davi, Danny Gardner, Eloise Kropp, Lesli Margherita, Cary Tedder Nominated

References edit

  1. ^ a b Klein, Alvin (May 26, 2002). "Theater; Not So Good: Goodspeed Revives A Revival". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Stone, Wendell C. (2005). Caffe Cino: The Birthplace of Off-Off Broadway. Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press, pages 62, 121-24. ISBN 0-8093-2644-2
  3. ^ " 'Dames at Sea', Bouwerie Lane Theatre" 2012-10-20 at the Wayback Machine Internet Off-Broadway Database, accessed August 20, 2013
  4. ^ a b c " 'Dames At Sea' Listing" 2006-10-01 at the Wayback Machine Internet Off-Broadway Database, accessed August 20, 2013
  5. ^ a b Jones, Kenneth. "George Haimsohn, Co-Writer of 'Dames at Sea', Dead at 77" Playbill, January 25, 2003
  6. ^ The New York Times, "Dames At Sea" Gets Split London Vote", August 29, 1969, p.24
  7. ^ Television: BBC-1. November 4, 1969. p. 2. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  8. ^ "About Paper Mill: History" 2007-06-26 at the Wayback Machine, papermill.org, accessed February 8, 2010
  9. ^ "Dr. Morris Binder Playbill Collection, Box 2, Volume 11" Chicago Public Library, retrieved February 14, 2018
  10. ^ Gussow, Mel. The New York Times, June 13, 1985, Section C, p.33
  11. ^ Young, B. A. Financial Times (London), "Crazy About the Navy", July 22, 1989, Sec. I, p.17
  12. ^ a b Sommers, Elyse."Review. 'Dames at Sea' " curtainup.com, September 2004
  13. ^ a b Staff. "The Verdict: Read Reviews of 'Dames at Sea' Starring Lesli Margherita, Eloise Kropp and Mara Davi" Playbill, October 22, 2015
  14. ^ Chow, Andrew. Dames At Sea The New York Times, June 2, 2015
  15. ^ a b Gans, Andrew. "'Dames at Sea' Taps Its Way Onto Broadway Tonight" Playbill, September 24, 2015
  16. ^ Blank, Matthew and Sims, Joey. "Schedule of Upcoming Broadway Shows" Playbill, June 5, 2014
  17. ^ Gans, Andrew. "Stars Revealed for Broadway Debut of 'Dames at Sea'" Playbill, July 21, 2015
  18. ^ "Flashback: Randy Skinner's 2012 'Dames At Sea' at Infinity Theatre Company" broadwayworld.com, August 20, 2013
  19. ^ Gans, Andrew. "Broadway's 'Dames at Sea' Sails Away Today" playbill.com, January 3, 2016
  20. ^ "'Dames at Sea' Broadway" playbillvault.com, accessed January 4, 2016
  21. ^ Cox, Gordon. "Broadway's 'Dames at Sea' to Close in January" Variety, November 23, 2015
  22. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang. "George Haimsohn, 77, Dies; a Writer of 'Dames at Sea'" The New York Times, January 25, 2003
  23. ^ a b Kerr, Walter. The New York Times, January 5, 1969, p. D1
  24. ^ Wilson, John. The New York Times, "Happily Afloat with 'Dames at Sea' ", July 6, 1969, p. D24
  25. ^ Mordden, Ethan. Open a New Window: The Broadway Musical in the 1960s (2002), p. 184, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 1-4039-6013-5
  26. ^ Original 1968 cast recording amazon.com
  27. ^ Barnes, Clive. The New York Times, December 22, 1968, p. 54
  28. ^ Time, January 3, 1969
  29. ^ Gay City News, Vol. 3, Issue 339, September 23–39, 2004
  30. ^ Gardner, Elysa. "Broadway's new 'Dames At Sea' is a dance-driven delight" USA Today, October 22, 2015
  31. ^ Suskin, Steven. "Aisle View: 'Dames' on Broadway" Huffington Post, October 22, 2015
  32. ^ Dames at Sea (1971) (TV) imdb.com, accessed July 21, 2009
  33. ^ According to Ethan Mordden in Open A New Window (2002), p. 184, Shawn played the Captain
  34. ^ O'Connor, John J. "TV: Some Network Specials Do Not Always Turn Out to Be So" The New York Times, November 17, 1971, p. 94
  35. ^ The New York Times, John Wilson, "Happily Afloat with 'Dames at Sea' ", July 6, 1969, pg. D4
  36. ^ "Dames at Sea" on amazon.com
  37. ^ Drama Desk Awards2006 - Winners 2001 Archived 2007-09-27 at archive.today dramadesk.com
  38. ^ "Awards 1968–1968" 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine Outer Critics Circle, accessed August 20, 2013

External links edit

dames, 1966, musical, with, book, lyrics, george, haimsohn, robin, miller, music, wise, original, cast, recordingmusicjim, wiselyricsgeorge, haimsohnrobin, millerbookgeorge, haimsohnrobin, millerproductions1966, broadway1968, broadway1969, west, end1973, lake,. Dames at Sea is a 1966 musical with book and lyrics by George Haimsohn and Robin Miller and music by Jim Wise Dames at SeaOriginal cast recordingMusicJim WiseLyricsGeorge HaimsohnRobin MillerBookGeorge HaimsohnRobin MillerProductions1966 Off Off Broadway1968 Off Broadway1969 West End1973 Lake Forest Illinois1985 Off Broadway revival1989 West End revival2004 Off Broadway revival2015 BroadwayAwards1968 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics The musical is a parody of large flashy 1930s Busby Berkeley style movie musicals in which a chorus girl newly arrived off the bus from the Midwest to New York City steps into a role on Broadway and becomes a star It originally played Off Off Broadway in 1966 at the Caffe Cino and then played Off Broadway starring newcomer Bernadette Peters beginning in 1968 for a successful run The show has enjoyed a London run a television adaptation and a number of revivals before its Broadway premiere in October 2015 Contents 1 Production history 2 Plot 2 1 Other elements 3 Musical numbers 4 Major Casts 5 Critical response 6 Television 7 Recording 8 Awards and nominations 8 1 Original Off Broadway production 8 2 Broadway 9 References 10 External linksProduction history editThe musical was originally a short sketch 1 based loosely on the Gold Diggers movies written by George Haimsohn Jim Wise and Robin Miller The character of Ruby was suggested by the Ruby Keeler type from those early movies It was lengthened to a 50 minute production 1 and director Robert Dahdah prepared it for its first staging After the original actress who was to play Ruby withdrew during rehearsals choreographer Don Price recommended newcomer Bernadette Peters for the role The show opened in May 1966 as Dames at Sea or Golddiggers Afloat at the Caffe Cino a small coffee house performance space in New York City s Greenwich Village where it continued for 148 performances The original Caffe Cino cast featured Peters as Ruby Joe McGuire as Frank David Christmas as Dick Jill Roberts as Joan Norma Bigtree as Mona and Gary Filsinger as the Director and Captain Peters was replaced by her sister Donna Forbes now DeSeta during the run 2 Retitled simply Dames at Sea the musical re opened at the Bouwerie Lane Theatre on December 20 1968 3 and transferred to the larger Theater de Lys on April 22 1969 and closed on May 10 1970 after a total of 575 performances 4 Directed and choreographed by Neal Kenyon the show again featured Peters in the role of Ruby and David Christmas as Dick The cast also featured Steve Elmore as the Captain Tamara Long as Mona Kent Joseph R Sicari as Lucky and Sally Stark as Joan 4 After Peters left the show the role of Ruby was played by Loni Ackerman Bonnie Franklin Janie Sell Barbara Sharma and Pia Zadora 4 5 On August 27 1969 the show opened at London s Duchess Theatre 6 where it ran for 127 performances The West End production was filmed for the television program Theatre Date and was broadcast on BBC1 on November 4 1969 7 Peters appeared in a regional production at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn New Jersey in early 1973 8 In July 1973 Peters appeared again as Ruby at the Academy Playhouse Lake Forest Illinois 9 Subsequent revivals have been staged at the Lamb s Theatre in Manhattan 1985 with Stephen Flaherty playing the piano 10 the Haymarket Theatre Leicester London 1989 11 and at the theater where the musical first played off Broadway the Bouwerie Lane Theatre produced by Jean Cocteau Repertory and directed by David Fuller from September 3 2004 to November 28 2004 12 The show began previews on Broadway on September 24 2015 and officially opened on October 22 at the Helen Hayes Theatre with direction and choreography by Randy Skinner 13 14 15 A workshop for this production was held in January 2014 with Laura Osnes Rachel York Mara Davi John Bolton Cary Tedder and Danny Gardner 16 The Broadway cast featured John Bolton as The Captain Hennesey Mara Davi as Joan Danny Gardner as Lucky Eloise Kropp as Ruby Lesli Margherita as Mona Kent and Cary Tedder as Dick 17 The show is described as a tap happy gem of a show that celebrates the golden era of movie musicals 15 Among the producers are Infinity Theatre Company and Perry Street Theatricals The show was produced in 2012 by Infinity Theatre Company Annapolis Maryland with direction and choreography by Randy Skinner 18 This production closed on January 3 2016 after 85 performances and 32 previews 19 20 21 The musical is popular for schools and has been produced in many countries 5 22 Plot editIn the early 1930s a Broadway musical is in rehearsal Mona Kent is its temperamental diva star Joan a wise cracking chorus girl and Hennesy the producer manager director The naive Ruby arrives from Utah with nothing but tap shoes in her suitcase and a prayer in her heart 23 determined to be a Broadway star She promptly faints into the arms of Dick a sailor and aspiring songwriter It s You Ruby gets a job in the chorus but Hennesy informs the cast that the theater must be torn down and they must find another place which turns out to be a ship for the show Joan and Lucky another sailor and her former boyfriend renew their romance Choo Choo Honeymoon while Ruby admits her feelings for Dick The Sailor of My Dreams Dick and Lucky persuade their Captain to volunteer the use of their ship Dames at Sea Mona recognizes the Captain as a former boyfriend The Beguine When Mona kisses Dick to persuade him to give her one of his songs Ruby notices and becomes despondent Raining In My Heart Dick explains the misunderstanding and the couple make up There s Something About You While rehearsing on the actual ship Mona becomes seasick The Echo Waltz Ruby steps in to save the show and becomes a star Star Tar The three couples decide to marry Let s Have A Simple Wedding Other elements edit John Wilson in The New York Times pointed out that the music is a mixture of parody such as the torch song That Mister Man pastiche Raining in My Heart and the real thing Wilson wrote that The pastiche songs built around phrases borrowed from or close to actual songs of the genre usually project an appealing period flavor 24 The joke was that while spoofing the large lavish movie musicals Dames at Sea did it with a cast of six two pianos and percussion and a tiny stage 25 In the 2015 Broadway production director Randy Skinner noted that this was the first time in New York that Dames at Sea will be heard with an orchestra and the show will have more dancing than ever before with all new dance and vocal arrangements by Rob Berman 13 This production opened with movie credits projected onto a screen reproducing exactly the font used by Warner Bros in the early 1930s Skinner received a 2016 Tony Award nomination for his choreography Musical numbers edit 12 26 Act I Overture Wall Street Mona It s You Dick and Ruby Broadway Baby Dick That Mister Man Of Mine Mona and Company Choo Choo Honeymoon Joan and Lucky The Sailor of My Dreams Ruby Singapore Sue Lucky and Company Broadway Baby reprise Hennesey Good Times Are Here To Stay Mona Joan and Company Act II Dames At Sea Company The Beguine Mona and Captain Raining In My Heart Ruby and Company There s Something About You Dick and Ruby Raining In My Heart reprise Ruby The Echo Waltz Mona Joan Ruby and Company Star Tar Ruby and Company Let s Have A Simple Wedding CompanyMajor Casts editCharacter Original Off Off Broadway 1966 Original Off Broadway 1968 TV movie 1971 Workshop 2014 Original Broadway 2015 Ruby Bernadette Peters Ann Margret Laura Osnes Eloise Kropp Dick David Christmas Harvey Evans Cary Tedder Joan Jill Roberts Sally Stark Anne Meara Mara Davi Lucky Joe McGuire Joseph R Sicari Dick Shawn Danny Gardner Mona Norma Bigtree Tamara Long Ann Miller Rachel York Lesli Margherita Hennessy The Captain Gary Filsinger Steve Elmore Fred Gwynne John Bolton In this production Lucky was called Frank Critical response editIn his review in The New York Times of the 1968 production Clive Barnes wrote Dames At Sea is a real winner a little gem of a musical The show is wonderfully helped by its cast The star I suppose is Bernadette Peters as the wholly sweetly silly small town chorine who taps her way from the bus station to stardom in 24 hours 27 Walter Kerr in his Sunday Times feature article added You ll find the show cheerful and ingratiating I think Miss Peters is a real find She is extremely funny and endearing on top of that 23 The Time magazine review noted that the show had three thoroughly engaging stars and some of the most ingenious staging currently on or off Broadway Tamara Long as the slinky heavy brandishes a flaming Morganitic torch for her Mister Man and Sally Stark as Ruby s peroxided pal belts a note almost as plangent as the great Merman s The comic delight of the show though is Bernadette Peters whose Ruby can simultaneously sing and dance up a storm that puts all New York including Queen Mane of Rumania at her feet 28 The review of the production at the Off Broadway Bouwerie Lane Theatre 2004 in the Gay City News Director David Fuller has filled his production with such subtle touches which make the show seem intriguingly contemporary and far from the saccharine and serious treatments this chestnut usually receives he s restored the true Off Broadway spirit that used the establishment s own forms to tweak its foibles First staged during the Vietnam War era the musical seems more relevant than ever as it takes precise aim at the sunny outlook that comes from near psychotic denial of reality The review praises the cast The cast does a great job Individually Kathleen White as Ruby is deliciously comic with expressions and physical comedies that recall Lucille Ball Chrysten Peddie as Joan has the tough dame attitude down cold She s got a warm presence is a great dancer and has a strong voice 29 The USA Today reviewer of the 2015 production wrote So why bring this trifle to Broadway for the first time 49 years after its downtown premiere Never mind just check your cares and pretensions at the door of the Helen Hayes Theatre and prepare to be thoroughly charmed Through it all happily Skinner keeps everyone dancing providing exuberant tap routines that his cast executes with joyful facility 30 Steven Suskin in reviewing for the Huffington Post wrote The surprise today is that the show remains viable this first Broadway production is impeccably staged and loaded with entertainment and should delight its target audience The songs hit all the bases reminding us of all those wonderful Harry Warren songs but they are mostly lightweight pastiches never quite as memorable as the real thing The show which was heretofore performed with two pianos and a drummer is now fully orchestrated 31 Television editAn adaptation for television starred Ann Margret as Ruby Ann Miller as Mona Anne Meara as Joan Harvey Evans as Dick Fred Gwynne as Hennesy and Dick Shawn as the Captain 32 33 It was broadcast on the Bell System Family Theater on NBC on November 15 1971 The cast had extra chorus girls and boys and there were full production numbers turning into the very thing it was spoofing Ann Miller was singled out for praise especially when she was allowed to tap out her brassy impersonation of the temperamental star 34 Recording editThe original off Broadway Cast Recording was released in 1969 by Columbia Masterworks Records Columbia OS 3330 35 and issued on CD by Sony 36 The Original London Cast Recording is also available on CD Awards and nominations editOriginal Off Broadway production edit Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result 1968 Drama Desk Award 37 Outstanding Performance Bernadette Peters Won Outstanding Director of a Musical Neal Kenyon Won Outstanding Lyrics George Haimsohn and Robin Miller Won Outer Critics Circle Award 38 Best Off Broadway Musical Won Broadway edit Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result 2016 Tony Award Best Choreography Randy Skinner Nominated Drama Desk Award Outstanding Choreography Nominated Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Nominated Outstanding Choreography Randy Skinner Nominated Fred and Adele Astaire Awards Outstanding Female Dancer in a Broadway Show Eloise Kropp Nominated Mara Davi Nominated Outstanding Choreographer in a Broadway Show Randy Skinner Nominated Outstanding Ensemble in a Broadway Show John Bolton Mara Davi Danny Gardner Eloise Kropp Lesli Margherita Cary Tedder NominatedReferences edit a b Klein Alvin May 26 2002 Theater Not So Good Goodspeed Revives A Revival The New York Times Stone Wendell C 2005 Caffe Cino The Birthplace of Off Off Broadway Carbondale Illinois Southern Illinois University Press pages 62 121 24 ISBN 0 8093 2644 2 Dames at Sea Bouwerie Lane Theatre Archived 2012 10 20 at the Wayback Machine Internet Off Broadway Database accessed August 20 2013 a b c Dames At Sea Listing Archived 2006 10 01 at the Wayback Machine Internet Off Broadway Database accessed August 20 2013 a b Jones Kenneth George Haimsohn Co Writer of Dames at Sea Dead at 77 Playbill January 25 2003 The New York Times Dames At Sea Gets Split London Vote August 29 1969 p 24 Television BBC 1 November 4 1969 p 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help About Paper Mill History Archived 2007 06 26 at the Wayback Machine papermill org accessed February 8 2010 Dr Morris Binder Playbill Collection Box 2 Volume 11 Chicago Public Library retrieved February 14 2018 Gussow Mel The New York Times June 13 1985 Section C p 33 Young B A Financial Times London Crazy About the Navy July 22 1989 Sec I p 17 a b Sommers Elyse Review Dames at Sea curtainup com September 2004 a b Staff The Verdict Read Reviews of Dames at Sea Starring Lesli Margherita Eloise Kropp and Mara Davi Playbill October 22 2015 Chow Andrew Dames At Sea The New York Times June 2 2015 a b Gans Andrew Dames at Sea Taps Its Way Onto Broadway Tonight Playbill September 24 2015 Blank Matthew and Sims Joey Schedule of Upcoming Broadway Shows Playbill June 5 2014 Gans Andrew Stars Revealed for Broadway Debut of Dames at Sea Playbill July 21 2015 Flashback Randy Skinner s 2012 Dames At Sea at Infinity Theatre Company broadwayworld com August 20 2013 Gans Andrew Broadway s Dames at Sea Sails Away Today playbill com January 3 2016 Dames at Sea Broadway playbillvault com accessed January 4 2016 Cox Gordon Broadway s Dames at Sea to Close in January Variety November 23 2015 Saxon Wolfgang George Haimsohn 77 Dies a Writer of Dames at Sea The New York Times January 25 2003 a b Kerr Walter The New York Times January 5 1969 p D1 Wilson John The New York Times Happily Afloat with Dames at Sea July 6 1969 p D24 Mordden Ethan Open a New Window The Broadway Musical in the 1960s 2002 p 184 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 1 4039 6013 5 Original 1968 cast recording amazon com Barnes Clive The New York Times December 22 1968 p 54 Friends from the 30s Time January 3 1969 Gay City News Vol 3 Issue 339 September 23 39 2004 Gardner Elysa Broadway s new Dames At Sea is a dance driven delight USA Today October 22 2015 Suskin Steven Aisle View Dames on Broadway Huffington Post October 22 2015 Dames at Sea 1971 TV imdb com accessed July 21 2009 According to Ethan Mordden in Open A New Window 2002 p 184 Shawn played the Captain O Connor John J TV Some Network Specials Do Not Always Turn Out to Be So The New York Times November 17 1971 p 94 The New York Times John Wilson Happily Afloat with Dames at Sea July 6 1969 pg D4 Dames at Sea on amazon com Drama Desk Awards2006 Winners 2001 Archived 2007 09 27 at archive today dramadesk com Awards 1968 1968 Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Outer Critics Circle accessed August 20 2013External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dames at Sea Dames at Sea at the Internet Off Broadway Database Dames at Sea at the Internet Broadway Database Plot song list and production information on guidetomusicaltheatre com Robert Patrick s Dames at Sea Page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dames at Sea amp oldid 1206228185, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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