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State Fair (musical)

State Fair is a musical with a book by Tom Briggs and Louis Mattioli, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, and music by Richard Rodgers.

State Fair
Original Broadway poster (1996)
MusicRichard Rodgers
LyricsOscar Hammerstein II
BookTom Briggs
Louis Mattioli
BasisState Fair
by Richard Fielder
State Fair
by Richard L. Breen
Oscar Hammerstein II
Sonya Levien
Paul Green
State Fair
by Oscar Hammerstein II
Sonya Levien
Paul Green
State Fair
by Sonya Levien
Paul Green
State Fair
by Phil Stong
Productions1996 Broadway

Phil Stong's original 1932 novel, State Fair, was first adapted for film in 1933 in a production starring Will Rogers. In 1945, the film was remade as a musical with original songs by Rodgers and Hammerstein. This was subsequently remade in 1962 as well as adapted into a made-for-television movie in 1976. The stage production closely follows the plot of its predecessors, providing a glimpse into the life of a farming family, the Frakes, and their three-day adventure at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines in 1946. While parents Abel and Melissa are hoping to win a few blue ribbons, siblings Margy and Wayne are more interested in finding romance on the midway.

Production history edit

In 1969, The Muny in St. Louis presented the world stage premiere of State Fair starring Ozzie and Harriet Nelson with Ron Husmann, Jerry Lanning, Bonnie Schon, Carol Richards, Jack Goode, Tom Pedi, Tommy Tune and Lawrence Leritz in the children's chorus. The production was directed by James Hammerstein, supervised by Richard Rodgers and also choreographed by Tommy Tune. Additional songs included in this production were three from "Me & Juliet"; "It's Me!", "Keep It Gay" and "Marriage Type Love" and a new one, "Away From Home."

In 1992 a new stage adaptation, by Tom Briggs and Louis Mattioli, was produced as part of the Broadway Preview Series at the North Carolina School of the Arts, and was directed and choreographed by Randy Skinner. The show played at the Stevens Center in Winston-Salem from July 17 – August 16, 1992.[1] From North Carolina, the show moved to Long Beach Civic Light Opera in October 1992.[2]

A re-staging of the 1992 version played on Broadway at the Music Box Theater opening March 27, 1996, following to a 23-city tour inaugurated with an engagement at the real Iowa State Fair August 12–20, 1995.[3][4][5] The final credit for iconic Broadway producer David Merrick, the 1995-1996 production of State Fair was co-directed by James Hammerstein (Oscar's son) and Randy Skinner, with the latter doubling as choreographer. The set design was by James Leonard Joy, the costume design by Michael Bottari and Ronald Case, and the lighting design was by Natasha Katz. Headlined by John Davidson as Abel, Kathryn Crosby as Melissa, and Andrea McArdle and Ben Wright as Margy and Wayne, the production also starred Donna McKechnie as Emily and Scott Wise as Pat. When McArdle was sidelined by a foot injury incurred onstage June 5, she was replaced by Susan Egan who had played Margy in the 1992 tryout tour of State Fair.[6] The 1996 production received 1996 Tony Award nominations for Best Score and Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Scott Wise. It also received three Drama Desk nominations for Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Scott Wise and Ben Wright and Best Featured Actress in a Musical for Donna McKechnie. A box-office disappointment, the Broadway production of State Fair closed June 20, 1996, after 118 performances at the Music Box. On September 7, 1997, a second tour of the production had its premiere engagement at the Eisenhower Auditorium a Pennsylvania State University. Headlined by John Davidson as Abel Frake, this reportedly scaled-down production toured for eight months.

The Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia hosted a production of State Fair September 10-October 19, 2008, which starred Mark Jacoby and Dee Hoty as Abel and Melissa Frake. Tim Dunleavy of TalkinBroadway.com rated the production as "good [and] consistently enjoyable. [This version of State Fair] may not be a classic [but] proves to be a real charmer [with] a tone that is sweet, but not too sugary. There may not be much depth to [this] production… but there's nothing cloying or embarrassing about it either. It's got great songs, some funny lines, a terrific cast and a gently nostalgic look at a bygone era.[7]

On August 3, 2010, the Finborough Theatre production opened at London's West End Trafalgar Studios 2, directed by Thom Southerland and starring Philip Rham, Karl Clarkson, Laura Main and Susan Travers, in a transfer from the 2009 Finborough production.[8] The show opened to generally positive reviews with The Guardian quoting "It's a great night out, and as exhilarating as a hoedown". Due to demand the run was extended two weeks to September 11, 2010. The musical had initially opened at the Finborough Theatre in August 2009, with Magnus Gilljam as musical director and pianist. The Guardian reviewer wrote of the 2009 production: "It may not be one of the great musicals, but, in its melodic paean to middle America, I found this infinitely more enjoyable than some of Rodgers and Hammerstein's later, tendentious excursions into east-west politics."[9]

Plot edit

Act I

It is a Tuesday afternoon in summer 1946 on the Frake family farm in Brunswick, Iowa, as the family prepares to leave for the Iowa State Fair. The family patriarch, Abel, is hoping that his prized boar, Blue Boy, will win the livestock sweepstakes. Abel's wife, Melissa, has her heart set on ribbons for her mincemeat and sour pickles, while their son, Wayne, is practicing throwing hoops, hoping to win prizes from the midway games (“Opening (Our State Fair)”). Wayne is suddenly saddened when he learns that his girlfriend, Eleanor, was accepted to college, and she cannot go to the fair with him.

Local shopkeeper Dave Miller is skeptical about the family's hopes. He makes a $5 bet that something is bound to go wrong for Blue Boy or the family. Abel accepts. Meanwhile, the Frakes' daughter, Margy, is feeling down and doesn't understand why (“It Might as Well Be Spring”). Her boyfriend, Harry, arrives at the farm and presses her for an answer to his marriage proposal; she agrees to give him an answer when she returns home. That night, the family leaves for the fair, awaiting the surprises that lie ahead (“Driving at Night/Our State Fair”).

After arriving at the fair on Wednesday morning, Wayne heads straight for the midway, where he is hustled by a carnie at a ring-throwing game. A beautiful mysterious woman defends on Wayne's behalf, and he falls head over heels in love before he even knows her name (“That’s for Me”). Later that afternoon, Abel and his farmer buddies are at the beer tent and trading stories about their prized pigs (“More Than Just a Friend”). Meanwhile, Pat Gilbert, a former World War II reporter, arrives with Charlie, a photographer, to cover the fair for the Des Moines Register. He runs into Margy, whom he repeatedly tries to court, and she remains forbidding until he begins to win her over (“Isn’t It Kinda Fun?”). That night, Wayne heads to the Starlight Dance Meadow in time to catch a show. The performer is a singer named Emily Arden, who happens to be the woman he met earlier in the day (“You Never Had it So Good”). She buys him a drink, and tells Wayne that her dream is to become a Broadway star. He charmingly asks her out. She agrees, but only on the bounds that their relationship only lasts for the rest of the fair.

Thursday morning arrives and Margy complains to Melissa about Harry (“It Might as Well Be Spring (Reprise)”). Abel walks in, overjoyed at the promise of victory and winning, and he proposes an evening of fun and dancing with his family (“When I Go Out Walking With My Baby”). At the Exhibit Hall that afternoon, the pickles and mincemeat are being judged. Unknowingly, Abel spiked Melissa's with a full bottle of brandy, sending the judges into a drunken fit of giggles and tipsiness. Melissa wins the blue ribbon and a special plaque. Pat and Charlie capture the euphoric moment. From a quiet hillside, Wayne and Emily watch the midway below. He wants to further continue their relationship, telling her that they have so many more memories to make, but she remains unsettled (“So Far”). At the Starlight Dance Meadow that night, fairgoers gather for a dreamy waltz. Abel and Melissa dance romantically, Wayne and Emily arrive with a distinctive glow, and Pat and Margy share a passionate kiss when, to Margy's shock, Harry arrives at the fair (“A Grand Night for Singing”).

Act II

It is now Friday, the last day of the fair. Despite Harry's presence, Pat and Margy are growing closer and more in love. While walking the midway alone, Pat runs into Jeanne and Vivian, two dancers whom he formerly shared intimate relationships with. They both try to flirt with him, but they notice that Pat has changed, as he admits that he has finally found real love (“The Man I Used to Be”). Blue Boy is declared the winner of the livestock sweepstakes, and the livestock tent turns into a celebration led by Abel (“All I Owe Ioway”). Afterwards, Charlie tells Pat that he has landed a job interview with the Chicago Tribune, but it would mean catching the first train out of Iowa (“The Man I Used to Be (Reprise)”). Reluctant to leave Margy in the high point, he leaves just as she arrives for their night out (“Isn’t it Kinda Fun? (Reprise)”).

The scene shifts to the Starlight Dance Meadow for the closing performance of the fair, headlined by Emily (“That’s the Way It Happens”). Wayne proclaims his love for Emily that night, but she breaks it off, revealing that she is married and was abandoned by her husband, making her scared to fall in love again. Back at the campsite, Abel and Melissa are watching the stars together. Melissa is concerned about the children growing up too fast, but Abel assures her that they raised Wayne and Margy well, and that when the children do move out, the couple will always be there for each other (“Boys and Girls Like You and Me”). On the darkened midway, the fair is over, and being dismantled. Margy is waiting for Pat, remembering that he said he wouldn't break it off, he just wouldn't be around (“The Next Time it Happens”). Harry enters, pleading to Margy for her hand in marriage, though her refusal finally leads him to realize that she simply just doesn't love him.

Upon returning to the family farm on Saturday morning, there is a full spread in the local newspaper detailing their experience at the Fair word-by-word, with extra emphasis on Margy, secretly written by Pat. Dave Miller returns, Abel pleads for him to cough up the money, but Dave reminds Abel that the bet was not about victory, but happiness. He emphasizes to Abel that he won't pay up until he is certain that everyone enjoyed themselves at the fair. Wayne and Eleanor have become engaged. Margy, however, has come in moping, saying that she has outgrown the fair. Shockingly, Pat has arrives at the Frake house, apologizing to Margy about leaving early, he reveals that he has been hired for the job in Chicago and he wants Margy to come with him. He gets down on one knee and proposes, Margy accepts. Dave Miller begrudgingly hands a $5 bill to Abel, and the two men shake hands and walk inside the house together ("Finale Ultimo").

Musical numbers edit

Notes on the music

The six songs from the original 1945 film score were supplemented by others that were either featured in, or cut from, other Rodgers and Hammerstein shows. One, "More Than Just a Friend," was written by Rodgers for the 1962 film remake after Hammerstein's death. "Driving at Night" was created by co-director James Hammerstein and the production's orchestrator, Bruce Pomahac, with music from a song that had been cut from Allegro entitled "Two Short Years".[10][5]

The starred songs (above) were in the original 1945 or 1962 films.

Cast (1996 Broadway) edit

Character Original Broadway Cast
Abel Frake John Davidson
Melissa Frake Kathryn Crosby
Margy Frake Andrea McArdle
Wayne Frake Ben Wright
Emily Arden Donna McKechnie
Pat Gilbert Scott Wise
Dave Miller Charles Goff
Harry Peter Benson
Eleanor Susan Haefner
Lem John Wilkerson
Clay J. Lee Flynn
Hank Munson Newton R. Gilchrist
Charlie Darrian C. Ford
Vivian Tina Johnson
Jeanne Leslie Bell

Recording edit

The 1996 Original Broadway Cast recording is on DRG Records 94765 (CD/CS).

Accolades edit


References edit

  1. ^ Playbill Front Cover for STATE FAIR at The Stevens Center at The North Carolina School of the Arts, July 17 – August 16 1992. rnh.com
  2. ^ "Gorgeous, Schmaltzy 'State Fair' Is So Good, Broadway May Want It" Deseret News, Salt Lake City, August 22, 1992
  3. ^ Viagas, Robert. "John Davidson To Star in 'State Fair' Tour" playbill.com, March 14, 1997
  4. ^ Hurley, Joseph. Variety, "Legit: Broadway & The Road", October 9, 1995 – October 15, 1995
  5. ^ a b c "Rodgers and Hammerstein listing, History" rnh.com, accessed May 17, 2013
  6. ^ "Susan Egan credits, Broadway" ibdb.com
  7. ^ Philadelphia - "State Fair" in Philadelphia - 9/16/08
  8. ^ " State Fair 2010" finboroughtheatre.co.uk, retrieved June 10, 2019
  9. ^ Billington, Michael. " 'State Fair' Review The Gusrdian, 18 August 2009
  10. ^ New York Times, Vincent Canby, March 28, 1996

External links edit

  • Internet Broadway database listing
  • RNH Theatricals Listing, 'State Fair'
  • Detailed plot synopsis, production details, guidetomusicaltheatre.com

state, fair, musical, other, uses, state, fair, disambiguation, state, fair, musical, with, book, briggs, louis, mattioli, lyrics, oscar, hammerstein, music, richard, rodgers, state, fairoriginal, broadway, poster, 1996, musicrichard, rodgerslyricsoscar, hamme. For other uses see State Fair disambiguation State Fair is a musical with a book by Tom Briggs and Louis Mattioli lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II and music by Richard Rodgers State FairOriginal Broadway poster 1996 MusicRichard RodgersLyricsOscar Hammerstein IIBookTom Briggs Louis MattioliBasisState Fair by Richard Fielder State Fair by Richard L BreenOscar Hammerstein IISonya Levien Paul Green State Fair by Oscar Hammerstein II Sonya Levien Paul Green State Fair by Sonya Levien Paul Green State Fair by Phil StongProductions1996 BroadwayPhil Stong s original 1932 novel State Fair was first adapted for film in 1933 in a production starring Will Rogers In 1945 the film was remade as a musical with original songs by Rodgers and Hammerstein This was subsequently remade in 1962 as well as adapted into a made for television movie in 1976 The stage production closely follows the plot of its predecessors providing a glimpse into the life of a farming family the Frakes and their three day adventure at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines in 1946 While parents Abel and Melissa are hoping to win a few blue ribbons siblings Margy and Wayne are more interested in finding romance on the midway Contents 1 Production history 2 Plot 3 Musical numbers 4 Cast 1996 Broadway 5 Recording 6 Accolades 7 References 8 External linksProduction history editIn 1969 The Muny in St Louis presented the world stage premiere of State Fair starring Ozzie and Harriet Nelson with Ron Husmann Jerry Lanning Bonnie Schon Carol Richards Jack Goode Tom Pedi Tommy Tune and Lawrence Leritz in the children s chorus The production was directed by James Hammerstein supervised by Richard Rodgers and also choreographed by Tommy Tune Additional songs included in this production were three from Me amp Juliet It s Me Keep It Gay and Marriage Type Love and a new one Away From Home In 1992 a new stage adaptation by Tom Briggs and Louis Mattioli was produced as part of the Broadway Preview Series at the North Carolina School of the Arts and was directed and choreographed by Randy Skinner The show played at the Stevens Center in Winston Salem from July 17 August 16 1992 1 From North Carolina the show moved to Long Beach Civic Light Opera in October 1992 2 A re staging of the 1992 version played on Broadway at the Music Box Theater opening March 27 1996 following to a 23 city tour inaugurated with an engagement at the real Iowa State Fair August 12 20 1995 3 4 5 The final credit for iconic Broadway producer David Merrick the 1995 1996 production of State Fair was co directed by James Hammerstein Oscar s son and Randy Skinner with the latter doubling as choreographer The set design was by James Leonard Joy the costume design by Michael Bottari and Ronald Case and the lighting design was by Natasha Katz Headlined by John Davidson as Abel Kathryn Crosby as Melissa and Andrea McArdle and Ben Wright as Margy and Wayne the production also starred Donna McKechnie as Emily and Scott Wise as Pat When McArdle was sidelined by a foot injury incurred onstage June 5 she was replaced by Susan Egan who had played Margy in the 1992 tryout tour of State Fair 6 The 1996 production received 1996 Tony Award nominations for Best Score and Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Scott Wise It also received three Drama Desk nominations for Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Scott Wise and Ben Wright and Best Featured Actress in a Musical for Donna McKechnie A box office disappointment the Broadway production of State Fair closed June 20 1996 after 118 performances at the Music Box On September 7 1997 a second tour of the production had its premiere engagement at the Eisenhower Auditorium a Pennsylvania State University Headlined by John Davidson as Abel Frake this reportedly scaled down production toured for eight months The Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia hosted a production of State Fair September 10 October 19 2008 which starred Mark Jacoby and Dee Hoty as Abel and Melissa Frake Tim Dunleavy of TalkinBroadway com rated the production as good and consistently enjoyable This version of State Fair may not be a classic but proves to be a real charmer with a tone that is sweet but not too sugary There may not be much depth to this production but there s nothing cloying or embarrassing about it either It s got great songs some funny lines a terrific cast and a gently nostalgic look at a bygone era 7 On August 3 2010 the Finborough Theatre production opened at London s West End Trafalgar Studios 2 directed by Thom Southerland and starring Philip Rham Karl Clarkson Laura Main and Susan Travers in a transfer from the 2009 Finborough production 8 The show opened to generally positive reviews with The Guardian quoting It s a great night out and as exhilarating as a hoedown Due to demand the run was extended two weeks to September 11 2010 The musical had initially opened at the Finborough Theatre in August 2009 with Magnus Gilljam as musical director and pianist The Guardian reviewer wrote of the 2009 production It may not be one of the great musicals but in its melodic paean to middle America I found this infinitely more enjoyable than some of Rodgers and Hammerstein s later tendentious excursions into east west politics 9 Plot editAct IIt is a Tuesday afternoon in summer 1946 on the Frake family farm in Brunswick Iowa as the family prepares to leave for the Iowa State Fair The family patriarch Abel is hoping that his prized boar Blue Boy will win the livestock sweepstakes Abel s wife Melissa has her heart set on ribbons for her mincemeat and sour pickles while their son Wayne is practicing throwing hoops hoping to win prizes from the midway games Opening Our State Fair Wayne is suddenly saddened when he learns that his girlfriend Eleanor was accepted to college and she cannot go to the fair with him Local shopkeeper Dave Miller is skeptical about the family s hopes He makes a 5 bet that something is bound to go wrong for Blue Boy or the family Abel accepts Meanwhile the Frakes daughter Margy is feeling down and doesn t understand why It Might as Well Be Spring Her boyfriend Harry arrives at the farm and presses her for an answer to his marriage proposal she agrees to give him an answer when she returns home That night the family leaves for the fair awaiting the surprises that lie ahead Driving at Night Our State Fair After arriving at the fair on Wednesday morning Wayne heads straight for the midway where he is hustled by a carnie at a ring throwing game A beautiful mysterious woman defends on Wayne s behalf and he falls head over heels in love before he even knows her name That s for Me Later that afternoon Abel and his farmer buddies are at the beer tent and trading stories about their prized pigs More Than Just a Friend Meanwhile Pat Gilbert a former World War II reporter arrives with Charlie a photographer to cover the fair for the Des Moines Register He runs into Margy whom he repeatedly tries to court and she remains forbidding until he begins to win her over Isn t It Kinda Fun That night Wayne heads to the Starlight Dance Meadow in time to catch a show The performer is a singer named Emily Arden who happens to be the woman he met earlier in the day You Never Had it So Good She buys him a drink and tells Wayne that her dream is to become a Broadway star He charmingly asks her out She agrees but only on the bounds that their relationship only lasts for the rest of the fair Thursday morning arrives and Margy complains to Melissa about Harry It Might as Well Be Spring Reprise Abel walks in overjoyed at the promise of victory and winning and he proposes an evening of fun and dancing with his family When I Go Out Walking With My Baby At the Exhibit Hall that afternoon the pickles and mincemeat are being judged Unknowingly Abel spiked Melissa s with a full bottle of brandy sending the judges into a drunken fit of giggles and tipsiness Melissa wins the blue ribbon and a special plaque Pat and Charlie capture the euphoric moment From a quiet hillside Wayne and Emily watch the midway below He wants to further continue their relationship telling her that they have so many more memories to make but she remains unsettled So Far At the Starlight Dance Meadow that night fairgoers gather for a dreamy waltz Abel and Melissa dance romantically Wayne and Emily arrive with a distinctive glow and Pat and Margy share a passionate kiss when to Margy s shock Harry arrives at the fair A Grand Night for Singing Act IIIt is now Friday the last day of the fair Despite Harry s presence Pat and Margy are growing closer and more in love While walking the midway alone Pat runs into Jeanne and Vivian two dancers whom he formerly shared intimate relationships with They both try to flirt with him but they notice that Pat has changed as he admits that he has finally found real love The Man I Used to Be Blue Boy is declared the winner of the livestock sweepstakes and the livestock tent turns into a celebration led by Abel All I Owe Ioway Afterwards Charlie tells Pat that he has landed a job interview with the Chicago Tribune but it would mean catching the first train out of Iowa The Man I Used to Be Reprise Reluctant to leave Margy in the high point he leaves just as she arrives for their night out Isn t it Kinda Fun Reprise The scene shifts to the Starlight Dance Meadow for the closing performance of the fair headlined by Emily That s the Way It Happens Wayne proclaims his love for Emily that night but she breaks it off revealing that she is married and was abandoned by her husband making her scared to fall in love again Back at the campsite Abel and Melissa are watching the stars together Melissa is concerned about the children growing up too fast but Abel assures her that they raised Wayne and Margy well and that when the children do move out the couple will always be there for each other Boys and Girls Like You and Me On the darkened midway the fair is over and being dismantled Margy is waiting for Pat remembering that he said he wouldn t break it off he just wouldn t be around The Next Time it Happens Harry enters pleading to Margy for her hand in marriage though her refusal finally leads him to realize that she simply just doesn t love him Upon returning to the family farm on Saturday morning there is a full spread in the local newspaper detailing their experience at the Fair word by word with extra emphasis on Margy secretly written by Pat Dave Miller returns Abel pleads for him to cough up the money but Dave reminds Abel that the bet was not about victory but happiness He emphasizes to Abel that he won t pay up until he is certain that everyone enjoyed themselves at the fair Wayne and Eleanor have become engaged Margy however has come in moping saying that she has outgrown the fair Shockingly Pat has arrives at the Frake house apologizing to Margy about leaving early he reveals that he has been hired for the job in Chicago and he wants Margy to come with him He gets down on one knee and proposes Margy accepts Dave Miller begrudgingly hands a 5 bill to Abel and the two men shake hands and walk inside the house together Finale Ultimo Musical numbers editAct IOverture Orchestra Opening Our State Fair Abel Melissa and Wayne It Might as Well Be Spring Margy Driving at Night Our State Fair Abel Melissa Wayne Margy and Company That s for Me Wayne More Than Just a Friend Abel Hank Lem and Clay Isn t It Kinda Fun Pat and Margy You Never Had It So Good cut from Me and Juliet Emily and the Fairtones It Might as Well Be Spring Reprise Margy When I Go Out Walking With My Baby cut from Oklahoma Abel and Melissa So Far from Allegro Wayne and Emily It s a Grand Night for Singing Company Act IIEntr acte Orchestra The Man I Used to Be from Pipe Dream Pat Vivian and Jeanne All I Owe Ioway Abel and Company The Man I Used to Be Reprise Pat Isn t It Kinda Fun Reprise Margy That s the Way It Happens from Me and Juliet Emily and the Fairtones Boys and Girls Like You and Me cut from Oklahoma 5 and included in some productions of Cinderella though not the original Abel and Melissa Next Time It Happens from Pipe Dream Margy Finale Ultimo Company Notes on the musicThe six songs from the original 1945 film score were supplemented by others that were either featured in or cut from other Rodgers and Hammerstein shows One More Than Just a Friend was written by Rodgers for the 1962 film remake after Hammerstein s death Driving at Night was created by co director James Hammerstein and the production s orchestrator Bruce Pomahac with music from a song that had been cut from Allegro entitled Two Short Years 10 5 The starred songs above were in the original 1945 or 1962 films Cast 1996 Broadway editCharacter Original Broadway CastAbel Frake John DavidsonMelissa Frake Kathryn CrosbyMargy Frake Andrea McArdleWayne Frake Ben WrightEmily Arden Donna McKechniePat Gilbert Scott WiseDave Miller Charles GoffHarry Peter BensonEleanor Susan HaefnerLem John WilkersonClay J Lee FlynnHank Munson Newton R GilchristCharlie Darrian C FordVivian Tina JohnsonJeanne Leslie BellRecording editThe 1996 Original Broadway Cast recording is on DRG Records 94765 CD CS Accolades editYear Award Category Nominee Result1996 Tony Award Best Original Score Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II NominatedBest Featured Actor in a Musical Scott Wise NominatedDrama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical NominatedBen Wright NominatedOutstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Donna McKechnie NominatedReferences edit Playbill Front Cover for STATE FAIR at The Stevens Center at The North Carolina School of the Arts July 17 August 16 1992 rnh com Gorgeous Schmaltzy State Fair Is So Good Broadway May Want It Deseret News Salt Lake City August 22 1992 Viagas Robert John Davidson To Star in State Fair Tour playbill com March 14 1997 Hurley Joseph Variety Legit Broadway amp The Road October 9 1995 October 15 1995 a b c Rodgers and Hammerstein listing History rnh com accessed May 17 2013 Susan Egan credits Broadway ibdb com Philadelphia State Fair in Philadelphia 9 16 08 State Fair 2010 finboroughtheatre co uk retrieved June 10 2019 Billington Michael State Fair Review The Gusrdian 18 August 2009 New York Times Vincent Canby March 28 1996External links editInternet Broadway database listing RNH Theatricals Listing State Fair Detailed plot synopsis production details guidetomusicaltheatre com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title State Fair musical amp oldid 1178841509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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