She Loves Me | |
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Music | Jerry Bock |
Lyrics | Sheldon Harnick |
Book | Joe Masteroff |
Basis | Parfumerie by Miklós László |
Productions | 1963 Broadway 1964 West End 1993 Broadway revival 1994 West End revival 2016 Broadway revival 2016 West End revival |
Awards | 1993 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a Musical 1994 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Musical Revival 2016 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a Musical |
She Loves Me is a musical with a book by Joe Masteroff, music by Jerry Bock, and lyrics by Sheldon Harnick.
The musical is the third adaptation of the 1937 play Parfumerie by Hungarian playwright Miklós László, following the 1940 film The Shop Around the Corner and the 1949 musical version In the Good Old Summertime. (It surfaced again as 1998's You've Got Mail ). The plot revolves around Budapest shop employees Georg and Amalia, who, despite being consistently at odds with each other at work, are unaware that each is the other's secret pen pal met through lonely-hearts ads.
The musical premiered on Broadway in 1963 and ran for 301 performances, was produced in the West End in 1964, and received award-winning revivals on each side of the Atlantic in the 1990s (as well as numerous regional productions). Although the original Broadway run was not a financial success, She Loves Me slowly became a cult classic, and the massively successful 2016 Broadway revival became the first Broadway show ever to be live-streamed.
On a beautiful summer day in Budapest in 1934, the employees of Maraczek's Parfumerie arrive at work ("Good Morning, Good Day"). Working at the shop are Ladislav Sipos, a fretful middle-aged salesman with a family; teenage delivery boy Arpad Laszlo; thirty-something Ilona Ritter, who is having an affair with suave Steven Kodaly; and Georg Nowack, the shy assistant manager. Mr. Maraczek arrives to open the store, and soon business is under way ("Sounds While Selling"/"Thank You, Madam"). Georg has been exchanging letters with an anonymous woman he knows only as "Dear Friend", and he shares today's romantic letter with Sipos. Maraczek advises Georg to get married and recalls being a bachelor ("Days Gone By").
Arpad begins stocking the shelves with a new musical cigarette case. Mr. Maraczek insists that they will manage to sell one within an hour. A nervous young woman, Amalia Balash, enters, hoping to obtain a job at the Parfumerie. When Georg tells her they are not hiring, she demands to speak with Maraczek. Amalia takes one of the cigarette cases and convinces a customer that it is really a musical candy box that plays each time it is opened to gently tell the owner "no more candy" ("No More Candy"). Maraczek is impressed and immediately hires Amalia.
As summer turns into autumn and then into the early days of winter, tension grows in the shop. Ilona and Kodaly are at odds, Mr. Maraczek is increasingly short-tempered with Georg, and Georg and Amalia bicker constantly. Georg finds solace in his anonymous romantic pen pal, not suspecting that his correspondent is none other than Amalia ("Three Letters"). Their fellow employees observe their bickering, and Sipos explains to Arpad that they argue because they unknowingly like each other very much. Arpad naively suggests they tell Georg and Amalia this, and Sipos retorts that they'd never believe it. Finally, in early December, the two "Dear Friends" arrange to meet in person.
Maraczek humiliatingly dresses down Georg for a minor problem. Georg tells Sipos that tonight he will finally meet his "dear friend" ("Tonight At Eight"). Meanwhile, Amalia explains to Ilona that even though she has not met her "dear friend" yet, she knows him very well from his letters ("I Don't Know His Name").
Mr. Maraczek and Georg argue, and when it becomes obvious that Maraczek is about to fire Georg, Sipos knocks over the stack of musical cigarette boxes to distract him. Maraczek reprimands Sipos and leaves. Sipos tells Georg that no replacement would treat him as well as Georg does ("Perspective"). Maraczek insists that everyone stay late to decorate for Christmas, but Amalia says she must leave early for her date. Georg asks to leave too, but Mr. Maraczek refuses to let him go. Georg angrily quits, and the other employees sadly say goodbye to Georg ("Goodbye Georg"). Amalia leaves clutching a copy of Anna Karenina with a rose in it so that her "dear friend" will be able to identify her. She wonders if "dear friend" will like her ("Will He Like Me?") Meanwhile, inside the shop, Kodaly begins seducing Ilona ("Ilona"). They make a date, but when Mr. Maraczek insists they must close the store early, Kodaly realizes that he has time for a 9:30 date that he previously scheduled. He postpones his date with Ilona, and she angrily declares that she will never fall for a man like him again ("I Resolve"). Georg is nervous and asks Sipos to give "dear friend" a note explaining that Georg could not come.
Mr. Maraczek's private investigator enters the shop and tells him that Kodaly is having an affair with his wife. Maraczek had assumed it was Georg. The investigator leaves, and Maraczek's wife calls to say she'll be out late. Maraczek points a gun at his own head and pulls the trigger as Arpad enters the shop. Meanwhile, in the Cafe Imperiale, the head waiter is trying to maintain a romantic atmosphere as Amalia waits with her book and rose ("Romantic Atmosphere"). Georg and Sipos enter and are shocked to realize that Amalia is Georg's date; however, Amalia does not know Georg is her "dear friend". Georg sits at Amalia's table and mocks her, singing a "Tango Tragique" about a woman who was murdered on a blind date (the show has been re-structured to where the song is not sung by Georg, but it is a dance number for the ensemble, 8-20-19). They argue, and Georg leaves. As the cafe closes, Amalia, still waiting, begs "dear friend" not to abandon her ("Dear Friend").
The next day, Mr. Maraczek has survived his suicide attempt, and Arpad comes to visit him in the hospital. Maraczek is impressed with Arpad's hard work in his absence, and Arpad begs to be promoted to sales clerk ("Try Me"). Georg also stops by, and Maraczek apologizes and asks him to return to his job. Maraczek tells Georg to fire Kodaly and mentions that Amalia has called in sick.
Georg is worried about Amalia and visits her at her apartment. She fears he has come to spy on her and tell the others she is not really sick, so she attempts to get out of bed and get ready for work ("Where's My Shoe"). Georg, seeing she is truly sick, forces her back to bed and presents her with a gift: vanilla ice cream. He apologizes for his rudeness the previous night, but Amalia tells him that he was right about her date; if "dear friend" really loved her, he would have come. Georg, meaning well, makes up a story that he saw an older, bald, fat gentleman looking into the cafe. Georg says the man told him that he had to work and could not meet his date, and Georg surmises that he must be her "dear friend". Amalia is surprised to find she enjoys her conversation with Georg. After he leaves, she begins a letter to "dear friend" but can only think of Georg's kindness and his gift of ("Vanilla Ice Cream").
Georg joyously realizes that Amalia loves him ("She Loves Me"). At Maraczek's, Ilona explains to Sipos that she has gotten over Kodaly; last night, she went to the library where she met Paul, a kindly optometrist ("A Trip to the Library"). Kodaly bids everyone goodbye ("Grand Knowing You"). With Christmas fast approaching, the employees are busy helping last-minute shoppers, and Georg and Amalia enjoy each other's company ("Twelve Days to Christmas"). On Christmas Eve, Amalia tells Georg she has invited "dear friend" to spend the evening with her and her mother. She invites Georg as well, and he hesitatingly accepts. Mr. Maraczek returns to the shop for a happy reunion, and Ilona announces her plans to accept Paul's proposal that night, even though he does not know he is going to propose yet. Sipos leaves to join his family's Christmas party, and Maraczek takes Arpad for a night on the town.
Georg helps Amalia with her packages as she leaves the shop, and they accidentally drop one of the musical cigarette boxes. Amalia intends to give it to "dear friend", but Georg says he really would like it; it will remind him of the day he first met her. He admits that he always thought Amalia was the sort of girl he could fall in love with. Amalia confesses to having similar feelings, and Georg takes one of Amalia's letters to "dear friend" out of his pocket and begins reading it aloud. Amalia finally understands that Georg really is "dear friend" and they kiss ("Finale").
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Producer Lawrence Kasha brought the three writers together.
The musical premiered on Broadway on April 23, 1963, at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre not long after the settlement of the four-month-long 1962–1963 New York City newspaper strike. Nevertheless, the show managed to run for 302 performances. The musical was directed by Harold Prince and choreographed by Carol Haney, with the cast that featured Daniel Massey as Georg Nowack, Barbara Cook as Amalia Balash, Barbara Baxley as Ilona Ritter, Jack Cassidy as Stephen Kodaly, Nathaniel Frey as Ladislav Sipos, Ralph Williams as Arpad Laszlo, and Ludwig Donath as Mr. Maraczek. The romantic, old fashioned show was short on big song and dance numbers, and the Eugene O'Neill Theatre was too small to generate a big profit.[ citation needed ] A two-record original cast recording was released by MGM Records [1] and subsequently re-released on CD on the Polydor label in 1987.
The West End production opened on April 29, 1964, at the Lyric Theatre, where it ran for 189 performances. The cast included Gary Raymond, Rita Moreno, Anne Rogers and Gary Miller. [2] A London cast recording was released by Angel Records. [3]
After the original Broadway production it was 30 years before a major revival. Critic Arthur Dorman, in a review of a production in 2019, says that it was overshadowed by the big Broadway productions of that time. "But," he says, "a small group of fans kept a flame going for She Loves Me, which was further flamed when the original Amalia, Barbara Cook, became a staple of cabarets and concert stages and made "Vanilla Ice Cream" one of her signature performance pieces." [4] Cook began her concert career on January 26, 1975 in Carnegie Hall. The concert included three songs from She Loves Me, but the New York Times review doesn’t name them. [5]
The Roundabout Theatre Company produced a Broadway revival, directed by Scott Ellis and choreographed by Rob Marshall (assisted by his sister Kathleen). It opened on June 10, 1993, at the Criterion Center Stage Right [6] and transferred on September 28, 1993, to the Brooks Atkinson Theatre, closing on June 19, 1994, after a total of 354 performances and 42 previews. The cast included Boyd Gaines as Georg, Judy Kuhn (replaced by Diane Fratantoni when the show transferred) as Amalia, Sally Mayes as Ilona, Howard McGillin as Kodaly, Lee Wilkof as Ladislav, Brad Kane as Arpad, and Louis Zorich as Mr. Maraczek. A revival cast recording was released by Varèse Sarabande, featuring Fratantoni as Amalia. The production was conducted by David Loud.
The West End revival, also directed by Ellis and choreographed by Marshall, opened on July 12, 1994, at the Savoy Theatre, where it ran for one year. The cast included John Gordon Sinclair as Georg, Ruthie Henshall as Amalia, and Tracie Bennett as Ilona. A revival cast recording was released on the First Night label. [7]
The Roundabout Theatre Company presented a revival in 2016, again directed by Scott Ellis and choreographed by Warren Carlyle, on Broadway which opened at Studio 54 on March 17 following previews from February 19 in a limited engagement to June 5. The production starred Laura Benanti as Amalia, Zachary Levi as Georg, Jane Krakowski as Ilona, Gavin Creel as Kodaly, Byron Jennings as Maraczek, and Michael McGrath as Sipos. [8] [9] [10] On December 2, 2015, it was announced that Byron Jennings would play the role of Maraczek, replacing René Auberjonois. [11] The revival's run was extended to July 10, 2016, and Tom McGowan replaced Michael McGrath in the role of Sipos beginning May 10, 2016. [12]
Following the huge success of the 2016 Broadway revival, the musical was revived in London's West End at the Menier Chocolate Factory, opening on November 25, 2016, in previews, officially on December 7, for a limited run through March 5, 2017. Directed by Matthew White, the cast starred Scarlett Strallen as Amalia Balash. [13]
The June 30, 2016, performance of the Roundabout revival of She Loves Me was presented via BroadwayHD live stream, marking the first time a Broadway show had ever been broadcast live. [14] The historic broadcast was screened in cinemas on December 1, 2016. [15]
A limited run of concert performances was held in March 1977 at The Town Hall in New York City, [16] and featured Madeline Kahn as Amalia, Barry Bostwick as Georg, Rita Moreno as Ilona, George Rose as Mr. Maraczek, and Laurence Guittard as Kodaly. [17] [18]
A slightly abridged BBC-TV production was made in 1978 starring Gemma Craven as Amalia, Robin Ellis as Georg, and David Kernan as Kodaly.
The Oregon Shakespeare Festival, in Ashland, Oregon, staged a production as part of its 2010 season, running from February through October in the Angus Bowmer Theater. [19]
A critically acclaimed, small-scale Australian production opened at Sydney's Hayes Theatre Company, which began previews on 22 August 2018. [20] [21] [22] The show featured Rowan Witt as Georg opposite Caitlin Berry as Amalia, with Tony Llewellyn-Jones as Maraczek. The production was directed by Erin James. [23] [24]
A production was staged by Artistry in Bloomington, Minnesota from January 26 to February 17, 2019.
Character | Original Broadway cast (1963) | Original London cast (1964) | 1977 concert | 1993 Broadway revival | 1994 London revival | 2011 concert | 2016 Broadway revival | 2016 London revival | 2018 Sydney |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amalia Balash | Barbara Cook | Anne Rogers | Madeline Kahn | Judy Kuhn | Ruthie Henshall | Kelli O'Hara | Laura Benanti | Scarlett Strallen | Caitlin Berry |
Georg Nowack | Daniel Massey | Gary Raymond | Barry Bostwick | Boyd Gaines | John Gordon Sinclair | Josh Radnor | Zachary Levi | Mark Umbers | Rowan Witt |
Ilona Ritter | Barbara Baxley | Rita Moreno | Sally Mayes | Tracie Bennett | Jane Krakowski | Katherine Kingsley | Zoe Gertz | ||
Steven Kodaly | Jack Cassidy | Gary Miller | Laurence Guittard | Howard McGillin | Gerard Casey | Gavin Creel | Dominic Tighe | Kurt Phelan | |
Zoltan Maraczek | Ludwig Donath | Karle Stepanek | George Rose | Louis Zorich | David de Keyser | Victor Garber | Byron Jennings | Les Dennis | Tony Llewellyn-Jones |
Ladislav Sipos | Nathaniel Frey | Peter Sallis | Tom Batten | Lee Wilkof | Barry James | Michael McGrath | Alastair Brookshaw | Jay James-Moody | |
Arpad Laszlo | Ralph Williams | Gregory Phillips | George Connolly | Brad Kane | Simon Connolly | Rory O'Malley | Nicholas Barasch | Callum Howells | Joel Granger |
Headwaiter | Wood Romoff | Carl Jaffé | Jonathan Freeman | David Alder | Peter Bartlett | Cory English | Jay James-Moody | ||
MGM bought the screen rights for the musical in 1967 with plans to make it into a film starring Julie Andrews and to be directed by Harold Prince. After a year of delays, MGM moved forward with the film with a revised production in 1969. Julie Andrews was still set to play Amalia; however Blake Edwards was now set to direct. Dick Van Dyke was strongly considered for the role of Georg which would have reunited Andrews and Van Dyke for the first time since Mary Poppins in 1964. Maurice Chevalier was among those considered for the role of Maraczek. Production was well underway when Kirk Kerkorian bought MGM and installed James T. Aubrey Jr. to run the studio to make sweeping changes.
With a major company restructuring and focus shifting to more youth oriented films, the musical was among the many projects abruptly dropped.
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1964 | Tony Award | Best Musical | Nominated | |
Best Author | Joe Masteroff | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical | Jack Cassidy | Won | ||
Best Direction of a Musical | Harold Prince | Nominated | ||
Best Producer of a Musical | Nominated |
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | Tony Award | Best Revival of a Musical | Nominated | |
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical | Boyd Gaines | Won | ||
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical | Judy Kuhn | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical | Jonathan Freeman | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical | Sally Mayes | Nominated | ||
Best Direction of a Musical | Scott Ellis | Nominated | ||
Best Choreography | Rob Marshall | Nominated | ||
Best Scenic Design | Tony Walton | Nominated | ||
Best Costume Design | David Charles and Jane Greenwood | Nominated | ||
Drama Desk Award | Outstanding Revival | Won | ||
Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Boyd Gaines | Won | ||
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical | Sally Mayes | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Director of a Musical | Scott Ellis | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Choreography | Rob Marshall | Nominated |
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | Laurence Olivier Award | Best Musical Revival | Won | |
Best Actor in a Musical | John Gordon Sinclair | Won | ||
Best Actress in a Musical | Ruthie Henshall | Won | ||
Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical | Tracie Bennett | Won | ||
Best Director of a Musical | Scott Ellis | Won | ||
Best Theatre Choreographer | Rob Marshall | Nominated | ||
Best Costume Design | David Charles and Jane Greenwood | Nominated | ||
Critics Circle Award | Best Musical | Won |
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Tony Awards [25] | Best Revival of a Musical | Nominated | |
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical | Zachary Levi | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical | Laura Benanti | Nominated | ||
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical | Jane Krakowski | Nominated | ||
Best Direction of a Musical | Scott Ellis | Nominated | ||
Best Scenic Design of a Musical | David Rockwell | Won | ||
Best Costume Design of a Musical | Jeff Mahshie | Nominated | ||
Best Orchestrations | Larry Hochman | Nominated | ||
Drama Desk Awards [26] | Outstanding Revival of a Musical | Won | ||
Outstanding Actor in a Musical | Zachary Levi | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Actress in a Musical | Laura Benanti | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | Nicholas Barasch | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical | Jane Krakowski | Won | ||
Outstanding Orchestrations | Larry Hochman | Won | ||
Outstanding Scenic Design of a Musical | David Rockwell | Won | ||
Outstanding Costume Design of a Musical | Jeff Mahshie | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Wig and Hair Design | David Brian Brown | Nominated | ||
Outer Critics Circle Awards [27] | Outstanding Revival of a Musical (Broadway or Off-Broadway) | Won | ||
Outstanding Actress in a Musical | Laura Benanti | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical | Nicholas Barasch | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical | Jane Krakowski | Won | ||
Outstanding Director of a Musical | Scott Ellis | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Set Design (Play or Musical) | David Rockwell | Won | ||
Outstanding Costume Design (Play or Musical) | Jeff Mahshie | Won | ||
Outstanding Lighting Design (Play or Musical) | Donald Holder | Nominated | ||
Drama League Awards [28] | Outstanding Revival of a Broadway or Off-Broadway Musical | Nominated | ||
Distinguished Performance | Zachary Levi | Nominated | ||
Laura Benanti | Nominated | |||
Astaire Award | Outstanding Female Dancer in a Broadway Show | Jane Krakowski | Won | |
Outstanding Ensemble in a Broadway Show | Cameron Adams, Justin Bowen, Alison Cimmet, Benjamin Eakeley, Michael Fatica, Gina Ferrall, Jennifer Goote, Andrew Kober, Laura Shoop, Jim Walton | Nominated | ||
Outstanding Choreographer in a Broadway Show | Warren Carlyle | Nominated |
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