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Musical
0001 - Simply Heavenly (1957)
Musique: Margaret Martin
Paroles: Langston Hughes
Livret: Langston Hughes
Production originale:
4 versions mentionnées
Dispo: Résumé  Génèse  Liste chansons  

Genèse: When Hughes decided to take Simple onto the stage, he used his second Simple book, Simple Takes a Wife, (published in 1953) as a starting point. With Simple Takes a Wife, Hughes had written more of a novel, exploring several characters in greater depth, especially the women who had appeared only briefly in earlier Simple material. The novel had originally been called Simply Heavenly and when Hughes decided to use it as the basis of a musical script, he returned to this title. The process of getting a play from idea to stage was a frustrating one and Hughes wrote of Simply Heavenly's ups and downs in an article called 'You're Simple if You Want to Write a Play'. "When I first put Simple into play form myself, it was a straight comedy. The producers holding the option, however, suggested making a musical, so I rewrote it and inserted 20 songs. Meanwhile these showmen went broke and allowed their option to run out. The producers who took the next option had entirely opposite ideas, so working with a new director of their choice, the play underwent a third drastic revision. Still no production came about." During the many rewrites Hughes drew from the columns he had written about Simple. He said he had fun letting the directors think he was a fast writer. He also thought that the "songs are the most fun" and took pleasure in working with David Martin in adding many new musical numbers. Finally, under the direction of a fourth director, the play came to the stage. Simply Heavenly opened in May 1957 at the auditorium of the Order of the True Sisters on West 85th Street to wonderful notices. The production thrived in this small, off-Broadway auditorium until the fire department closed the theatre for building violations. The show then moved to the Playhouse, an intimate theatre on Broadway, opening there on August 20, 1957. It was well-received by the critics and achieved a respectable run. Brooks Atkinson in The New York Times praised it saying: "Mr Hughes loves Harlem. He loves the humour, the quarrels, the intrigues, the crisises and the native shrewdness that makes life possible from day to day. He has written Simply Heavenly like a Harlem man. If it were a tidier show, it would probably be a good deal less enjoyable. It would seem like something that has been improvised out of high spirits for the sake of a good time." Simply Heavenly had a very brief run at the Adelphi in London in 1958, but since then hasn't been seen in Britain until the Young Vic's production in 2003.

Résumé: This story by Langston Hughes, based on his novels about Jesse B. Semple, a Joe Doakes Harlemite, seems to capture the colour and the humour and poetry of these neighbours-to-the-North as no outlaner could imitate. This is the story of the New York Negro written from the inside out; it is a happy and exciting evening. There is a mood and a temper about this show that is unique." The NY Post, describes the play: "It possesses such unhackneyed freshness and cheeriness of spirit, such humorous decency and regard for the human spirit, that, as offered last night at the 85th Street Playhouse, it was a real delight. Its great merit is that Mr. Hughes contemplates the people he is writing about with a respect that never becomes patronising or stuffy and always retains its sense of humour." The setting is Paddy's bar, a refuge whose regulars are either hard working or out of work — both are gond enough reasons to drink and sing the blues away. The hero is Jesse who is in love with Joyce but can't resist the advances of man-eater Artie. But never mind whether Jesse and Joyce do or don't. The luckless Citfiddle picks out the most heartrending blues on his guitar, while queen of the drinking hole is the big-busted, short-tempered MamieWhat's important is spending time in a bar where every emotion is a musical cue.

Création: 20/8/1957 - Playhouse Theatre (Broadway) - représ.