Musical (1952)


Musique: Arthur Jones • Fred Stamer
Paroles: Gen Genovese
Livret: Billy Gilbert • Gen Genovese
Production à la création:

Buttrio Square was about a village in 1946 Italy seeking to qualify as a town. One more citizen is needed for township, and Marisa, daughter of the baron who owns the village, becomes pregnant. The pregnancy must be kept secret, however, because the father of the child is American Captain Steve, who has married Marisa in spite of the fact that fraternization between the Italians and the occupying Gis is forbidden. Childless Papa Mario, the village's baker and would-be mayor, is led to believe that his own wife is pregnant and that it is his child that is on the way. For comic relief, there is Terry Patterson, who wants to become a WAC but who, because of her male name, has been accidentally designated as a CI and been unable to correct her status.

1 Buttrio Square peut-être considéré comme un Flop musical


Billy Gilbert, who played Mario, was a popular comic star of films and the stage who had recently appeared on Broadway in two floperettas, Gypsy Lady and a revival of The Chocolate Soldier. Gilbert cowrote the book, and one Gen Genovese was colibrettist, lyricist, producer, and author of the story on which the show was based.
Buttrio Square had a terribly troubled history. During rehearsals, a postdated check written to cover the Equity bond bounced, and Equity stepped in and halted rehearsals. Both Boston and Philadelphia tryouts were scratched when a major backer withdrew funding. Eugene Loring, the choreographer, took over the direction as well, replacing Dale Wasserman. At the last minute, Loring was forced to form a syndicate of fifty enthusiastic cast members, each of whom invested two hundred dollars so that the show could open. But critics were horrified, with good words only for talented newcomer Susan Johnson as the would-be WAC.


Aucun dossier informatif complémentaire concernant Buttrio Square

Aucun dossier informatif complémentaire concernant Buttrio Square

Presse: "The Theater: New Musical in Manhattan" Oct. 27, 1952 - The Time
Buttrio Square (music by Arthur Jones & Fred Stamer; book by Billy Gilbert & Gen Genovese; lyrics by Mr. Genovese) is the sort of 1880-style musical that would have looked old hat in 1912. In 1952 it is overpoweringly tedious and trite—all about G.I.s in an occupied Italian village where fraternizing is forbidden. An American captain is secretly married to a native girl, the girl is going to have a baby, a sentimental old Italian wants his wife to have one, and the village needs one more inhabitant to graduate into a town. Though Buttrio Square is the center-of-life in an Italian community, it looks like the market place of a dozen Ruritanian capitals. Up goes the curtain, and out pop youths and maidens committing the usual merry-month-of-Mayhem. Thereafter, there is much strenuous dancing, deplorable banter, and songs with such titles as Let's Make It Forever and You're Mine, All Mine.
The one pleasant note is a vivacious blonde named Susan Johnson. She brightens the landscape and has one pretty good song called Get Me Out, in which every member of the audience feels like joining.


Version 1

Buttrio Square (1952-10-New Century Theatre-Broadway)

Type de série: Original
Théâtre: New Century Theatre (Broadway - Etats-Unis)
Durée :
Nombre : 7 représentations
Première Preview : Inconnu
Première: 14 October 1952
Dernière: 18 October 1952
Mise en scène : Eugene Loring
Chorégraphie : Eugene Loring
Producteur :
Star(s) :

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