Greenwillow | |
---|---|
Original Recording
|
|
Music | Frank Loesser |
Lyrics | Frank Loesser |
Book |
Lesser Samuels Frank Loesser |
Basis | Novel by B.J. Chute |
Productions | 1960 Broadway |
Greenwillow is a musical with a book by Lesser Samuels and Frank Loesser and music and lyrics by Loesser. The musical is set in the magical town of Greenwillow. It ran on Broadway in 1960.
Based on the novel by B. J. Chute, the musical is a fantasy, set in the magical town of Greenwillow. In Greenwillow, the eldest in each generation of Briggs men must obey the "call to wander", while the women they leave behind care for the home and rear their children in the hope that some day their husbands will return. Gideon loves his girlfriend, Dorrie, and would like nothing better than to settle down with her, and finds in the town's newest inhabitant, the Reverend Birdsong, an ally who will try to help him make his dream come true.
The musical had a pre-Broadway try-out at the Shubert Theatre in Philadelphia. The musical opened on Broadway on March 8, 1960, at the Alvin Theatre, and closed on May 28, 1960, after 97 performances. The show was hampered by lukewarm reviews. According to Thomas Riis (the Joseph Negler Professor of Music and director of the American Music Research Center, University of Colorado at Boulder), The New York Times "was pleased" but it was the only paper to give a positive review.
The director was George Roy Hill and choreographer was Joe Layton, scenery by Peter Larkin and costumes by Alvin Colt. The cast included Anthony Perkins as Gideon Briggs, Cecil Kellaway, Pert Kelton, Ellen McCown as Dorrie Whitbred, William Chapman, Marian Mercer and Tommy Norden.
This musical was being rehearsed in New York while Anthony Perkins was simultaneously filming the Alfred Hitchcock classic shocker Psycho (1960) in Los Angeles. He had a stand-in for the shower scene in that film. Stephen Rebello noted that the shower scene did not "require the services of Anthony Perkins", so Hitchcock allowed him to attend reheasals in New York.