Bye Bye Birdie

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Bye Bye Birdie
Original Broadway cast album
Music Charles Strouse
Lyrics Lee Adams
Book Michael Stewart
Productions 1960 Broadway
1961 West End
1963 film
1995 Television
2004 Encores!
2008 Kennedy Center condensed
Awards Tony Award for Best Musical

Bye Bye Birdie is a musical with a book by Michael Stewart, lyrics by Lee Adams, and music by Charles Strouse.

Originally titled Let's Go Steady, the satire on American society is set in 1958. The name "Conrad Birdie" is a play on the name Conway Twitty, a popular singer at the time, and the character is based on Elvis Presley, whose draft into the Army shortly before the musical was written inspired a plot element. The original Broadway production was a Tony Award-winning success. The show also became a popular choice for high school and college productions.1 It spawned a 1981 sequel, Bring Back Birdie, starring original Broadway cast member Chita Rivera.

Contents

Productions

Produced by Edward Padula and directed and choreographed by Gower Champion, the Broadway production opened on April 14, 1960 at the Martin Beck Theatre, transferring to the 54th Street Theatre and then the Shubert to complete its 607-performance run. The original cast included Dick Van Dyke, Chita Rivera, Paul Lynde, Dick Gautier, Susan Watson, Kay Medford and Charles Nelson Reilly. Replacements later in the run included Gene Rayburn as Albert and Gretchen Wyler as Rosie.

Rivera never wanted the role as Rosie but got it anyway.citation needed Peter Marshall was Albert and Marty Wilde was Birdie in the 1962 West End production, which ran for 268 performances. Rivera headlined an ill-fated 1981 sequel entitled Bring Back Birdie, which closed after four performances. Charles Nelson Reilly understudied for Lynde, who along with Van Dyke appeared in their roles periodically throughout the play's original run.

The New York City Center Encores! staged concert production ran in May 2004, with Karen Ziemba as Rosie, Daniel Jenkins as Albert, Jessica Grové as Kim, and Bob Gaynor as Conrad.2

An abridged version of Bye Bye Birdie was presented at the Kennedy Theatre in Washington, DC, October 2-5, 2008, as part of their Broadway: Three Generations production. Laura Osnes played Kim and Leslie Kritzer played Rosie.3

Among those who have appeared in various stage productions of Bye Bye Birdie are Tommy Tune, Steve Zahn, Doris Roberts, Rue McClanahan, Gary Sandy, Randy Jones, Rachel Bilson, Kim Darby, Gene Rayburn, and Marc Kudisch.

Synopsis

Act One

Agent and songwriter Albert Peterson finds himself in trouble when hip-thrusting rock and roll superstar Conrad Birdie is drafted into the Army. Albert's secretary and sweetheart, Rose Alvarez, comes up with a last-ditch publicity stunt to have Conrad Birdie record and premiere a song before he is sent overseas. She makes Albert promise to give up the music business and become "An English Teacher." They plan to have Birdie sing Albert's new song "One Last Kiss" and give one lucky girl from his fan club a real "last kiss" on The Ed Sullivan Show before going into the Army.

The lucky girl chosen randomly from Conrad's national fan club is fifteen-year-old Kim MacAfee from Sweet Apple, Ohio. All the teenagers in Sweet Apple are catching up on the latest gossip in "The Telephone Hour": Kim MacAfee and Hugo Peabody just got pinned! Kim, excited to have a steady boyfriend, rhapsodizes, "How Lovely to be a Woman". Conrad, Albert and Rosie set off to Sweet Apple to prepare for the event. Before they depart by train from New York City, local teenage girls are ecstatic to meet Conrad, but two young girls are sad that by the time Conrad gets out of the army, they'll be too old for him. Albert advises them to "Put on a Happy Face". Reporters arrive, and Albert, Rosie, and the teenagers tell them that Conrad is "A Healthy, Normal, American Boy". Conrad receives a hero's welcome in Sweet Apple, and Hugo worries that Kim likes Conrad more than she likes him, but Kim assures Hugo that he's the "One Boy" for her. Conrad shocks the town parents and drives the teenage girls crazy with his performance of "Honestly Sincere".

Kim's father, Mr. MacAfee, does not want Kim to kiss Conrad until Albert tells him their whole family will be on The Ed Sullivan Show. Mr. MacAfee, Mrs. MacAfee, Kim, and her younger brother Randolph sing Sullivan's praises in "Hymn for a Sunday Evening". Hugo becomes disastrously jealous of Conrad, and Albert's overbearing, interfering mother Mae comes to break up her son's relationship with Rosie, whom she dislikes for being Hispanic.

Rosie devises "One Hundred Ways" to kill Albert, and then plots a way to ruin the broadcast with Hugo. Conrad sings "One Last Kiss" on The Ed Sullivan Show, and as he leans in to kiss Kim, Hugo runs onstage and punches him in the face. On live television, Conrad collapses, Rosie breaks up with Albert, and Albert, trying to cover for the mishaps of the evening, leads a chorus of "A Healthy, Normal, American Boy".

Act Two

Despite plans to refilm the broadcast, Rosie and Kim resolve to leave Albert and Hugo, each asking herself, "What Did I Ever See in Him?" Conrad decides he wants to go out and have a good time on his last night as a civilian, and encourages the teens to party, and they declare they've got "A Lot of Livin' to Do". Conrad, Kim, and all the teenagers except Hugo head for the Ice House where they can party without adult supervision. Hugo goes to Maude's Roadside Retreat, hoping to get drunk, but Maude can tell that he's under age and refuses to serve him.

When Mr. MacAfee finds out Kim has run away, he and Mrs. MacAfee lament how disobedient "Kids" are today. Rosie ends up at Maude's Roadside Retreat, but Albert calls her on the telephone and begs her, "Baby Talk To Me". Rosie, hoping to forget Albert, interrupts a Shriners meeting being held in Maude's private dining room. She flirts with all the Shriners, and they begin a wild dance. Hugo and Albert rescue Rosie from the crazed Shriners, and Albert stands up to his mother. Hugo tells the MacAfees and the other parents that the teenagers have all gone to the Ice House, and they all declare that they don't know what's wrong with their "Kids" (Reprise). Randolph joins in, stating that his older sister and the other teens are "ridiculous and so immature".

The adults and the police arrive at the Ice House and arrest Conrad, although he doesn't appear to have done anything illegal or immoral. Kim claims that she was intimidated by Conrad and Hugo gladly takes her back. Rosie sees Albert's mother and tells her that she's going to marry Albert, even though she's a "Spanish Rose". Albert bails Conrad out of jail and arranges for him to sneak out of town dressed as a middle-aged woman -- presumably so he can report for induction as scheduled. Albert also gets his mother to leave Sweet Apple bound for home on the same train, and then tells Rosie that they're going to Pumpkin Falls, Iowa. It seems the town is in need of an English teacher, and they prefer the applicant to be married. Albert professes his love for her in "Rosie", and they go off together.

Film and television adaptations

Main article: Bye Bye Birdie (film)

Bye Bye Birdie was first adapted to film in 1963. It starred Dick Van Dyke as Albert Peterson, Maureen Stapleton as Mama Mae Peterson, Janet Leigh as Rosie, Paul Lynde as Mr. MacAfee, Bobby Rydell as Hugo Peabody, and Ann-Margret as Kim MacAfee. Jesse Pearson played the role of teen idol Conrad Birdie. Ed Sullivan makes a substantial guest appearance. The film is credited with making Ann-Margret a superstar during the mid-1960s, leading to her appearing with the real Elvis Presley in Viva Las Vegas. The film ranked number 38 on Entertainment Weekly's list of the 50 Best High School Movies.4

Several significant changes were made in the plot and character relationships in the film version. Albert is not Birdie's agent but a talented research chemist who is struggling as a songwriter only to please his overbearing mother. He contributed to Birdie's initial success, and therefore Birdie "owes" him a favor. The film version also includes an additional character, a suave English teacher who flirts with Rosie. She plays up to him in several scenes after Albert has made her angry by caving in to his mother.

The positioning and context of several songs was changed as well. "An English Teacher," "A Healthy, Normal American Boy," "One Hundred Ways," "What Did I Ever See In Him?," "Baby Talk To Me" and "Spanish Rose" were eliminated entirely. "Kids" was performed in the MacAfee kitchen by Mr. MacAfee, Mama Mae Peterson, Albert and Randolph. "Put On A Happy Face" is performed by Albert and Rosie in the MacAfees' back yard; "A Lot of Livin' To Do" was performed by Conrad, Kim and Hugo at a teen dance; and "Rosie" is sung at the end of show by Albert, Rosie, Hugo and Kim. Kim also opens and closes the film version singing the title song, "Bye Bye, Birdie, I'm gonna miss you so...."

The film version ends on a brighter and lighter note. When Hugo punches Conrad, knocking him out with a single punch "live" on The Ed Sullivan Show, he wins Kim's heart, and the young couple is reunited. Albert's mother shows up after the broadcast with a man in tow, informs Albert and Rosie that she has married him, and gives Albert and Rosie her blessing for their long-postponed wedding.

A new adaptation was made for television in 1995. It starred Jason Alexander of Seinfeld in the role of Albert and Vanessa L. Williams as Rosie. Tyne Daly played Albert's mother Mae Peterson. Broadway actor Marc Kudisch, who played Conrad Birdie on tour opposite Tommy Tune, reprised the role. 1980s pop music sensation Chynna Phillips played Kim MacAfee, and George Wendt played her father Harry. While this version remained mostly true to the original musical, several songs were added and re-arranged in the show, and minimal dialogue was rewritten to smoothly facilitate their inclusion. The title song "Bye Bye Birdie" sung by Ann Margret in the film is rearranged and re-written as a rockin' quintet for a group of Sweet Apple girls at the soda shop. The verse of "One Boy" that Rosie sings was replaced with ""Let's Settle Down". The song "Baby Talk to Me" returns to the show. Dialogue where Albert's mother Mae laments her fate was re-written into a song entitled "A Mother Doesn't Matter Anymore," and in "A Giant Step" Albert tells Rosie how he has finally broken free of his overbearing mother.

Roles and original Broadway cast

Song list

Act I
  • Overture
  • An English Teacher
  • The Telephone Hour
  • How Lovely To Be A Woman
  • Put On A Happy Face
  • A Healthy, Normal, American Boy
  • One Boy
  • Honestly Sincere
  • Hymn For A Sunday Evening
  • One Hundred Ways Ballet (dance only)
  • One Last Kiss
Act II
  • Entr'acte
  • What Did I Ever See In Him?
  • A Lot Of Livin' To Do
  • Kids
  • Baby, Talk To Me
  • Shriner's Ballet (dance only)
  • Kids (Reprise)
  • Spanish Rose
  • Rosie
  • Finale

Cast and other recordings

Awards and nominations

  • Tony Award for Best Musical (winner)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical (Van Dyke, winner; Gautier, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Rivera, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Scenic Design for a Musical (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Choreography (winner)
  • Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical (winner)
  • Tony Award for Best Conductor and Musical Director (nominee)

Cultural references

The song "The Telephone Hour" is frequently parodied in television shows, for example in the opening number of the Xena musical episode "Lyre Lyre Hearts on Fire", in the Family Guy DVD version of the episode "Petarded", and a "Kids" parody in The Simpsons episode "Wild Barts Can't Be Broken". The song was also used in an episode of The Daily Show to explain the Valerie Plame Scandal.

Another song, "Put on a Happy Face" has been used in various television commercials, including for Wal-Mart in the 2000s for an advertising campaign with its smiley logo, in the early 1970s for a Kool-Aid commercial featuring a very young Jimmy Osmond, and in a cold sore medicine commercial. Instead of "Grey Skies Are Gonna Clear Up", the jingle ran, "Cold Sores Are Gonna Clear Up...." Another use for Put on a Happy Face was in the BBC television program Keeping Up Appearances. In that show's Christmas special "Sea Fever", the song is used as dance music aboard the QE2 when Hyacinth Bucket finds out that her brother-in-law Onslow won a cruise from horse racing.

A parody of Bye, Bye, Birdie was done in the animated show Home Movies in the fourth episode of the fourth season called "Bye Bye Greasy". The episode involved the main characters directing and performing in a school play named Bye Bye Greasy. The plot of the play featured a mix of other works including Grease, and Rebel Without a Cause.

The song, "A Lot of Livin' to Do" can be heard on the radio in the car in the beginning of the movie "Secondhand Lions."

References

  1. ^ TIME magazine reported in its May 26, 2008 issue, p. 51, that this musical tied (with Oklahoma!) as the eighth most frequently produced musical by U.S. high schools in 2007.
  2. ^ Brantley, Ben."THEATER REVIEW; Rock 'n' Roll Just Right for the Milk and Cookies Set","New York Times", May 8, 2004
  3. ^ Gans, Andrew."Graff, Ashmanskas, Brescia, Osnes, von Essen Explore Broadway: Three Generations Oct. 2-5",playbill.com, October 2, 2008
  4. ^ "Countdown: The 50 best high school movies | Photo Gallery | News | Entertainment Weekly". Retrieved on 2008-11-29.

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  • This page was last modified on 6 January 2009, at 01:30.

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