...or not!
Shows that don't have their title number performed in the show.....
Three starters:
The Rocky Horror Show
Priscilla Queen Of The Desert
Follies
Updated On: 6/6/09 at 07:44 AM
Lots and Lots
Shrek
Chicago
Zanna, Don't
Wicked
Gypsy
tick, tick..BOOM!
Jekyll and Hyde
Pippin
Seussical
Spring Awakening
Witches of Eastwick
Les Miserables
Miss Saigon
Billy Elliot
The Drowsy Chaperone
Godspell
Blood Brothers
the lion king
mary poppins
tarzan
little mermaid
the drowsy chaperone
evita
south pacific
the king and i
my fair lady
Wizard of Oz
Young Frankenstein
110 in the Shade
The Wiz
I asked this as a friend of mine (with very limited theatrical knowledge, very) said that all musicals use there title as a big production number!'
WELL, imagine my face!
I stared!
Laughed and walked away!
All R&H shows (except for their first and last) did not use their title for a number.
I particularly like Chicago as the example, because everyone (I mean the average general public) thinks that the song Chicago is in the show
Aida
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
Little Women
LOTR
Songs For A New World
Spamalot
Boy From Oz
The Wedding Singer
Catch me if you can (Thanks again for that Mama!)
Young Frankenstein
Honk
Rock of Ages
Shrek
The Story of my Life
And thats to name a few!
Little Women has the title as a lyric in "Here Alone" though.
Wicked has the title as a lyric in what feels like every song!
In that thick Wicked souvenir book thingy, Stephen Schwartz says that originally he wanted every song title to have a word like "good" or "wicked" ... hence:
No One Mourns the WICKED
Making GOOD
Something BAD
Thank GOODness
No GOOD Deed
I don't like it when plays have their title within the dialogue. There's always the moment when the audience collective goes ahhh so she's the cat on the hot tin roof...
"And by the way, he died the death of a salesman..."
I love the way the meaning is subtly changed- we all assume it's about Willy, but his speech shows he has a different understanding of the phrase
"All R&H shows (except for their first and last) did not use their title for a number."
Not strictly accurate, I'm afraid. "Allegro" had a title song. So did "State Fair" (which began as a movie but later became a stage show). Interestingly, the R and H show, "Pipe Dream" did not have a title song but did have a song "Sweet Thursday", which was the title of the Steinbeck story the show was based upon.
Totally agree Sister George.
Same thing in "Next to Normal" - I had a huge ahhh moment during Maybe
A fine example d.t as I'm sure the first time I saw DOTS my admittledly then youthful brain was going ahh there's the title of the play rather noticing the subtle reconception of the phrase.
I'm racking my brain to think of a play that has the title as it's final line of dialogue; there must be some creaky old pot-boilers or some 30's American social poetic-realism dramas that fit the bill?
I now just have a mental image of Kevin Spacey standing on the stage of the Old Vic saying, 'Truly this man will inherit the wind' curtain.
Which shows how little I know of the original source material or the biblical source of the original quote.
(I also think my mental image was blatantly just ripping off Barton Fink anyway)
The Woman In White
I always found this interesting as there is a song The Woman in White, but it isn't in the actual show, it was just on a promo CD (not sure if it was used anywhere else).
"It'll probably appear in Love Never Dies."
ROTFLMAO ! This is so funny coz it's probably true.
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