Friday, January 15, 2021

NOT BORN YESTERDAY. January 2021.THE CROWN, WALLY FOR QUEEN, THE WINDSOR FOLLIES

 


I hope you are all enjoying this fascinating series even though there’s been some criticism over the image of members of the Royal family. Happily, viewers are not deterred and in fact, seeing this secluded family as real people, with distinctive personalities, is obviously part of the charm. I myself, being British born and raised, spent many years living under the mythical Royals which adds to my enjoyment. However, I’d like to add a personal experience that strangely parallels the hubbub surrounding the depictions in “The Crown”.

It started in the 1980’s when my literary agent, the legendary Bertha Klausner, gave me a short play by another of her clients to read. It was titled, “Wally For Queen” and written by the illustrious Upton Sinclair. He was a distant cousin to the infamous Mrs. Wallis Simpson for whom King Edward the Eighth gave up his throne in 1936. This delightful short play described the human relationship between her and the Prince of Wales during their affair.

There was interest in the subject at this time, and Bertha arranged for me to work with a noted Broadway director on a full-length adaptation. As I expanded the script, Upton’s dialogue inspired me to show two very real, and perhaps eccentric people, unlike the pompous waxworks figures so often seen as Royalty onstage. Well, the director and I didn’t see eye to eye as he wanted the more respectful (to me cliché) image of these two famous people. So, the project landed entirely in my lap.

Bertha sided with me and, by the time my “Wally For Queen” was finished, she had an important Broadway woman producer eager to read it. I was surprised to learn she sent back the script saying, “The dialogue is all wrong. Members of the Royal Family don’t talk like that!” Happily, the Off-Broadway group, Works by Women, eagerly accepted it and it opened to excellent reviews that seemed to prove that they do.

After another OOB production, retitled “Wally and Davy” with a male actor playing Wallis, I decided to adapt it into a Cabaret Book Musical. With a score by my composer-lyricist husband Ralph Martell, and a new title, “The Windsor Follies”, and starring British actor Keith Benedict.  Before its scheduled Off-Broadway opening on 42nd Street, we were invited to premiere it at The Royal Suite in The Waldorf Towers. This was a gala event with NYC theater luminaries attending and a write-up in Cindy Adams prestigious column.

To our surprise, in spite of this good publicity, attendance at the West Bank Café was light and the enthusiasm for the subject seemed to have waned. Then a Jewish friend who came to the show, took me aside. “Morna,” she said gently, “People aren’t coming because these two were Nazi supporters and you are glamorizing them.” Huh! Suddenly I had written a romance for two despised people who no one would find charming, even with songs.


I now realize that there is a risk when one writes characters based on famous figures. People have an image of them and do not want you changing it for better or worse. My interpretation, taken from Upton Sinclair’s version, was of two delightful if superficial people, in an unusual lifestyle, who fall impossibly in love.  Not pompous statues, not secret fascists, not pitiful misfits, but just plan Wally and Davy! See THE WINDSOR FOLLIES video on You Tube and let me know what you think:  http://youtu.be/WIHdzGISakc

 

NOT BORN YESTERDAY. December 2020. A Christmas Carol 1951, Charlie Brown Christmas, Barbara Morrison, Covid Fan Tutte

 



  A CHRISTMAS CAROL – 1951 – You Tube

Having seen many incarnations over the years, I must admit this b/w version of Charles Dickens masterpiece is simply the best ever on stage or film. Alastair Sim is marvelous as the miserly businessman who views Christmas as a waste of time. He is the bitterest, meanest Scrooge you’ll ever see, as he grudgingly allows his timid clerk to spend only one day with his family, even though his little boy, Tiny Tim, is lame and dying from TB. When alone, Scrooge is visited by ghosts and given a glimpse into his sad past, cruel present and tragic future, with a final revelation that brings a joyous conclusion.

The roster of fabulous British performers include Mervyn Johns as clerk Bob Cratchit and Hermione Baddeley (who I toured with in 1961) as Mrs. Cratchit; Michael Hordern as Scrooge’s dead partner; Kathleen Harrison as his charwoman, and George Cole as the young Scrooge when Spirit of Christmas Past (Michael Dolan) takes him back in time. Screenplay by Noel Langley uses dialogue from the original book. Produced and directed by Brian Desmond Hurst.

 

  A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS – PBS

Christmas will look vastly different for millions this year due to the coronavirus, but PBS has announced that one tradition will remain intact. The Charlie Brown holiday special “A Charlie Brown Christmas” will air on PBS and PBS Kids on December 13. This annual holiday tradition was thrown into question in October when Apple TV+ made a deal with Peanuts Worldwide and Mendelson Film Productions to be the sole home of all Peanuts’ holiday specials. When people learned that the Peanuts characters would only be on Apple TV+ thousands signed a petition to bring back Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Woodstock, and the rest. Also on Apple TV+.


BARBARA MORRISON - Beverly Hills

This nightclub series at The Wallis Annenberg Center has gone virtual with all programs presented digitally on Saturday evenings at 8 pm. “Standing on Their Shoulders” on Dec. 5, brings jazz and blues singer Barbara Morrison with her musical tribute to Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and other greats. “A Night of Holiday Magic” on Dec. 12, is a magical holiday surprise when four local magicians delight and amaze the entire family with awe-inspiring holiday-themed illusions. “Songs of Joy and Peace” on Dec. 19 is for those who love to sing along. Singer Audra Mae, great grandniece of Judy Garland, performs from classic holiday films, along with keyboardist Dylan Meek. All shows run approximately 45 minutes.

Info: (310) 746-4000 or Tickets@TheWallis.org

COVID FAN TUTTE – You Tube

For opera lovers here is a wildly imaginative comedic adaptation of Mozart’s “Cosi fan tutte”, created and produced by the Finnish National Opera. It depicts life in the spring of 2020 as disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The idea came when they had to cancel the planned production of Wagner’s “Die Walküre” and conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen conceived the idea. Journalist-novelist Minna Lindgren created the libretto, selecting music from Mozart’s original and an aria each from his “Don Giovanni “and “The Magic Flute.” My opera-loving friend, playwright Anibal Aprile, advises “Do not miss this!” You can view the entire show, with English subtitles, on You Tube through March 30. Soprano Karita Mattila plays a parody of herself as a renowned opera diva trapped in Finland because of the pandemic. Ironically, both she and conductor Salonen reside in the U.S., but found themselves unable to leave Finland when the international borders were closed.