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Music and Lyrics by Irving Berlin International cabaret and concert star Klea Blackhurst returns to Moon to star as Ambassador Sally Adams, the “Hostess With the Mostes’ on the Ball.” Washington’s most vivacious — and unconventional — party-giver is sent to represent the U.S. in the tiny duchy of Lichtenburg. It’s not long before her down-to-earth and decidedly The dynamite Irving Berlin score features You’re Just in Love, It’s a Lovely Day Today, Something to Dance About, Starring Klea Blackhurst as Ambassador Sally Adams. |
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I Feel A Song Coming On! Our first evening salutes the word of lyricist and librettist Dorothy Fields. In her 45-year career, Ms. Fields wrote lyrics to the music of Jerome Kern, Cy Coleman, Jimmy McHugh, Harold Arlen, Albert Hague, Arthur Schwartz, Harry Warren and others. Her catalogue of brilliant song hits includes I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, On the Sunny Side Of the Street, A Fine Romance, I’m In the Mood For Love, The Way You Look Tonight, Make the Man Love Me, Big Spender, If My Friends Could See Me Now |
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Destry Rides Again (1959) Music and Lyrics by Harold Rome Hollywood’s classic western is transformed into a whoopin’, shootin’, rip-roarin’ firecracker of a musical. Bottle-neck is a town filled with gamblers, bullwhip-toting bad guys, saloon girls and drunkards all intent on maintaining their wild ways. The new sheriff, Tom Destry, intends to keep the peace without using a gun. Frenchy, the dance hall girl at the Last Chance Saloon, is sent to compromise his morals and lead him astray. In a classic tangle of law vs. vice, Destry Rides Again takes a dark turn and moves toward a riveting climax. In roles immortalized by Jimmy Stewart and Marlene Dietrich on film and Andy Griffith and Dolores Gray on Broadway are Moon favorite Steve Rhyne and popular San Francisco singer Connie Champagne. Harold Rome’s score includes rousing numbers such as Are You Ready, Gyp Watson?, I Say Hello, Anyone Would Love You, and Ev’ry Once in a While. |
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Jubilee (1935) Oh, what high jinks abound in Cole Porter and Moss Hart’s smart, cheeky, and ultra-moderne 1935 hit! The Royal Family of a “fictional European country” (read: England) uses the threat posed by an impending revolution as an excuse to abandon the throne and pursue their private dreams. Off they go on an adventure with parody versions of a host of recognizable 1930s celebrities (Noel Coward, Elsa Maxwell, Johnny Weissmuller, Ginger Rogers), who show the disguised monarch and his family the time of their royal lives. Cole Porter’s amazing score includes Begin the Beguine, Just One of Those Things, Why Shouldn’t I?, A Picture of Me Without You, and The Kling-Kling Bird on the Divi-Divi Tree. Megan Cavanagh and
Michael Patrick Gaffney star as the Queen and King. |
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Donna McKechnie in This special event will be held at the Alcazar Theatre. |
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Lady Be Good (1925) Music by George Gershwin Our Ira Gershwin celebration kicks off with one of the earliest Gershwin hits. Fred and Adele Astaire originally starred in this farce about a brother-and-sister vaudeville team, Dick and Susie Trevor, who, through a series of The Gerhswins rocketed Broadway into the Roaring |
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ADDED SHOW! Everything the Traffic Will Allow Music and Lyrics by: |
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Very Warm for May (1939) Music by Jerome Kern The first show in our Jerome Kern Celebration spotlights Kern’s final Broadway score. A giddy romp, Oscar Hammerstein II’s script takes the old “barn musical” plot and turns it on its head. This time, the show in the barn is an avant-garde musical being rehearsed by a bohemian bunch led by an eccentric director. Equally strange is Winnie Spofford, the amiably screwball Long Island matron who sponsors the troupe on her estate. The real star of Very Warm for May is Kern and Hammerstein’s beautiful and sophisticated score, which features the timeless All the Things You Are (heard in a stunning arrangement unique to the musical), All in Fun, In the Heart of the Dark, Heaven in My Arms, and In Other Words, Seventeen. |
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Kiss the Boys Goodbye Music by the great composers of the 1940s Broadway and Hollywood were jiving and jumping with the best composers and lyricists in the 1940s! For one magical evening, we’ll celebrate the songs that kept the home fires burning (and swinging!) during World War II – and that reflected the jubilation and prosperity of the post-war era. Songwriters including Cole Porter, Harry Warren, Jerome Kern, Ralph Rainger, Leo Robin, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein, Johnny Mercer, Irving Berlin, are celebrated with songs like I’ll Be Seeing You, They’re Either Too Young or Too Old, It’s Been a Long, Long Time, Happiness is Just a Thing Called Joe, This is the Army, Mr. Jones, It Might as Well Be Spring, Be a Clown, How About You?, South America, Take it Away!, And the Angels Sing, The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat and others. |
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