"Fantastiks" to close after 42 years (OT)

Billbrpt@AOL.COM Billbrpt@AOL.COM
Fri, 11 Jan 2002 10:30:21 EST


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List,

This subject is off topic but it struck me as notable.  It is one of my 
favorite shows.  I saw it first when I was in high school in the 1960's and 
several times since.

Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison, Wisconsin
 <A HREF="http://www.billbremmer.com/">Click here: -=w w w . b i l l b r e m m e r . c o m =-</A> 

'The Fantasticks' to close after almost 42 years

By Bernie Woodall

  
NEW YORK (Reuters) - "The Fantasticks," which ends a nearly 42-year run at 
the Sullivan Street Playhouse in New York's Greenwich Village on Sunday, 
became the longest-running musical in the world by surviving some close 
brushes with death. 

The first came almost as soon as the show opened on May 3, 1960, when 
producer Lore Noto was advised by his ad agency to shut because the newspaper 
reviews were tepid. 

He ignored the advice, and the show went on. 

Then, in 1986, with attendance down and the second-floor bathroom about to 
crash through the ceiling into the 153-seat Sullivan Street Playhouse in 
Greenwich Village, Noto announced the play's closing. 

A co-producer, Donald V. Thompson, came along with some money to shore up the 
ceiling and drum up attendance, and the show went on. 

Last year, when the 41st anniversary of "The Fantasticks" passed without the 
usual spike in ticket sales, Noto -- who is 78 and in poor health -- began to 
think of closing. By the first week of September, he had decided that there 
was no way that the show could go on forever. 

The last of 17,162 performances will be Sunday night. 

"It's been 42 years of hard labor," said Noto, who says he has "four major 
medical problems, any one of which has the potential to be fatal." 

A BETTER 'MOUSETRAP'? 

Only the Agatha Christie play, "The Mousetrap," now in its 50th year in 
London, has been around longer. 

"The Mousetrap" has moved theaters since its opening, leaving "The 
Fantasticks" as the holder of the record for the longest-running live theater 
performance at a single location. 

A new owner on Sullivan Street seeking a better return on high-priced 
Manhattan real estate and dwindling revenues also helped paved the way for 
Sunday's closing. 

"All hope and promise of continuing the run evaporated and we were being 
strangled with red ink," Noto said. 

The sweet, simple, two-act musical has spawned more than 11,000 productions 
in some 2,000 U.S. cities and towns and has been staged in 67 nations from 
Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, according to the play's official Internet Web site, 
www.thefantasticks.com. 

The show's theme is the timeless story of a young boy and girl thrown 
together by scheming fathers, then torn apart by a yearning for an 
adventurous wider world only to find that life was better at home with the 
love next door. 

It was adapted from Edmond Rostand's "Les Romanesques" by composer Harvey 
Schmidt and lyricist Tom Jones. A better-known Rostand work is "Cyrano de 
Bergerac." 

A version of "The Fantasticks" was first performed as a summer production at 
Barnard College north of New York City.  Noto saw it and convinced Schmidt 
and Jones to expand the work to 14 songs and bring it to The Sullivan Street 
Playhouse. 

That was in 1960, a year before the first manned space flight. Dwight 
Eisenhower was president, the first of nine U.S. presidents to be outlasted 
by "The Fantasticks." 

The Sullivan Street Theater is about three miles (5 km) south of the center 
of Broadway where the big-time Broadway shows like "The Producers" and "42nd 
Street" run, and where the long-running show "Cats" lived to 18. Even 
community theaters across America where the show has played are larger. 

NURTURED FAMOUS CAREERS 

Still, from this small space in the middle of a low-rise block, "The 
Fantasticks" has helped nurture the careers of future stars, including 
Academy Award winners F. Murray Abraham and Liza Minnelli. 

For Abraham, it was his first professional part in New York. It was 1966 and 
he was up from his homestate of Texas. 

Abraham played Hucklebee, the boy's father, and then took over as The Old 
Actor, and filled in the other male roles as vacations came around for the 
seven-man, one-woman cast. The show has only two musicians, playing piano and 
harp. 

"It was the best thing that ever happened to me because I was home. I started 
to feel like I belonged," said Abraham, who still lives in New York, within a 
mile of the playhouse. 

"The material is so great and so eternal," said Elliot Gould, who played the 
narrator and swashbuckling lead El Gallo in a 1966 road show opposite 
Minnelli. 

"These songs have resonance in terms of American musical theater. 'The 
Fantasticks' deserves an eternal place," said Gould, now 63 and currently on 
movie screens as a casino owner in "Oceans 11." 

The character El Gallo opens each performance with "Try to Remember," a song 
that became popular in the 1960s and has taken on added significance since 
the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center just a mile or so south of the 
show's home. 

The show has been performed eight times a week with only Mondays dark for 
almost 42 years. That's taken its toll on Noto, who also played Hucklebee for 
what the "Guinness Book of World Records" called a record of 6,348 
performances (from 1970 to 1986). 

Noto said he and his son Tony are tired of running the show that hasn't been 
making money for years and feel too much pressure from outsiders who want it 
to continue just for the sake of longevity. 

The original play will close, but fans have other outlets. 

"The Fantasticks (Original 1960 Off-Off Broadway Cast)" has been remastered 
and reissued on compact disc. A film version starring Joel Grey which was 
shot in 1995 and released last year is now available on DVD and video. 

Reuters/Variety 


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