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Movies - Hellzapoppin' |
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| Hellzapoppin' was a musical revue which was a Broadway hit, running from 22 September 1938 to 17 December 1941, and was at the time the longest-running Broadway musical with 1,404 performances—one of only three plays to run more than 500 performances in the 1930s. A comedy hodgepodge full of sight gags and slapstick, the show was continually rewritten throughout its run to remain topical (its opening scene was Hitler speaking in a Yiddish accent). A circus atmosphere prevailed, with midgets, clowns, trained pigeons and audience participation adding to the merriment. The book was by Olsen & Johnson, a comedy team consisting of John "Ole" Olson and Harold "Chic" Johnson, the music and lyrics were by Sammy Fain and Charles Tobias. It featured such performers as Chic Johnson, Ole Olsen, Billy Adams, Ray Kinney and the Aloha Maids, the comedy team Barto & Mann (Dewey Barto and George Mann), Bergh and Moore, The Charioteers, Bettymae and Beverly Crane, Ray Kinney, Walter Nilsson, J. C. Olsen, The Radio Rogues, Reed, Dean and Reed (Bonnie Reed, Syd Dean, and Mel Reed), Roberta and Ray, Hal Sherman, The Starlings, Dorothy Thomas, Shirley Wayne, June Winters, and Whitey's Steppers (also known as Whitey's Lindy Hoppers). The songs (decidedly less a factor for the show's success than its comedy), included:
The show opened at the original 46th Street Theatre, and moved later in its run to the Winter Garden Theatre and the Majestic Theatre, and spawned several successful sequels. The television show Laugh-In (1968-1973) was an attempt to replicate the atmosphere for a new generation. A movie version was made in 1941, directed by H.C. Potter and depicting Ole and Chic making a movie for the fictitious studio Miracle Pictures (their slogan "If it's a good picture, it's a Miracle!"), and featuring the Lindy Hop and the stylistic dance moves of Dean Collins. The cast of the movie included Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson (playing themselves), Martha Raye, Shemp Howard (before his stint in the Three Stooges), and The Six Hits. The credits for the movie assert that "any resemblance between Hellzapoppin and a motion picture are coincidental—a truth that is perhaps responsible for it being much less successful than the stage show which engendered it. In spite of this, the dance scene from the movie is one of the most well-known Lindy Hop scenes from the Swing Era and has made it popular among modern lindy hoppers. "Pig Foot Pete", an Academy Award nominee for Best Song in 1942 (it lost to "White Christmas"), was attributed in its nomination to Hellzapoppin, but it never appeared in that film. It actually appeared in the Bud Abbott and Lou Costello movie, Keep 'Em Flying. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Hellzapoppin' ] Some related entries: Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kids | Denise Cronenberg | Steve Krantz | Horror film scores | Films considered the worst ever | The Raven | Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kids | Wholly Moses | Wake of Death | A World Without Thieves | Magenta This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Hellzapoppin'; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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