Thursday, September 16, 2010

THE BROADWAY SCENE 50 YEARS AGO THE DRAMAS 1960-1961

As we head into another New York theatre season, I thought it might be fun to look back on what was happening on Broadway fifty years ago. I was going into my last year of high school ,was totally in love with theatre and saw quite alot of it that year.

It was a season of fine dramas with great performances. We had Peter Glenville's spectacular production of "Becket" with Laurence Olivier and Anthony Quinn mesmerizing in the leading roles. Angela Lansbury and Joan Plowright were stunning in the squalid but riviting"A Taste Of Honey". "Advise And Consent" was an exciting political drama and "All The Way Home" was a lovely play with exquisite performances and won the Pulitzer Prize for drama that year. "The Wall" and " The Devil's Advocate" were both adapted from bestselling novels, but depite fine acting in both plays neither worked as drama and seemed heavy handed and dull as theatre.

"Big Fish, Little Fish" was a distinguished first play by the talented Hugh Wheeler and boasted some of the finest all-around acting of the season. "A Far Country" was an interesting look at the young Sigmund Freud's early experements with the human mind but "Mandingo" was an apallingly tastless look at slavery in the old south with bad acting and inept direction.
While" A Call On Kuprin" only ran 12 performances, it was a good, solid, theatrical look at the cold war, had some stunning scenery by Donald Oenslager, and first rate acting and direction. This was fine and sometimes exciting theatre and deserved a much better fate then it got.
"Face Of A Hero " was a dull, lifeless play that even Jack Lemmon's fine performance could not save but "Little Moon Of Alban" with Julie Harris giving a superb performance was a fine and sometimes moving look at Dublin during the political unrest of the 20s, and was far better than the 20 performances it ran.
My next blog will look at the season's musicals.









'

No comments:

Post a Comment