Showing posts with label Broadway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Broadway. Show all posts

February 5 - Move Hollywood and Broadway to Lebanon, PA, Day

Posted on February 5, 2019

Move Hollywood and Broadway to Lebanon, PA, Day??

This is obviously not a major holiday. Not a public holiday, when governmental buildings and public schools are closed. Not a serious holiday, at all.

It's apparently just someone's idea of a joke. 

(Ha, ha?)

But, like all jokes, it's also an opportunity to ask, Why are things located where they are?

First, Lebanon, Pennsylvania, is a perfectly fine little town, with its 25,000 residents and its completely odd custom of
dropping a 12-foot, 150-pound bologna every New Year's Eve as the countdown proceeds to the New Year's Day.

Honestly, it doesn't even look like bologna!
But it's encased in a metal holder so that the
meat can be later donated.

But, with so few residents and only a handful of hotels, Lebanon, PA, is not going to be able to be the city of culture, of musicals and plays and museums and shows, that New York City is. (NYC has more than 8,623,000 residents - so about 8,600,000 more people! - than Lebanon. And it has hundreds of hotels!) 

Broadway is a road in NYC, and since it runs through the section of Midtown Manhattan that's called the Theatre District (also the "Great White Way") because there are so many play and show venues built there, we tend to use the term "Broadway" for the district:

"Have you ever acted on Broadway?"
"Are you going to see something on Broadway, while you're in New York?"
"They say the neon lights are bright.../ On Broadway..."

So that provides one answer to the question "why are things where they are?": Because of the size of the population needed...

The place name "Hollywood," of course, has stretched to mean a whole lot more than what the name originally meant -a boulevard and a neighborhood in Los Angeles - in a similar way. This Southern Californian neighborhood is where several movie studios located back in the early 1900s, but the name has become the synonym for the entire movie industry!

"I want to be discovered by Hollywood!" 
"Hollywood reacted quickly to the tragedy." 
"I'll be a star that shines / I can make the whole world mine / Hollywood / It feels so good..."
Hollywood is located in So Cal because of the weather. Did you already know that?

When the movie industry was first starting, the East Coast had a lot more bad weather than film crews and outdoor shots could stand. But Florida and Texas, where there was a lot more sunshine, also had a lot of humidity and damaging tropical storms. 

Movie making legend Cecil DeMille was leading his movie crew out to Flagstaff, Arizona, in 1913, wanting to take advantage of its more than average amounts of sun...but Flagstaff is almost 7,000 feet in altitude, and it was chilly. So DeMille kept going to Southern California.

And he discovered that there was about 320 days per year of good weather - 

Aaaaand the rest is history!

So the answer to "location, location, location?" may be size of a place, in population, or it may be weather. Here are a few more possible answers:

  • A natural feature. The Grand Canyon is where it is - of course tourists are going to flock to it!
  • Compromise. The U.S. capital, Washington, D.C., is located between Maryland and Virginia as a compromise between those who wanted the capital to be located in the industrial north and those who wanted it to be located in a place more friendly to agricultural (and, sadly, slave-holding) interests.



  • Transportation. A lot of cities and civilizations arose where they did because of ease of transportation in that area. The ancient civilizations of Sumer and Egypt and India and China all arose on river banks. The ancient empires of Phoenicia and Greece and Rome developed around the Mediterranean Sea. Moving goods and people in these places was easier and faster by water than they would have been on huge tracks of riverless land.
  • Historical fluke. Woodstock was held on Max Yasgur's farm in New York state after a whole bunch of other possible venues turned down their chance at history because they didn't want 50,000 hippies swarming over their neighborhood. (Actually, more than 400,000 people actually attended!!)


  • There are probably loads of other reasons why things are located where they are located. Can you suggest one?

December 3 – Happily-Ever-Aftering in Camelot!

Posted on December 3, 2018



The date: December 3, 1960.
The place: The Majestic Theatre, Broadway, New York City
The event: The Broadway opening of the musical Camelot

After having drastically loooooonnnnnngggg shows in Toronto and Boston (the premiere in Toronto ran almost four-and-a-half hours!), Camelot opened on Broadway with a talented cast but mixed reviews. 



Still, it was popular: the musical ran on Broadway for 873 performances, won four Tony Awards, became a hit album for 60 weeks, and inspired many revivals and foreign productions and a movie!


This depiction of Camelot is by
Tobias Roetsch
Camelot is the name of a place of legend - the home and castle of King Arthur and Queen Guinevere. King Arthur was said to have lived in early Britain - a time of knights and ladies and quests for the Holy Grail. "They" say that Arthur built a Round Table where his knights, including his loyal friend Sir Lancelot, would meet and talk with him. "They" say that Arthur had a magical sword called Excalibur - a sword he pulled from a stone as a young boy, proving his worth to be king. "They" even say that the young Arthur was taught by a wizard named Merlin.


The Sword in the Stone isn't the only legend about
Excalibur - there is also a legend about the sword and
 the Lady of the Lake.

All of that sounds like myths, right? And although there may be some real guy at the bottom of all the fabulous stories, or maybe not, for sure most of the tale of King Arthur and Camelot is fiction. 

Nothing wrong with fiction!




Remember I mentioned that the original cast of Camelot released a popular album? Well, not only did many folks in the United States listen to their Camelot LPs over and over again, even President Kennedy loved listening to the album. According to his wife, Kennedy had some favorite lines:
Don't let it be forgot
That once there was a spot
For one brief, shining moment
That was known as Camelot.
The thing is, President Kennedy's administration was cut short by an assassin, and looking back, many people felt that having the relatively young and charismatic president for such a little time was a sort of "brief, shining moment." And so now the idea of Camelot - the idea of a fantastic place, a place of romance and chivalry, a place that is hard to achieve and harder yet to hold onto - is associated with the Kennedy Administration.

Check out some Camelot videos, such as these here and here

Like the legends of King Arthur and his Round Table, the images on the Pinterest page "All Things Camelot" are equal parts mysterious and alluring.



What did King Arthur and Queen Guinevere look like?
Well, since they probably never existed:
Any way you like!












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November 16 – Anniversary of the premiere of “The Sound of Music”

The movie version starred Julie Andrews.
Posted November 16, 2013

The hills are alive...

And Broadway was alive...
...with The Sound of Music.




On this date in 1959, this beloved musical premiered on Broadway. For the first time audiences were entranced by the exciting story of the von Trapp family: A nun working as a governess falls in love with the children's widowed father, and he with her; after they are married, the family of nine flees the Nazis.

The original Broadway show starred Mary Martin.
For the first time, audiences were delighted by the Rodgers and Hammerstein songs “Edelweiss,” “My Favorite Things,” “Climb Every Mountain,” and “Do-Re-Mi.” Oh, and “The Sound of Music,” of course!

For the first time, audiences fell in love with this musical—but not for the last. Not by a long shot. The 1965 movie starring Julie Andrews won five Academy Awards—including Best Picture—and became the highest-grossing film of all time. (Its record has since been supplanted. With figures adjusted for inflation, it's now #5.)
 
These are the real von Trapp kids. Their life was a little different than it was portrayed in the show and movie, and their names were changed, too. Rupert was shown as Friedrich, Agathe became Liesl, Maria became Louisa, Werner was portrayed as Kurt, Hedwig was changed to Brigitta, Johanna became Marta, and Martina was changed to Gretl. 

Celebrate The Sound of Music!

Soon there will be yet another version of the musical, as NBC airs “Sound of Music Live!” on Thursday, December 5! 

Check out “The Making of The Sound of Music for interesting stories about the movie.  To give you a tantalizing taste of what you can learn: the movie's co-star Christopher Plummer once called the movie “The Sound of Mucus”; some now-famous actors were considered for the roles of the von Trapp kids; and the movie-family cast still feels surprisingly close, 45 years later!

Here is a “sing-along activity kit” for The Sound of Music

Learn some of the songs from the show. Here is “Do-Re-Mi.”  And here is a bit of “My Favorite Things.” 


Also on this date:


















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