Jule Styne and Bob Merrill's 1972 Broadway musical comedy, Sugar, based
on the classic Billy Wilder film, "Some Like It Hot," will get
resurrected and made-over in a 2002 national tour with two marquee draws
added: Tony Curtis starring as an aged suitor and the story's original,
well-known title.
Curtis, of course, starred in the 1959 picture as one of two Windy
City musicians (his pal was played by Jack Lemmon) who witness a mob
murder in 1929 and flee to Florida. They escape in women's clothing
finding refuge in all-girl jazz band in which a comely, blonde
named Sugar is a member.
In the musical Some Like It Hot, Curtis will play millionaire Osgood
Fielding III, a senior who is attracted to "Daphne," the Lemmon
character. Meanwhile, "Josie," the original Curtis role, gets
sweet on Sugar and disguises himself as a millionaire.
Director-choreographer Dan Siretta helms the new version, which will
boast a revised libretto by the project's original book writer, Peter
Stone. Some songs that were cut (including "The People in Your
Life") in 1972 are being re-added and Curtis is getting the gift
of a popular Styne number that's well-known and not previously associated
with the show. Siretta and producer Diane Masters were so excited about
the song that they didn't want to reveal it just yet. Casting for the
Jerry and Joe (who drag it up as Daphne and Josephine, respectively)
is ongoing.
Styne and Merrill wrote 75 songs for Sugar (they had previously collaborated
on the hit, Funny Girl and the flop, Prettybelle) and Gower Champion
directed and choreographed. Hopes were high in 1972 that Sugar might
be a smash in the tradition Champion's Hello, Dolly! or Funny Girl.
Robert Morse, Tony Roberts, Cyril Ritchard (in the role Curtis will
soon play) and Elaine Joyce were the original stars. David Merrick produced.
Morse and Roberts brought the house down nightly when they donned bosomy
dresses to sing "The Beauty That Drives Men Mad." The show
ran 505 performances, and had a score that was considered potent only
in pockets and a troubled second act. Siretta and Stone plan to fix
that, and to improve upon a London revival from 1982 that starred Tommy
Steele (the late Merrill was not happy with the London version, Siretta
said). Rights to the title, Some Like It Hot, were granted to that London
staging 20 years ago and to this planned all-new staging produced by
Masters and Jeffrey Spolan. The powerful Merrick was not able to snag
the title rights from MGM, which may be one reason the show isn't better
known. Masters said nobody knows what a show called Sugar is about.
The 50-city national tour begins June 4, 2002, at Houston's new Hobby
Center for the Performing Arts. The hope is that the tour will end up
on Broadway, Masters said.
The 1972 score includes "Doing It for Sugar," "Beautiful
Through and Through," "Hey, Why Not!," "We Could
Be Close" (a duet for Daphne and Sugar that also brought down the
house in 1972-73), "What Do You Give to the Man Who's Had Everything?,"
"Penniless Bums" and "Sun on My Face," among others.
Siretta says the orchestrations by Philip Lang remain a dream and "the
nature of Styne's melodic line is masculine, it's powerful, it moves
forward." Styne died in 1994, Merrill in 1998. Siretta said his
goal as director-choreographer is to streamline the storytelling and
make sure it has the comic pace and flow of the film.
"I'm trying to hold onto something that's impeccable about the
film the rhythm," Siretta said, adding that he's taking
a cue from the late Merrill. "Bob liked to move things faster
to say it and move it along and get out of there."
Both the 1982 London revival cast and the original Broadway cast are
preserved on cast albums.
By Kenneth Jones
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