I Can Get It for You Wholesale
I Can Get It For You Wholesale | ||
---|---|---|
Book Jerome Weidman | | |
Basis | Novel by Jerome Weidman | |
Productions | 1962 Broadway 2023 (Off-Broadway) |
I Can Get It for You Wholesale is a musical, produced by
Background
In the album
Productions
The 1951 film with the same title is based very loosely on the original novel.
The musical premiered on Broadway at the
In 1991, the American Jewish Theatre staged a revival directed and choreographed by Richard Sabellico. The production starred
In 2002, Arcola Theatre in London, a former clothes factory, produced the show for its second anniversary. The director was Mehmet Ergen with co-director William Galinsky.[3]
In 2023, the Classic Stage Company staged a revival starring Santino Fontana, Judy Kuhn and Julia Lester.[4][5]
Plot
Harry Bogen is an ambitious, unscrupulous young businessman in the 1930s New York City garment industry. He will stop at nothing to get to the top: he lies to his mother and his long-suffering girlfriend, Ruthie Rivkin, who try to help him become a better person, but he embezzles company funds from Apex Modes and betrays his friends and partners. Harry leaves Ruthie to take up with Martha Mills, a gold-digging dancer in Club Rio Rhumba, as tough and hard as the diamonds Harry rewards her with. But Harry goes bankrupt and loses his fairweather friends. Only his mother and Ruthie stand by him, but there is a surprising ally to re-emerge from the past.
Casts
Original Broadway (1962)[6] | National Tour (1962)[7] | Off-Broadway Revival (1991)[8] | Off-Broadway Revival (2023)[9] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Harry Bogen | Elliot Gould | Larry Kert | Evan Pappas | Santino Fontana |
Maurice Pulvermacher | Jack Kruschen | Jay Sadler | Joel Brooks | Adam Grupper |
Miss Marmelstein | Barbra Streisand | Carol Arthur | Vicki Lewis | Julia Lester |
Ruthie Rivkin | Marilyn Cooper | Andrea Stevens | Carolee Carmello | Rebecca Naomi Jones |
Meyer Bushkin | Ken LeRoy | Michael Shaw | Richard Levine | Adam Chanler-Berat |
Mrs. Ida Bogen | Lillian Roth | Fritzi Burr | Patti Karr | Judy Kuhn |
Martha Mills | Sheree North | Nan Courtney | Deborah Carlson | Joy Woods |
Blanche Bushkin | Bambi Linn | Sandra Kent | Alix Korey | Sarah Steele |
Teddy Asch | Harold Lang | Tony Monaco | Jim Bracchitta
|
Greg Hildreth |
Songs
|
|
Awards and nominations
1962 Broadway Production
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1962 | Tony Awards | Best Featured Actress in a Musical | Barbra Streisand | Nominated |
2023 Off-Broadway Production
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Revival | Pending | |
Outstanding Leading Performer in a Musical | Santino Fontana | Pending | ||
Drama League Awards |
Outstanding Revival of a Musical | Pending | ||
Outer Critics Circle Awards | Outstanding Revival of a Musical | Pending | ||
Outstanding Featured Performer in a Musical | Judy Kuhn | Pending |
Recording
The
Goddard Lieberson, who produced the Wholesale cast album for Columbia Records, signed Streisand to a contract, and her first solo album was released two months after the show closed.
Response
The musical garnered mixed reviews and lost money despite a run of 300 performances. As theatre historian Ken Mandelbaum noted, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying had opened five months earlier with a similar, but more palatable, story. J. Pierrepont Finch is a much more "cuddly betrayer... and audiences were less willing to confront Wholesale's unflinching portrayal of Harry's little world of "men and ulcers on parade... that shouldn't detract from the fact that it was a daring and distinctive musical.".[11]
Howard Taubman of The New York Times wrote that the show generated a "lot of momentum" and added, "It is spirited in its appreciation of the garment-trade milieu, and both winning and tearfully sentimental in its treatment of Jewish folks and some of their Bronx folkways." He thought the score was pleasant, using "folklife motifs to distill the flavor of Jewish life." Saving the most lavish praise for last, he wrote that Streisand was the "evening's find... a girl with an oafish expression, a loud irascible voice and an arpeggiated laugh. Miss Streisand is a natural comedienne."[12]
The Time critic observed, "Wholesale relies heavily on Jewish folk and speech ways. But as comedy, Jewish dialect is in awkward transition, no longer funny and not yet English. Harold Rome's score is drab and his lyrics resemble either singing dialogue or nursery rhymes... Harold Lang and Sheree North make a scorching sex rite out of 'What's In It for Me?'... Barbra Streisand trips the show into stray laughs. For the rest, Wholesale is as quiet as Seventh Avenue on Yom Kippur."[13]
Notes
- from the original on May 25, 2015.
- ^ Internet Off-Broadway listing lortel.org, accessed July 30, 2009
- ^ Listing arcolatheatre.com
- ^ Gans, Andrew. "Santino Fontana and Judy Kuhn Will Star in Classic Stage Company's I Can Get It for You Wholesale Revival" playbill.com, March 22, 2023, accessed July 21, 2023
- ^ Gans, Andrew. "Into the Woods Tony Nominee Julia Lester Will Be Miss Marmelstein in Off-Broadway's I Can Get It for You Wholesale Revival" playbill.com, June 8, 2023, accessed July 21, 2023
- ^ "I Can Get It for You Wholesale (Original Broadway Production, 1962) | Ovrtur". ovrtur.com. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
- ^ "I Can Get It for You Wholesale (National Tour, 1962) | Ovrtur". ovrtur.com. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
- ^ "I Can Get It for You Wholesale (Off-Broadway Revival, 1991) | Ovrtur". ovrtur.com. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
- ^ Levitt, Hayley. "I Can Get It for You Wholesale Completes Casting for CSC Revival" TheaterMania, July 26, 2023, accessed September 5, 2023
- )
- ^ Mandelbaum, Ken. "Insider: The Way Things Are: I Can Get It For You Wholesale" broadway.com, October 14, 2005
- ^ Taubman, Howard. "Theatre: I Can Get It For You Wholesale Opens", The New York Times, March 23, 1962, p. 29
- ^ "Delousing of Harry Bogen," Time Magazine, March 30, 1962
References
- Guinness Who's Who of Stage Musicals, editor Colin Larkin, ISBN 0-85112-756-8
- 'I Can Get It For You Wholesale" interview and production notes, barbra-archives.com Archived February 3, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- Playbill from the Shubert Theatre