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The Hexagon Show - January 2009

HORTON THE MOVIE OFFICAL SITE



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Show Information

Seussical
Music Theatre International - MTI

Character Breakdown:
THE CAT IN THE HAT is the essence of mischief, fun and imagination. The Cat stirs things up, causes trouble, but always sets things right again, helping JoJo to discover the power of his imagination as they create the story for the show together. Look for a physically adept actor to play the Cat, one who will be able to play many comic cameos and is comfortable improvising with an audience.
JOJO is a "Thinker"--a smart child with a wild imagination. He can be played as being a little bit awkward, a little bit of a loner, or simply a rambunctious kid whose 'Thinks' get him into constant trouble. By the end of the show, he learns what it means to be a responsible member of his world, using the power and possibilities of his own 'Thinks.'
HORTON THE ELEPHANT A gentle giant, rotund and appealing. Think of him as a big-hearted blue collar guy who is steadfast and responsible and always tries to do the right thing for his friends. He is imaginative and receptive to the world around him. He is very un-self-conscious. Horton's view of the world never changes--he believes in its goodness. But by the end of the show, without even realizing it, he is ready to become a parent.
GERTRUDE McFUZZ Very self-conscious and aware that her one-feather tail isn't perfect. Gertrude changes during the show from a vain, neurotic, nervous and shy bird into one with the power to protect and care for a baby elephant bird and commit herself to Horton. In other words, she stops worrying about her looks and grows up.
MAYZIE LA BIRD Self-centered, selfish and vain, Mayzie will never admit to her own flaws. She manipulates anyone she can (especially Horton) into doing what she wants. But Mayzie isn't all bad. In giving up her egg to Horton once and for all, she has a moment of generosity--she realizes she isn't the kind of person who'd be a good parent, and she does the best thing she can do for the egg.
SOUR KANGAROO She isn't really sour at all. She's just got a lot of attitude. She's loud, brassy and a lot of fun.
GENERAL GENGUS KHAN SCHMITZ General Schmitz is bursting with pride at the military academy he runs, and the boys he turns out. He is not sadistic, mean or abusive. He is proud! He is doing the right thing for his boys! He is making the world a better place! This makes him a comic character, because it's clear he's so misguided. Please don't play him as a villain or bully. By the end of the show, he's discovered that making war may not be the right thing to do, and that adults can learn from children as well.
THE WICKERSHAM BROTHERS These are not bad guys! They're simply a lot like kids who tease, play pranks and get a kick out of making mischief, although often at others' expense. They enjoy hanging around with one another, making music together on the street corner, and playing off one another. Encourage each of your actors to find his own Wickersham persona.
THE WHOS They're a lot like you and me only so small as to be invisible. Don't think of them as cute midgets or weird little aliens. They should be played for inherent humanity. This goes for MR. and MRS. MAYOR, who are parents trying hard to raise a difficult child in a difficult world. They may get aggravated with Jojo, but they love him dearly and try to do the right thing, even if it turns out to be a mistake. Encourage everyone playing a Who to try and create his or her own, unique character.
JUNGLE CREATURES No matter how these actors are costumed, please ask each one to create a distinct human persona. They are real people at heart, just like us, even though they may be described as animal characters. We discourage masks and literal "animal costumes." Be imaginative. Be Wild. Be simple.


Seussical
Music Theatre International - MTI

To hear a brief clip in Windows Media format from a specific song click on the song title.

Songs:
 
  • Overture
  • Orchestra
  • Oh, The Thinks You Can Think
  • The Cat In The Hat, Company
  • Horton Hears A Who*
  • Bird Girls, Horton, Citizens of the Jungle of Nool
  • Biggest Blame Fool
  • Sour Kangaroo, Horton, Wickersham Brothers, Bird Girls, Gertrude McFuzz, Mayzie LaBird, Citizens of the Jungle of Nool, The Cat
  • Here On Who
  • Mayor of Whoville, Mrs. Mayor, The Grinch, Whos, Horton
  • It's Possible (McElligot's Pool)*
  • JoJo, The Cat, Fish Chorus
  • How To Raise A Child
  • Mayor, Mrs. Mayor
  • The Military
  • Gen. Genghis Kahn Schmitz, JoJo, Cadets
  • Alone In The Universe
  • Horton, JoJo
  • The One Feather Tail Of Miss Gertrude McFuzz
  • Gertrude
  • Amayzing Mayzie
  • Mayzie, Gertrude, Bird Girls
  • Amayzing Gertrude
  • Gertrude, The Cat, Bird Girls
  • Monkey Around
  • Wickersham Brothers
  • Chasing The Whos*
  • Horton, Sour Kangaroo, Bird Girls, Wickersham Brothers, The Cat, Vlad Vladikoff, Whos
  • How Lucky You Are
  • The Cat
  • Notice Me Horton
  • Gertrude, Horton
  • How Lucky You Are (Mayzie's Reprise)
  • Mayzie, Horton, The Cat
  • Horton Sits On The Egg*/Act 1 Finale
  • Company
  • Egg, Nest, And Tree*
  • Sour Kangaroo, Bird Girls, Wickersham Brothers, The Cat, The Cat's Helpers, Hunters
  • The Circus McGurkus
  • The Cat, Horton, Circus McGurkus Animals and Performers
  • The Circus On Tour
  • Horton
  • Mayzie In Palm Beach
  • Mayzie, The Cat, Horton
  • Solla Sollew
  • Horton, Animals and Performers, Mayor, Mrs. Mayor, Cadets
  • The Who's Christmas Pagaent
  • The Grinch, Whos
  • A Message From The Front
  • Gen.Schmitz, Mayor, Mrs. Mayor, Cadets
  • Havin' A Hunch*
  • The Cat, JoJo, Hunches
  • All For You
  • Gertrude, Bird Girls
  • The People Versus Horton The Elephant
  • Horton, Sour Kangaroo, Wickersham Brothers, Judge Yertle the Turtle, Bird Girls, Gertrude, Mayor, Mrs. Mayor, JoJo, Whos, The Cat
  • Finale/Oh, The Thinks You Can Think
  • Company
  • Green Eggs And Ham*
  • Company

    Seussical
    Music Theatre International - MTI

    Book by: Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty
    Co-Conceived by: Eric Idle
    Lyrics by: Lynn Ahrens
    Music by: Stephen Flaherty
    Co-Conceived by Lynn Ahrens, Stephen Flaherty and Eric Idle.


    Based on the works of Dr. Seuss

    A strange and fantastic red-and-white striped top hat appears on an empty stage, full of possibilities. A Boy enters and is drawn toward the magical hat. He begins imagining what type of wonderful person would wear such a hat, when The Cat in the Hat suddenly materializes! “You’ve got quite a mind for your age,” quips the Cat as he/she begins singing about the power of imagination (“Oh The Thinks You Can Think”). Throughout the fun and silly song, famous Seussian characters are introduced who will figure in the musical: Horton the Elephant, Gertrude McFuzz—the bird with the one feather tail, the Whos of Whoville—including the Mayor and his Wife, the General Genghis Kahn Schmitz, Mayzie La Bird, Sour Kangaroo and the Citizens of the Jungle of Nool. As the energizing opening number comes to a close, the Boy and the Cat use their imaginations to transport everyone to the Jungle of Nool for the first adventure (“Horton Hears A Who”).

    Horton is the only one in the jungle with large and sensitive enough ears to hear the tiny citizens of Whoville. They are crying for help as their little planet, the size of a speck of dust, floats aimlessly through air. Horton vows at once to help them and places Whoville safely onto a soft clover, just as Sour Kangaroo and her baby enter the scene. Sour Kangaroo thinks Horton is crazy for talking to and protecting a speck of dust and she lets him and the rest of the jungle know about it (“Biggest Blame Fool”). The rascally Wickersham Brothers—a group of mischievous monkeys—join in on the fun of teasing Horton. The one person who stands up for Horton, his neighbor Gertrude McFuzz, is not noticed by anyone, most of all Horton.

    Horton is left alone with his ‘inhabited’ clover and discovers much more about the Whos and their tiny town of Whoville (“Here On Who”). He assures them of his belief that “a person’s a person no matter how small.” The Cat in the Hat, who is continuously present, throws the Boy into the story as JoJo, son to Mr. and Mrs. Mayor of Whoville. They are both very unhappy with JoJo because too many of his ‘thinks’ have gotten him into trouble at school. They send him to bed, but the Cat in the Hat has another idea (“Oh, The Thinks You Can Think” [Reprise]). JoJo’s mind begins imagining again and instead of the bathtub, he’s swimming in McElligot’s pool full of fantastical fish (It’s Possible”)! The fun is interrupted when Mr. and Mrs. Mayor scold JoJo for flooding the house with bathwater. With JoJo finally in bed, his parents lament the change in him since his ‘thinks’ began (“How To Raise A Child”). The Cat in the Hat gives them an idea to help solve JoJo’s problem and the next morning they introduce their son to General Genghis Kahn Schmitz (“The Military”). After a long and very tough first day at military school, JoJo sits alone in his bunk while simultaneously, Horton sits alone guarding the clover (“Alone In The Universe”). Eventually Horton and JoJo hear each other and become friends when they realize their imaginations are so much alike.

    In another part of the jungle, Gertrude has just written her four hundred and thirty-seventh love song about Horton (“The One Feather Tail Of Miss Gertrude McFuzz”). She believes Horton doesn’t notice her because of her pathetically small and uninteresting tail. Mayzie appears and offers advice by telling her story (“Amayzing Mayzie”), which leads Gertrude to Doctor Dake and his pills for ‘amayzing’ feathers. After taking several pills, Gertrude is very happy as her tail begins to grow (“Amayzing Gertrude”), but the Cat in the Hat warns that trouble is brewing.

    The Wickersham Brothers are up to no good (“Monkeying Around”) and they decide to grab the clover with Whoville on it. A chase begins (“Chasing The Whos”) involving Horton, the Wickershams, Sour Kangaroo and the Bad Girls. The Wickershams eventually hand off the clover to Vlad Vladikoff, the eagle, and he taunts and teases, flying and swooping until he drops it. As the clover plummets toward the ground, the Cat in the Hat freezes the action (“How Lucky You Are”), then unfreezes the action and the Whos drop directly onto an enormous field of clover. Though the situation looks bleak, Horton begins looking for the Whos. Gertrude has followed the chase and arrives with her new tail, determined to tell Horton how she truly feels (“Notice Me, Horton”). Horton does not notice and just continues looking for the Whos in the clover. Gertrude leaves rejected and sad. We soon see Mayzie looking bored, sitting up on a nest (“How Lucky You Are” [Reprise]) and she convinces Horton to sit on the nest for her while she takes a brief vacation (“Horton Sits On The Egg”).

    Seasons pass and Horton is still stuck sitting on the egg, the Whos are still lost in the clover and Gertrude still cannot get Horton to notice her and her very long tail! (“Horton’s Dilemma/The Hunters”). Hunters suddenly arrive to capture Horton and the egg and because of Gertrude’s now long and heavy tail, she cannot fly to help Horton. Chaos begins until the Cat freezes the tableau and Horton, Gertrude, the Cat and all the Whos send the audience out to intermission (“How Lucky You Are” [Second Reprise]).

    As the orchestra tunes up again, we realize that the conductor is the Cat in the Hat. The music becomes increasingly wild and out of control—pages fly, the baton goes crazy, the Cat does his/her tricks—until the Cat finally regains control to actually begin Act Two (“Seussical Entr’Acte”).

    The Boy runs on to question the Cat about the future of Horton, the egg and JoJo—but the Cat just sends the Boy back into the story (as JoJo) without any indication as to what will happen next.

    Horton is still surrounded by hunters as he sits on Mayzie’s egg up in the tree. Though the tiny town of Whoville was damaged in the “fall”, the military school continues to march. JoJo marches, wondering what the point of marching is when their world is in ruins. Back in the jungle, Gertrude is extremely worried about Horton, but can hardly walk without help because her tail is so long and heavy. All the jungle characters watch as Horton, still on the tree nest, is carried away by the hunters (“Egg, Nest and Tree”). After a long, arduous journey, Horton arrives in New York where he is auctioned off to the circus.

    The Cat enters as Mr. McGurkus who proceeds to introduce us to his fantastical circus with Horton as his main attraction (“The Circus McGurkus”). As the circus rambles throughout the country, Horton worries about JoJo and Whoville and wonders when Mayzie will return to her egg; he needs her back now (“The Circus On Tour/How Lucky You Are” [Reprise]). The circus arrives in Palm Beach, where we find Mayzie under a palm tree bemoaning the monotony of vacationing (“Mayzie In Palm Beach”). She decides she needs a change of scenery and heads to the circus, where she runs into Horton who begs her to take back her egg. Mayzie sees Horton’s adventure with the egg as a great success and decides Horton would be a better parent for her egg than she could ever be (“Amayzing Horton”), so she gives him the egg for good. Horton accepts the responsibility of caring for the egg (“Alone In The Universe” [Reprise]), even though he worries about JoJo and the Whos. He sings the egg a lullaby (“Solla Sollew”) that is echoed by JoJo and Mr. and Mrs. Mayor, as JoJo writes, and his parents read, his letter from military school.

    The next morning, General Schmitz and his military cadets head off to war to fight the ‘Butter Side Downers’ who eat their bread the wrong way (“Green Eggs and Ham II”). JoJo confronts the General about the ridiculousness of the war and quits, marching off in the direction of a minefield. We then hear an extremely loud explosion.

    Back in Whoville, the Christmas pageant is under way led by the Grinch (“Into The Whos’ Christmas Pageant”) and ends with the traditional finale (“The Grinch Carved The Roast Beast”). General Schmitz suddenly enters with his cadets and approaches Mr. and Mrs. Mayor with horrible news (“A Message From The Front/Solla Sollew” [Reprise]). JoJo has been lost in the war—a war which has become questionable in everyone’s eyes. In re-enacting JoJo’s departure, the Cat helps us discover that JoJo has survived, but is confused and lost (“JoJo Alone In The Universe”). Frightened, JoJo begins to blame the Cat for all his troubles, but the Cat helps him find his way home to the arms of his parents (“Havin’ A Hunch”).

    Far away at the circus, Horton is woken up by Gertrude, who has journeyed great distances and through much peril to find and rescue him. She tells him the reason for her tail mishap and her going through all these adventures is because she cares for him (“All For You”). She also has found the Whos’ clover! Horton finally notices that Gertrude is amazing. As he begins to communicate with the Whos again, he is interrupted by Sour Kangaroo and the Wickersham Brothers who make a citizens arrest and put Horton on trial for talking to a speck of dust and sitting on an egg. The trial begins (“The People Versus Horton The Elephant”) and everyone becomes more agitated as it progresses—especially Horton. When Judge Yertle (the Turtle) sentences Horton to the Nool Asylum and the speck of dust to be boiled in oil, Horton ‘trumpets’ his protest and tells the Whos they must yell to be heard to prove their existence. They try and they try, but still only Horton can hear them. Suddenly, JoJo comes up with a think: a new word to shout that will be heard by everyone—YOPP! At last, all the animals of Nool hear the tiny planet of Whoville and realize Horton was right and the people of Whoville realize what a great thinker JoJo is. Horton and Whoville are saved! Just then, the giant egg begins to crack and out comes an Elephant Bird. Horton looks to Gertrude for help and they agree to care for the creature together (“Yopp!/Alone In The Universe” [Reprise]).

    All is well in the Jungle of Nool and in Whoville, but many more adventures are likely to occur “if you open your mind, oh, the thinks you will find (“Oh, The Thinks You Can Think” [Reprise]). As the song ends, we find the Boy alone onstage with the red and white striped hat which embodies his imagination. As he puts it on, it falls over his eyes putting the stage into BLACKOUT

      Full
     

    THE FULL MONTY

    Musical in 2 Acts. Book by Terrence McNally; Music & lyrics by David Yazbek
    Based on the motion picture
    The Full Monty

    World Premiere - Old Globe Theater, San Diego June 1, 2000
    Eugene O'Neill Theatre, New York - October 26, 2000
    Prince of Wales Theatre, London - 20 March, 2002

    The Place: Buffalo, New York - The Time: The Present


    ACT ONE

    Georgie Bukatinsky bounds onto the stage of Tony Giordano's club and welcomes us to Girls' Night Out. "Let's hear it for gals who work!" While her husband is at home doing the dishes, she introduces us to the featured attraction of the evening-Buddy "Keno" Walsh - the personification of male physical perfection in an expensive business suit, though not for long. Soon enough, Keno is down to a G-string and accepting the cheers and screams (and dollar bills) from the women in the club. "Who says Buffalo doesn't rock?"

    While the women are having a night out, the guys are having a different kind of meeting. They're all out of work because the steel plant in town has closed, and they're at their union meeting house to pick up their weekly cheques. Their discontent is beginning to show, and Jerry Lukowski commiserates with his best friend, the hopelessly overweight Dave Bukatinsky, as well as the somewhat simple-minded but good-hearted Ethan Girard, and the sweet Malcolm MacGregor, who lives alone with his infirm mother - they all feel like so much scrap.

    After the meeting, Jerry, who shares custody of his 12-year-old son Nathan, takes him to the bus stop which is outside Tony Giordano's club. Nathan tells Jerry not to worry, that he will get a job. Jerry says that he knows he will, but he's "waiting for the right situation ... you don't want to see your old man bussing tables, do you?" Nathan's response is simply "I wouldn't mind." Nathan tells Jerry he loves him; Jerry responds in kind and tells Nathan to get on the bus. In the meantime, Dave has been admiring the pictures of Keno that are outside the club. Jerry dismisses Keno's physique as a choice "real guys don't look like that." When they overhear two women excitedly going into the club (and paying $50 to do so), Jerry asks the women what the strippers have that he doesn't have. "Just about everything" is their response. When Jerry finds out that Dave's wife is in the club watching, he insists that Dave go into the club and bring her out. Dave says he can't - he has to go home and do dishes, and besides it's ladies only, and Georgie organised the evening. But at Jerry's urging they sneak in through the window of the men's room.

    Once inside, the two hear the screams of the cheering women and then the sounds of Georgie and three friends entering the men's room because the line for the ladies' room is too long. Jerry and Dave take refuge in an empty stall while Georgie and her friends powder their noses. The three ladies are joined by Jerry's ex-wife Pam, and Jerry and Dave overhear revelations about each other from each of the ladies. The ladies leave, and Jerry and Dave soon find themselves confronted by Keno in a G-string making a quick change into a cowboy outfit. Keno mistakes Jerry for a new dancer for the evening, and Jerry acidly proclaims his heterosexuality. Keno bitchily dismisses him, and as Jerry takes a swing at Keno, he misses, and Keno slugs him, hard.

    After Keno leaves, Jerry begins brainstorming about the money Keno makes and that if he and Dave - "real men" - were to strip, they could clean up. Dave needs to be convinced, and Jerry does his best - after all, he's a man!

    The next day Jerry is served with papers threatening to take Nathan away from him because he is over two months behind in child support payments. Pam is now living in a nice neighbourhood with a more stable man, Teddy Slaughter, who has asked her to marry him. Pam tells Jerry that he should take any kind of job he can get and start to grow up. After an unpleasant confrontation with Teddy, Jerry leaves more determined than ever to make his stripping plan work.

    Jerry and Dave are jogging (or rather, Dave is accompanying Jerry as he trains) when they come upon Malcolm attempting suicide by asphyxiation. They save him and offer him alternative ways to commit suicide. Jerry invites Malcolm to join him in stripping and, since Malcolm has a part-time job as the night security guard at the abandoned steel plant, they now also have a place to rehearse.

    Jerry engages Nathan to find them a dance teacher, and Nathan takes them to a dance school where they meet their old boss Harold Nichols and his wife Vicki. They're brushing up on their "cha-cha" for a trip to Puerto Rico. Harold hasn't told Vicki that he has been out of work for the past six months, and through desperation and the hint of blackmail Harold agrees to become the guys' choreographer. But before he can agree to that, Vicki tells them all about life with Harold.

    The guys hold auditions and they aren't going well. However, their showbiz-savvy accompanist Jeanette Burmeister -ho simply showed up "piano and all" - tells them they'll know when the right guy shows up. "He'll glimmer." Enter Horse, a gnarled, depressing and seemingly arthritic 50-year-old man who seems to fulfil a certain kind of fantasy.

    Later, the good-natured Ethan shows up and openly proclaims that he can't dance or sing, but that he has something to offer. He drops his pants and Jeanette simply says, "Gentlemen, put on your sunglasses. We suddenly have a lot of glimmer."

    That night, while Georgie sleeps, Dave confronts his body image with a love song to his stomach. And, at the same time, Harold reflects on his adoration of Vicki.

    At the first rehearsal the following day, Harold is having a rough time getting the guys to do anything together. While Horse is off in the corner rehearsing "the funky chicken," Ethan and Malcolm bond over an affection for the film The Sound of Music. However, it is only when Harold reminds them that choreography is just like basketball that Jerry picks up an idea, and suddenly their moves become teamwork - as long as they are imagining that they're playing with Michael Jordan's Ball.

    ACT TWO

    At rehearsal a week later, the mistress of understatement, Jeanette, sings that "things could be better." To no avail, Ethan keeps insisting he can do Donald O'Connor's flip up a wall from Singin' in the Rain. And any attempt at choreography brings about disastrous results.

    In order to perform at Tony Giordano's club, Jerry needs to come up with $1,000 as a deposit. He tries to get it from Pam but she'll have none of it. Nathan, however, has money from his college savings account and gives it to Jerry. Jerry's love of his son is all-encompassing and overwhelming.

    Harold persuades Vicki to leave the house so that they can hold a rehearsal there. Jerry has given their group a name - Hot Metal. This is the day that the guys are going to take off all their clothes in front of each other for the first time. They are fraught with anxiety. When they are hypercritical of the sexy women in a Victoria's Secret catalogue, they realise that their audience might be just as critical of them.

    Nathan has gathered a small audience from a nearby nursing home for the final dress rehearsal at the steel plant, but as they are taking off their first layer of clothing they're raided by the police. In the confusion that follows, Malcolm and Ethan successfully escape to Malcolm's home where their attraction to one another is almost acknowledged, until Malcolm senses something is wrong with his mother. Pam and Teddy arrive at the police station to pick up Nathan, and it's very clear to everyone that even if Jerry were to come up with the child support money, he wouldn't be able to share custody of Nathan.

    At his mother's funeral, much to the surprise of Jerry and Dave and a few other mourners, Malcolm expresses his loneliness and longing, and finds that both will be ended by the warm heart and hand of Ethan.

    Jerry was afraid to disclose to the guys that sales for the show weren't going well. When told by a few women that the Buffalo Bills are playing that night, and, asked why after having seen "the real thing," they should want to see a bunch of amateur local guys strip, Jerry quickly says (much to the shock and disbelief of the guys), "We're different - we go all the way! You heard me. What do they call it? The Full Monty." Ticket sales start to take off.

    Jerry considers Dave a traitor for having taken a job at Wal-Mart, and their friendship is dissolved. When Dave returns home from his first day at work, Georgie, upon discovering part of his stripping costume, confronts him about it. When, embarrassed, he confesses what he had been up to with the guys, she is relieved and supports him. She reaffirms her love for him, and he for her. At the same time, when Vicki finds out that Harold has been out of work, she reminds him that she loves him for himself, and not for what he can buy her. Both couples find their marriages and their love on stronger ground than ever.

    It's the night of the show, and backstage at Tony Giordano's club nervousness runs high. A beautifully coifed Jeanette wishes all the guys good luck. Vicki tells them that Harold has got a job so he doesn't need to do this for the money, but she reminded him, "Harold, you have the rest of your life to wear a suit and tie - but only one night to be a member of Hot Metal!" Even Keno, just passing through town, shows up to see if the guys will really go all the way.

    Before they take their places Jerry decides that, since Dave chickened out, he also isn't going to do the show. But then Dave shows up and Jerry no longer has an excuse not to go through with it, except his old refrain - he's a failure. Nevertheless, the rest of the guys decide to give a good show, but not to do The Full Monty. They take their places on-stage and the number begins. While they're performing, Nathan confronts Jerry about why he isn't out there with the rest of the guys, and through a mixture of wisdom, passion and frank common sense, he tells his father, "This time don't be what everyone thinks you are - a loser." Jerry realises not only how much his son loves him, but that he can't think of himself in the same way ever again. He joins his friends on stage midway through the number and by the end of the show, we know that The Full Monty isn't just about showing off the outside, it's about what all of us have on the inside.

     

    Musical Numbers:

    1. Overture
    2. Scrap
    3. It's A Woman's World
    4. Man
    5. Big-Ass Rock
    6. Life With Harold
    7. Big Black Man
    8. You Rule My World
    9. Michael Jordan's Ball
    10. Jeanette's Showbiz Number
    11. Breeze Off the River
    12. The Goods
    13. You Walk With Me
    14. Let It Go

     

    Characters:

    George Bukatinsky
    Buddy "Keno" Walsh
    Reg Willoughby
    Jerry Lukowski
    Dave Bukatinsky
    Malcolm MacGregor
    Ethan Girard
    Nathan Lukowski
    Susan Hershey
    Joanie Lish
    Estelle Genovese
    Pam Lukowski
    Teddy Slaughter
    Molly MacGregor
    Harold Nichols
    Vicki Nichols
    Jeanette Burmeister
    Noah "Horse" T. Simmons
    Police Sergeant
    Minister
    Tony Giordano

    Discography:

    Original Broadway Cast - RCA Victor 09026-63739-2
     
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