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FUTURE
SHOWS |
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The Hexagon
Show - January 2009
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HORTON THE MOVIE
OFFICAL SITE

BUY THE SEUSSICAL CD
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Show
Information
Seussical

Character
Breakdown:
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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.
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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.'
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HORTON THE
ELEPHANT
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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THE
WICKERSHAM
BROTHERS
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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.
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THE WHOS
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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.
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JUNGLE
CREATURES
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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.
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Seussical

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

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
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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:
-
Overture
-
Scrap
-
It's A
Woman's
World
-
Man
-
Big-Ass
Rock
-
Life
With
Harold
-
Big
Black
Man
-
You Rule
My World
-
Michael
Jordan's
Ball
-
Jeanette's
Showbiz
Number
-
Breeze
Off the
River
-
The
Goods
-
You Walk
With Me
-
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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