HAPPY HUNTING
A Musical comedy in 2 acts, 16 scenes: Book by Howard Lindsay & Russel
Crouse: Music by Harold Karr: Lyrics by Matt Dubey Majestic Theatre, Broadway - 6 December, 1956 (408 perfs)
The story:
It's the wedding of the year. Grace Kelly of Philadelphia
is soon to be Princess Grace of Monaco. Liz Livingstone, the darling outcast
of Philadelphia's Main Line society, and her daughter, Beth, have come
to Monaco, along with a regiment of reporters, tourists, and Main Liners
to attend the wedding. Mrs. Sanford Stewart, Sr., the grande dame of the
Main Line, and her son, Sandy, are also in the tiny principality. Ostensibly
Sandy is there to check the faltering finances of the Hotel Riviera for
the ownership syndicate that Sandy's law firm represents.
Sandy and Beth meet outside the Palace gates while Liz
is trying to run down their tardy invitations to the wedding. As it turns
out, they were overlooked, but rather than admit the disappointment to
Beth, Liz stages the theft of all her clothes and makes international
headlines in her pyjamas and jewels. However, Liz confesses the truth
to Beth just before the hotel manager, Arturo, discovers the clothes stuffed
in a linen closet. There has been a witness to the crime, the hotel's
most honoured guest, the Duke of Granada. He, of course, immediately recognises
Liz and is puzzled by her actions.
She gives him the story straight from the shoulder and
in the next breath lines him up for a date with Beth. Meanwhile Sandy
has discovered the hotel's red ink closely matches the 'credit extended
the Duke over the last year. Arturo is proud to be one of the Duke's strongest
supporters. Sandy isn't sympathetic to the problems of high-living royalty
in exile and orders the Duke to pay up or get out. Liz is loaded and proposes
a marriage for money between the Duke and Beth. The Duke accepts and the
whole post-wedding crowd sails for the U.S.A. En route, Sandy, who is
also Liz's lawyer, is directed to work out the marriage agreement with
Arturo, who is now on the Duke's personal staff. By now the Duke is becoming
more and more enchanted with Liz while Sandy is agonisingly dealing away
his growing love for Beth (who toys with his predicament). Only after
Beth's icy status rejection by Sandy's mother does she resolve to go through
with her marriage to the Duke.
Meanwhile the Duke confesses to Liz that the best part
of the agreement will be his nearness to her. They kiss emotionally and
Liz is ready to switch the signals, but she has already baited the press,
and the Duke is forced to announce his engagement to Beth. Back in Philly
Liz is throwing a party to introduce the Duke. Even the Main Liners who
have snubbed Liz for years can't stay away from royalty. However, they
seek to embarrass her with a hunt (the vehicle of Liz's previous falling
out with society). But the plan backfires. Liz's showing convinces the
Duke that she's really the woman for him. Just as well, too, for Beth
has been secretly meeting Sandy, and they plan to elope. But when the
Duke tells Liz he wants her, she believes he only wants her money and
he storms out. However, they are reunited at the Hunt Ball where the Duke
renounces his claim to the throne of Spain to announce his engagement
to his delightful American commoner. Liz has really arrived.
|
Musical Numbers:
- Postage-stamp Principality
- Don't Tell Me
- It's Good to Be Here
- Mutual Admiration Society
- For Love or Money
- Bikini Dance
- It's Like a Beautiful Woman
- Wedding-of-the-Year Blues
- Mr. Livingstone
- If'n
- This Is What I Call Love
- A New-Fangled Tango
- She's Just Another Girl
- The Game of Love
- Happy Hunting
- I'm a Funny Dame
- This Much I Know
- Just Another Guy
- Everyone Who's Who's Who
|
Instrumentation:
Violin A-C, B-D, viola, cello, bass, pic (flute, clar, alto sax), clar
(alto sax, bass clar), tenor sax (flute, oboe, Eng. horn, clar), tenor
sax (clar, flute), bari sax (bassoon, bass clar), trumpet I-II, 111, trombone
1, II, horn, percussion, guitar, piano-conductor.
|
Cast:
32 parts, 6 principals, 3 featured roles.
Liz, powerful singer/actress who carries show
Sandy and Beth, romantic leads who sing well and dance (Beth does
dance solo).
Duke of Granada, middle-aged, classy actor who sings.
Arturo, character man.
Maud, character woman.
Mrs. Sanford Stewart, Sr., cold straight role.
Featured reporters, sing 2 numbers.
Separate singing and dancing choruses.
Total cast, 40-60, plus 1 trained horse (equine or human). |
Scenes and Sets:
2 acts, 17 scenes, 9 full stage
sets (original production used turntable), 3 scenic drops (1 transparent),
gangplank set piece. (Several sets could be converted to drops or partial
sets.)
ACT I
Scene 1: Outside the Palace Gates, Monaco.
Scene 2: Liz Livingstone's Suite, Hotel Riviera, Monaco.
Scene 3: Terrace of the Hotel Riviera.
Scene 4: Veranda of the Duke's Suite, Hotel Riviera.
Scene 5: The Quay.
Scene 6: The Ship's Bar.
Scene 7: Afterdeck of the Ship.
Scene 8: The Ship's Bar.
Scene 9: Afterdeck of the Ship.
ACT II Scene 1: The Garden of Liz Livingstone's Estate, Near
Philadelphia.
Scene 2: The Stables, Liz's Estate.
Scene 3: Summerhouse, Liz's Estate.
Scene 4: The Hunt Club.
Scene 5: Another Part of the Forest.
Scene 6: Liz's Boudoir.
Scene 7: A Corridor in the Hunt Club.
Scene 8: The Hunt Ball.
|
Period and Costumes
Mid 1950s: high society dresses, suits. Everyday beat-up clothes for
reporters, photographers, etc., uniforms for Monaco police sergeant, hotel
staff, the Duke's servants and confidants, waiter, ship's officers and
crew, bartender, stable groom. Duke's high style fashions. Casual deck
clothes, negligees, robes and other casual clothes, evening clothes, boots,
gaily colored hunt outfits, Goya period costumes for everyone attending
Hunt Ball.
|
Choreography:
Solo beach ball dance, tango, modern ballet, ballroom steps, soft shoe.
Lighting and special effects:
Thunderstorm, rain, rear-projected shadows of the hunt figures on horseback.
Recorded offstage playback.
|
Note:
This show is built around the marriage of Grace Kelly to the Prince of
Monaco and is in that sense topical for the time of its first production.
However, even if fictional names were used it would have little effect
on today's production. It was an added point of interest then, but now
of little value. The subject has always been Liz Livingstone. The show
could be updated or done as a period piece. Beth's beach ball dance solo
is extraneous.
|
|