CHAZY MUSIC THEATRE PRESENTS

Thursday March 22 - Sunday March 25 - 2012
News Flash:
Saturday Jan. 21, 2012
Live Improv Show a Smash Hit
Huge Turnout, Over $1000 Raised for Gypsy
Thanks to the
Completely Stranded Comedy Troupe & to the Weathercock Restaurant & Bar
GYPSY SYNOPSIS:
The
story starts in Seattle with stage mother, Rose, pushing her two
daughters into Uncle Jocko's Kiddie Show. June, her mother feels, is
the most likely to become a star. Louise is plainer and quieter; she
stands meekly in her sister's shadow. A new act called 'Baby June and
her Newsboys' is conceived by Rose, and the family is off to the 'big
time' in Los Angeles. The act steeped in star spangled banners, dancing
horses (Louise plays the rear end), and screaming newsboys moves to
Dallas, Akron, New York, Buffalo and Omaha. Along the way Rose meets
Herbie, a theatrical agent, and hires him as manager. He makes himself
father to the troupe, sharing with them their meals of chow mein,
Rose's favorite food. Rose scrimps as she schemes and scrambles for
bookings and billings to maintain their hand to mouth existence. She
sleeps her charges six in a dingy hotel room and makes their costumes
from hotel blankets. Her object is to make her two penniless girls into
world stars. The girls begin to grow up and the act becomes 'Dainty
June and her Newsboys.' Unfortunately its quality does not improve.
Bookings are cancelled and the act moves on.
Louise
wishes that Momma would marry a plain man so they could settle down.
Herbie proposes but is rejected. June elopes with Tulsa, one of the
boys in the act. Rose sets out to make Louise into the star. She bursts
into new enthusiasm with the rousing number Everything's Coming Up
Roses. Behind Rose lies a worrying sense of doom; a feeling that she
never will fulfill her dream of stardom for her girls because it is
really a dream of stardom for herself.
Finally
the troupe reaches the bottom, a burlesque house in Wichita. Rose
laments that she would rather starve than perform there. Louise
realizes there is no vaudeville left except for burlesque. Here the
clumsy Louise shoots into stardom by becoming something different: a
ladylike stripper. Three strippers dressed respectively in a ballet
costume, a trumpet and well placed electric light bulbs are used in a
most exaggerated, but very funny number, You Gotta Get a Gimmick, to
indicate the difference between the usual brassy stripper and the very
elegant Louise. At last Louise breaks away from her mother and goes out
on her own as Gypsy Rose Lee.
Rose
bursts into the plaintive Rose's Turn in which she sings of her
suppressed talents that she has sacrificed to further the careers of
her unappreciative daughters.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
EXTRA
INFORMATION GYPSY originally played for 702 performances on Broadway at
the Broadway Theatre starring Ethel Merman as Rose. It played for 300
performances in London at the Piccadilly Theatre with Angela Lansbury
as Rose. This extremely successful show has been revived on Broadway no
less than four times: In 1974 with Angela Lansbury, in 1989 with Tyne
Daly, in 2003 with Bernadette Peters, and in 2008 with Patti LuPone,
all as Rose.
Individuals seeking more information, please contact the director, Jason Borrie, by emailing him at jaborrie@gmail.com