This article is about the musical. The film article is A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (film)
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart.
Inspired by the farces of the ancient Roman playwright Plautus (251–183 BC), specifically Pseudolus
, Miles Gloriosus
and Mostellaria
, it tells the bawdy story of a slave named Pseudolus and his attempts to win his freedom by helping his young master woo the girl next door. The plot displays many classic elements of farce, including puns, the slamming of doors, cases of mistaken identity (frequently involving characters disguising themselves as one another), and satirical comments on social class. The title derives from the line that vaudeville comedians often used to begin a story: "A funny thing happened on the way to the theater".
The musical's original 1962 Broadway run won several Tony Awards, including Best Musical and Best Book. A Funny Thing
has enjoyed several Broadway and West End revivals and was made into a successful film. It is a popular choice for school and community theatre.
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A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM TICKETS
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Productions
Original Broadway production
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
opened on
Broadway on May 8, 1962 at the
Alvin Theatre. Directed by
George Abbott and produced by
Hal Prince, it ran for 964 performances.
The show's creators originally wanted
Phil Silvers in the lead role of
Pseudolus, but he turned them down, allegedly because he would have to perform onstage without his glasses, and his vision was so poor that he feared tripping into the orchestra pit. So did
Milton Berle. Eventually,
Zero Mostel was cast.
Out of town during pre-Broadway tryouts, the show was attracting little business and not playing well. Director and choreographer
Jerome Robbins was called in by Abbott and Prince to give advice and make changes. The biggest change Robbins demanded was a new opening number to replace "Love Is in the Air" and introduce the show as a bawdy, wild comedy;
Stephen Sondheim complied, creating the song "Comedy Tonight." From that point on, the show was a success.
Along with Mostel, the musical featured a cast of seasoned performers, including
Jack Gilford (Mostel's friend and fellow blacklist member),
David Burns,
John Carradine,
Ruth Kobart and
Raymond Walburn. The young lovers were played by
Brian Davies and
Preshy Marker.
Karen Black, originally cast as the ingenue, was replaced out of town.
The show won several
Tony Awards: best musical, best actor, best supporting actor (Burns), best book, and best director. The score,
Sondheim's first time on Broadway writing both words and music, was coolly received, however, not even garnering a nomination.
Motion picture adaptation
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
was made into a
musical film in 1966, directed by
Richard Lester, with
Zero Mostel and
Jack Gilford re-creating their stage roles and
Phil Silvers starred in an expanded role as
Marcus Lycus.
David Burns did not return for the film role of
Senex.
Broadway revivals
In 1972 there was a critically well-received Broadway
revival, directed by co-author
Burt Shevelove and starring
Phil Silvers as Pseudolus.
Larry Blyden, who played Hysterium, the role created by Jack Gilford, also co-produced. Two songs were dropped from the show, and two new Sondheim songs were added. The new songs included in this production had been added during a 1971 Los Angeles production: "Echo Song" (sung by Hero and Philia), and "Farewell" (sung by Domina as she and Senex depart for the country). The production ran 156 performances, but had to close soon after Phil Silvers suffered a stroke. The show won Tonys for Silvers and Blyden.
The musical was also revived with great success in 1996, starring
Nathan Lane as Pseudolus; he was replaced later in the run by
Whoopi Goldberg and also by
David Alan Grier. The production, directed by
Jerry Zaks, ran 715 performances. Lane won the Best Actor Tony for his work.
Every actor who has opened in the role of Pseudolus on Broadway (Zero Mostel, Phil Silvers and Nathan Lane) won a Best Actor Tony for their performance. In addition,
Jason Alexander, who performed as Pseudolus in one scene in
Jerome Robbins' Broadway, also won a Tony for Best Actor in a Musical.
Other productions
The
Stephen Sondheim Center for the Performing Arts produced a limited-run revival of the musical from January 11 to 27, 2008. The production was directed by Randal K. West, with Justin Hill as musical director and Adam Cates as choreographer. The cast featured
Richard Kind as Pseudolus, Joel Blum as Senex,
Stephen DeRosa as Marcus Lycus, Sean McCall as Hysterium, and Steve Wilson as Miles Gloriosus. It also featured Diana Upton-Hill, Ryan Gaffney, Stephen Mark Crisp, Jack Kloppenborg and Margret Clair.
[1] [2] [3]
The
Stratford Shakespeare Festival in
Stratford, Ontario, Canada has announced a production for June 11 to November 1, 2009, with Des McAnuff directing and
Wayne Cilento choreographer.
[4]
The Chung Ying Theatre Company in Hong Kong has staged a Cantonese version of the musical at
Kwai Tsing Theatre, to celebrate the company's 30th anniversary. It is directed by
Chung King Fai and Ko Tin Lung and runs from 14th to 21st March 2009.
[5]
West End productions
The show was presented three times in London's West End. The 1963 production and its 1986 revival were staged at the
Strand Theatre and the
Piccadilly Theatre respectively, and featured
Frankie Howerd starring as Pseudolus. (Howerd went on to star in
Up Pompeii!, a 1969 British television comedy series set in ancient Pompeii, as the slave Lurcio, whose character was based on Pseudolus'.) In 2004 there was a limited-run revival at the
Royal National Theatre starring
Desmond Barrit as Pseudolus,
Philip Quast as Miles Gloriosus,
Hamish McColl as Hysterium and
Isla Blair as Domina (who had previously played Philia in the 1963 production).
Plot
In ancient Rome some neighbors live in three adjacent houses. In the center is the house of Senex, who lives there with wife Domina, son Hero and several slaves, including head slave Hysterium and the musical's main character Pseudolus, who wishes to buy, win, or steal his freedom. He is the slave of young Hero, son of Senex and Domina. One of the neighboring houses is owned by Marcus Lycus, who is a buyer and seller of beautiful women; the other belongs to the ancient Erronius, who is abroad searching for his long-lost children (stolen in
infancy by
pirates).
One day, Senex and Domina go on a trip and leave Pseudolus in charge of Hero. Hero confides in Pseudolus that he is in love with the lovely Philia, one of the courtesans in the brothel next door. Pseudolus promises to help him win Philia's love in exchange for his freedom. Unfortunately (as the two find out when they pay a visit on Lycus), Philia has been promised to the renowned warrior Captain Miles Gloriosus, who is on his way to claim her. Pseudolus, an excellent liar, uses her cheery disposition to convince Lycus that she has picked up a
plague from
Crete, which causes its victims to smile endlessly in its terminal stages. By offering to isolate her in Senex's house, he is able to give Philia and Hero some time alone together, and the two fall in love. But Philia insists that, even though she is in love with Hero, she must honor her contract with the Captain, for "that is the way of a courtesan." Undeterred, Pseudolus comes up with a plan to slip Philia a sleeping potion that will render her unconscious. He will then tell Lycus that she has died of the Cretan plague, and will offer to remove the body. Hero will come along, and they will stow away on a ship headed for Greece. Satisfied with his plan, Pseudolus steals Hysterium's book of potions and has Hero read him the recipe for the sleeping potion; the only ingredient he lacks is "mare's sweat," and Pseudolus goes off in search of some.
Unexpectedly, Senex returns home early from his trip, and knocks three times on his own door. This was the signal that Pseudolus had told Philia he'd use to indicate Miles Gloriosus arrival. She comes out of the house, and, thinking that Senex is the Captain, offers herself up to him. Surprised but game, Senex instructs Philia to wait in the house for him, and she does. Hysterium arrives to this confusion, and tells Senex that Philia is the new maid that he has hired. Pseudolus returns, having procured the necessary mare sweat; seeing that Senex has returned unexpectedly and grasping the need to keep him out of the way, Pseudolus discreetly sprinkles some of the horse-sweat onto him, then suggests that the road trip has left Senex in dire need of a bath. Taking the bait, Senex instructs Hysterium to draw him a bath in the long-abandoned house of Erronius. But while this is happening, Erroneous returns home, finally having given up the search for his long-lost children. Hysterium, desperate to keep him out of the house where his master is bathing, tells the old man that his house has become haunted -- a story seemingly confirmed by the sound of Senex singing in his bath. Erroneous immediately determines to have a soothsayer come and banish the spirit from his house, and Pseudolus obligingly poses as one, telling Erroneous that in order to banish the spirit, he must travel seven times around the seven hills of Rome (thus keeping the old man occupied and out of the way for quite awhile).
When Miles Gloriosus arrives to claim his courtesan-bride, Pseudolus hides Philia on the roof of Senex's house; told that she has "escaped," Lycus is terrified to face the Captain's wrath. Pseudolus offers to impersonate Lycus and talk his way out of the mess but, his ingenuity flagging, he ends up merely telling the Captain that Philia has disappeared, and that he, "Lycus," will set out in search of her. Displeased and suspicious, Miles insists that his soldiers accompany Pseudolus, but the wily slave is able to "lose" them in Rome's winding streets.
Complicating matters further, Domina returns from her trip early, suspicious that her husband Senex is "up to something low." She disguises herself in virginal white robes and a veil (much like Philia's) in order to try and catch Senex being unfaithful. Pseudolus convinces Hysterium to help him by dressing in
drag and pretending to be Philia, "dead" from the plague. Unfortunately, it turns out that Miles Gloriosus has just returned from Crete, where there is of course no actual plague. With the ruse thus revealed, the main characters run for their lives, resulting in a madcap chase across the stage with both Miles and Senex pursuing all three "Philia"s (Domina, Hysterium, and the actual Philia -- all wearing identical white robes and veils). Meanwhile, the courtesans from the house of Marcus Lycus -- who had been recruited as mourners at "Philia"'s ersatz funeral -- have escaped, and Lycus sends his
eunuchs out to bring them all back, adding to the general pandemonium.
Finally, the Captain's troops are able to round everyone up. His plot thoroughly unraveled, Pseudolus appears to be in deep trouble -- but Erronius, midway through his fourth circuit of the Roman hills, shows up fortuitously to discover that Miles Gloriosus and Philia are wearing matching rings which mark them as his long-lost children. Her betrothal to the Captain obviously nullified by the unexpected revelation that he's actually her brother, Philia weds Hero; Pseudolus gets his freedom, Gloriosus receives twin courtesans to replace Philia, Erronius gets his children, and a general happy ending prevails.
Characters
- Pseudolus: A Roman slave, owned by Hero, who seeks to win his/her freedom by helping his/her young master win the heart of Philia. While originally written as a male role, it has been performed by female cast as well.
- Hero: Young son of Senex who falls in love with the virgin, Philia.
- Philia: (Filia, Latin for "daughter"; also, "Philia" is the Greek word for "love.") A virgin in the house of Marcus Lycus, and Hero's love interest.
- Senex: (Latin for "old man," or "senile") A Roman senator living in a less fashionable suburb of Rome.
- Marcus Lycus: A purveyor of courtesans, who operates from the house to the left of Senex. (Name based on Lycus, the pimp in Plautus's Poenulus.)
- Domina: (Latin for "mistress") The wife of Senex. A manipulative, shrewish woman who is loathed by even her husband.
- Erronius: (Latin for "wrong") Senex's elderly neighbor who has spent the past twenty years searching for his two children, kidnapped in infancy by pirates.
- Gymnasia: (Latin for "Nude", though could be a play on words for "Gymnasium") A courtesan from the house of Lycus with whom Pseudolus falls in love.
- Miles Gloriosus: (Latin for "boastful soldier," the archetype of the braggart soldier in Roman comedies) A captain in the Roman army to whom Marcus Lycus has promised Philia.
- Hysterium: (Latin for "Hysterical", or "Anxious", the suffix "-um" makes the name neuter, and the character's gender is often mistaken throughout the piece) The chief slave in the house of Senex.
- Tintinabula: (Latin for "Bell") A jingling, bell-wearing courtesan in the house of Lycus.
- Vibrata: (Latin for "Vibrant") A wild, vibrant courtesan in the house of Lycus.
- Geminae: (Latin for "Twins") Twin courtesans in the house of Lycus.
- Panacea: (Latin for "Cure All") A courtesan in the house of Lycus.
- Proteans: Choristers who play multiple roles (slaves, citizens, soldiers, and eunuchs). They accompany Pseudolus in "Comedy Tonight". On Broadway, three people played all of these roles
Songs
- "Comedy Tonight" — Pseudolus and Company
- "Love, I Hear" — Hero
- "Free" — Pseudolus and Hero
- "The House of Marcus Lycus" — Lycus and Pseudolus
- "Lovely" — Philia and Hero
- "Pretty Little Picture" — Pseudolus, Hero, and Philia
- "Everybody Ought to Have a Maid" — Pseudolus, Senex, Lycus, and Hysterium
- "I'm Calm" — Hysterium
- "Impossible" — Senex and Hero
- "Bring Me My Bride" — Miles Gloriosus and Company
- "That Dirty Old Man" — Domina
- "That'll Show Him" — Philia
- "Lovely" (reprise) — Pseudolus and Hysterium
- "Funeral Sequence" — Pseudolus, Miles Gloriosus and Company
- "Finale" — Company
Note: The song "Love Is in the Air" was originally intended as the opening number. The song was cut from the show and replaced with "Comedy Tonight".
[6] The song was later featured in the film
The Birdcage
(1996) and performed by
Robin Williams and
Christine Baranski.
Cultural References
In the second season of the AMC Series
Mad Men,
which takes place in 1962, several characters refer to the play. For example,
Don Draper runs into his former mistress, Rachel Menken, at
Sardi's. Rachel and her new husband are on their way to see the show on Broadway.
Notes
- gazettonline article, 1/14/08
- theatermania.com article, 1/4/08
- Gans, Andrew."Tragedy Tomorrow, Comedy Tonight: Forum Begins Run at Sondheim Center", playbill.com, January 11, 2008
- Stratford Festival schedule
- [1]
- Cut songs at sondheim.com
References
- gazettonline article, 1/14/08
- theatermania.com article, 1/4/08
- Gans, Andrew."Tragedy Tomorrow, Comedy Tonight: Forum Begins Run at Sondheim Center", playbill.com, January 11, 2008
- Stratford Festival schedule
- [1]
- Cut songs at sondheim.com