When Aubrey Tanqueray marries for the second time; he knows that his new wife; Paula; is a lsquo;woman with a pastrsquo;. But he has no idea how that past will catch up with him in the end.More probing than Oscar Wilde; more accessible than Ibsen; Pinerorsquo;s The Second Mrs Tanqueray (1893) is one of the masterpieces of the Victorian theatre: sexy; dramatic; funny and very moving.
#1753048 in eBooks 2002-11-19 2012-07-26File Name: B009GIPI4U
Review
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. IndispensibleBy William WhyteThis is one of the best books on musicals that I know of. Its serious about book. lyrics and music alike. and full of insight.The heart of the book is a series of studies of important musicals. one by each of a series of important writing teams (Kern/Hammerstein. Sondheim. Kander/Ebb. Rice/Lloyd Webber. Bock/Harnick -- Rodgers and Hammerstein get two chapters because of their importance). For each show. we get some interesting historical background. an outline of the plot. and detailed analysis of the music. The analysis is quite technical. but readable. and anyone can learn from it. Most importantly. its not a dry analysis. The question Swain asks throughout is the question all musical writers should be asking themselves: how does the music help the show tell the story it wants to tell?Hes not afraid to make strong judgements. either. He praises Jesus Christ Superstar for its eclectism and atmosphere. but considers that the reuse of tunes in different contexts in Evita robs them of narrative power; on this basis. he judges Evita a (relative) failure. His review of A Chorus Line is so hostile that the authors. uniquely for the shows under review in this book. refused him permission to use extracts from the score. Yet even in this review theres insight and sympathy.Read this book. It will educate your ears. Youll approach all musicals more intelligently after reading it.1 of 12 people found the following review helpful. Showboat Porgy and Bess by GershwinBy Betty BurksJoseph Swain was a professor of music at Colgate University. He is an authority on Broadway shows and the music which carries them to success. He wrote" The influence of Showboat was subliminal or subconscious. but there is no doubt that members of the younger generation of stage composers. especially George Gershwin and Richard Rodgers. were impressed by the play. It established a new set of dramatic ideals only approximated in the 1930s. but realized again and again thereafter." When George Gershwin labored to produce the folk-opera. Porgy and Bess he was unjustly criticized as an outsider because the American Negro in 1935 coudl speak for himself. Things havent changed in the past seventy years for some people; Essie Johnson declared at the KTA meeting that "we have NOT overcome." She is a product of the Gem Theater theatrics of that prohibition era. singing and dancing herself into the sidelines of local politics. And shes still not satisfied. but still holding old grudges. George Gershwins Porgy and Bess is a complicated case owing to its intensity of ethnic setting and expression. The main dramas of Porgys loneliness and Bess weakness remain an extreme but typical case of ethnic usage.As did Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammersteins Oklahoma based on the play "Green Grow the Lilacs." Both of these musicals had beautiful songs intermingled with the story line. Who will ever forget "Old Man River." In The King and I there is "Shall We Dance." and in Flower Drum Song. "You Are Beautiful" and "I Enjoy Being a Girl." Kiss Me Kate is based on Shakespeares drama. Fiddler On the Roof has the most beautiful music throughout of all the musicals.All the great composers like Jerome Kern. Frank Loesser. Lerner and Lowe. and Leonard Berstein with those mentioned above are included in this concise book about Broadway Musicals. They are good but. since I have yet to go to New York. I enjoy the movie versions. especially Richard Harris in "Camelot." He was a great King Arthur. the best there is. by far greater than Richard Burton on stage. I could go on and on about this fabulous music and the men who wrote it. but there comes a time for a conclusion so I hope that the English teacher at Grainger County High will not be too critical of my feeble renderings.