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The Producers.


The Producers * Book by Mel Brooks and Thomas Meehan * Music and lyrics by Brooks * Directed and choreographed by Susan Stroman * Starring Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick * St. James Theatre
For the London theatre see St James's Theatre.
The St. James Theatre is located at 246 W. 44th St. Broadway, New York City, New York. It was built by Abraham L.
, New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 (runs indefinitely)

Mel Brooks reshapes The Producers into a hilarious Broadway musical

Yes, it's springtime for Hitler A fictional play in Mel Brooks' The Producers, Springtime for Hitler: A Gay Romp With Eva and Adolf at Berchtesgaden is a musical about Adolf Hitler written by Nazi Franz Liebkind. , thanks to that Broadway baby Mel Brooks. We think of Brooks primarily as the maker of over-the-top comic films, most notably Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein. But before he went Hollywood, Brooks parlayed his early success as a TV sketch writer into a brief period of writing Broadway shows in the 1950s and early '60s. And he poured his love and inside knowledge of Broadway's sleazy glamour into his very first movie, The Producers, in 1968.

In the movie, Zero Mostel played the veteran impresario Max Bialystock, who teamed up with neurotic accountant Leo Bloom (played by Gene Wilder) in a scheme to make millions by producing a big Broadway flop. These days, when Broadway is scrambling to turn any hit movie into a musical, banking on presold presold

Of, relating to, or being a new security issue that is sold out before all the specifics of the issue have been announced. In the case of a bond issue, this term usually means that sufficient orders for the issue have been placed before announcement
 material to guarantee a return on the millions it takes to put on a show, The Producers seems perfectly suited for the treatment. The question might be: What took them so long? The answer to that would probably be: They were waiting for a star who could fill Zero Mostel's hilarious, gigantic, shticky shoes.

That star, of course, is Nathan Lane. It's been a long time since Broadway has spawned a performer with comic, dramatic, and musical chops who's earned enough of a following from movies and TV to carry a big commercial musical. It's hard to think of anyone else who could bring such freshness to Brooks's borscht-belt shtick. Bialystock is a cartoonish, roly-poly, middle-aged vulgarian vul·gar·i·an  
n.
A vulgar person, especially one who makes a conspicuous display of wealth. See Synonyms at boor.


vulgarian
Noun

a vulgar person, usually one who is rich

Noun 1.
 who gets the dough to mount his crummy shows (like The Breaking Wind and a musical based on Hamlet called Funny Boy) by porking rich little old ladies, whom he distinguishes by nicknames such as "Hold-me-Touch-me" and "Yank-me-Spank-me." And Lane is more than matched by Matthew Broderick as Bloom. We knew Broderick could do nerdy neurotic in his sleep, but he turns out to be a beguiling hoofer hoof·er  
n. Slang
A professional dancer, especially a tap dancer.


hoofer
Noun

Slang a professional dancer

Noun 1.
 whose dancing is one of the show's deepest pleasures.

To direct the worst show ever, Max goes looking for the worst director ever, and finds him in Roger De Bris (Gary Beach), who advises him that the only way to make a World War II musical tolerable is to "keep it gay." Cross-dressing De Bris and his staff, including his swishy swish·y  
adj. swish·i·er, swish·i·est
1. Producing a swishing sound.

2. Slang Effeminate.

Adj. 1.
 "common-law assistant" Carmen Ghia (Roger Bart), provide a veritable catalogue of campy gay stereotypes. If you're the kind of person--like me--who has difficulty ignoring the fact that a straight audience is roaring at old-fashioned cliches of ditsy dit·sy also dit·zy  
adj. dit·si·er also dit·zi·er, dit·si·est also dit·zi·est Slang
Eccentric or scatterbrained: "Needless to say, this ditsy crew succeeds in spite of itself" 
, mincing queens, you may find The Producers hard to enjoy at times. Everybody else seems to love it.

Susan Stroman, the hyperkinetic hyperkinetic

pertaining to or marked by hyperkinesia.


hyperkinetic episodes
see Scottie cramp.

hyperkinetic circulatory disorders
 director-choreographer behind the current Broadway hits Contact and The Music Man, is at her wizardly wizardly - Pertaining to wizards. A wizardly feature is one that only a wizard could understand or use properly.  best here, keeping the stage whirling and alive. Her dance number for a chorus of little old ladies with walkers is an instant classic, and of course she goes to town with Springtime for Hitler, the staggeringly tasteless show that Bialystock and Bloom pick as their golden turkey. From the Fuhrer perched on the edge of the stage like Judy Garland at the Palace to a Chorus Line homage with storm troopers high-stepping in swastika formation, it's a succinct survey of Broadway kitsch.

Shewey is the editor of Out Front: Contemporary Gay and Lesbian Plays, published by Grove Press.

Find more on The Producers, Nathan Lane, and Mel Brooks at www.advocate.com
COPYRIGHT 2001 Liberation Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Review; St. James Theatre, New York, New York
Author:Shewey, Don
Publication:The Advocate (The national gay & lesbian newsmagazine)
Article Type:Theater Review
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Jun 19, 2001
Words:610
Previous Article:Making his mark.(Brief Article)
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