I realized the other day that I’d been avoiding seeing Gypsy. My main reason was that I was enjoying all the backstage turmoil at the Shubert Theatre ruthlessly recounted every morning by Michael Riedel in his New York Post column. Surely the show itself could only be an anticlimax. I’d have been happy for it to go on previewing forever, as the producers ordered up new sets, fired choreographers, shuffled casts, and denied rumors about how lousy the star was, etc.
It hardly seems possible to have got into such a mess with Gypsy. The 1959 musical biography by Jule Styne, Stephen Sondheim, and Arthur Laurents is indestructible. It’s nominally about Gypsy Rose Lee, but actually about her mother, Mama Rose, the mother of all stage mothers. Just as her daughter is merely a vehicle for Mama’s ambitions, so a showbiz biotuner is merely a pretext for an investigation of something dramatically much juicier, and ...
Mark Steyn’s most recent book is America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It (Regnery)
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 21 June 2003, on page 38
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