Paramount Pictures, which owned the rights to the source material for Nothing Sacred, also acquired the rights to produce a film version of Hazel Flagg. The Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis film Living It Up (1954) is based on the musical,[2] with Hazel Flagg rewritten as a man, Homer Flagg (played by Lewis) and Wallace Cook rewritten as a woman, Wally Cook (played by Janet Leigh). The one hit song from Hazel Flagg, "Every Street's a Boulevard in Old New York", was performed in this movie by Martin and Lewis.[5]
Plot synopsis
Wallace Cook, a writer for Everywhere magazine, suggests that his editor should run an article about small-town girl Hazel Flagg, purportedly dying from exposure to radium. Cook invites her to New York City for an interview. After accepting, she discovers that she was misdiagnosed, but eager to visit the big city, decides not to reveal the truth, and becomes a media darling embraced by a public deeply moved by her sad story.
Song list
Sources: Dietz, Dan (2014) The Complete Book of 1950s Broadway Musicals;[2]Guide to Musical Theatre website[3]
Act I
A Little More Heart—Laura Carew, Wallace Cook and Magazine Staff
The World Is Beautiful Today—Hazel Flagg
I'm Glad I'm Leaving—Hazel Flagg
The Rutland Bounce—Vermont Villager, Man on the Street, Dancer and Villagers
Hello Hazel—Laura Carew and New Yorkers
Paris Gown (ballet) -- Hazel Flagg, Maximilian Lavian, Dancers, Models and Attendants
The World Is Beautiful Today—Wallace Cook and Editors
Every Street's a Boulevard in Old New York—Mayor of New York
How Do You Speak to an Angel—Wallace Cook
Autograph Chant—Autograph Hunters
I Feel Like I'm Gonna Live Forever—Hazel Flagg
You're Gonna Dance With Me, Willie—Hazel Flagg, Willie and Company
Act II
Who Is the Bravest? -- University Glee Club
Dream Parade (ballet)-- Hazel Flagg and Company
Salome—Dancing Girls, Salome, Cowboy Singer and Cowboy Dancers
Everybody Loves To Take a Bow—Laura Carew, Mayor of New York and Men
Laura De Maupassant—Hazel Flagg
Autograph Chant (Reprise) -- Autograph Hunters
I Feel Like I'm Gonna Live Forever (Reprise) -- Company
How Do you Speak to an Angel (Reprise) -- Company
Awards
1953 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical (Thomas Mitchell)[6][7]
1953 Tony Award for Best Costume Design (Play or Musical) (Miles White)[6][7]
Mandelbaum, Ken (1992). Not Since Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops (softcover) (1st ed.). New York, NY: St. Martins Press. ISBN978-0-312-08273-4.
Mordden, Ethan (2001). Coming Up Roses: The Broadway Musical in the 1950s (softcover) (1st ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-514058-3.
References
^Robinson, Mark A. (2014). The World of Musicals: An Encyclopedia of Stage, Screen, and Song (hardcover) (1st ed.). Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. p. 308. ISBN978-1-4408-0097-9.
^ abcdeDietz, Dan (2014). The Complete Book of 1950s Broadway Musicals (hardcover) (1st ed.). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN978-1-4422-3504-5.