Hollywood Pinafore, or The Lad Who Loved a Salary is a musical comedy in two acts by George S. Kaufman, with music by Arthur Sullivan, based on Gilbert and Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore. The adaptation transplants the maritime satire of the original Pinafore to a satire of the glamorous world of 1940s Hollywood film making, but Sullivan's score is retained with minor adaptations.
According to Howard Teichmann's 1972 biography George S. Kaufman: An Intimate Portrait, Kaufman had the inspiration for Hollywood Pinafore during a poker game with his friend Charles Lederer. While Lederer was arranging his cards, he idly sang a few bars of "When I Was a Lad" from Pinafore while ad-libbing a new lyric: "Oh, he nodded his head / and he never said 'no' / and now he's the head of the studio." Kaufman insisted on paying Lederer a token fee for the idea of transplanting Pinafore's setting to a Hollywood studio.
Although Kaufman's lyrics are witty, the book is static for a musical. However, it has been revived a number of times in recent years, including a 1998 "Lost Musicals" staged concert production at the Barbican Centre in London.[3][4]
Synopsis
Starlet Brenda Blossom, pining for a lowly writer, Ralph, is promised in marriage by her father (a director looking to advance his own career) to the studio head, Joseph Porter. If she marries Ralph, she'll be tossed out of Hollywood and forced to make a living on the stage. Everything turns out for the best when it is discovered that a mix-up in Louhedda Hopsons' gossip column was responsible for Ralph's fall from grace. In reality, it was Ralph who was meant to head the studio instead of Porter.
Roles and Broadway cast
Joseph W. Porter, head of Pinafore Pictures – Victor Moore
Simple Movie Folk – Miss Gloria Mundi, Miss Beverly Wilshire, Little Miss Peggy, Girls, Ensemble
Little Butter-Up – Louhedda Hobson
An Agent's Lot Is Not a Happy One – Dick Live-Eye
A Maiden Often Seen – Ralph Rackstraw, Miss Beverly Wilshire, Ensemble
I'm a Big Director at Pinafore – Mike Corcoran, Ensemble
Here on the Lot – Brenda Blossom
Joe Porter's Car is Seen – Male Chorus, Ensemble
I Am the Monarch of the Joint – Joseph W. Porter, Miss Liebe, Ensemble
When I Was a Lad – Joseph W. Porter, Ensemble
A Writer Fills the Lowest Niche – Bob Beckett, Ralph Rackstraw, Guard, Ensemble
Never Mind the Why and Wherefore – Dick Live-Eye, Ensemble
Refrain, Audacious Scribe/Proud Lady, Have Your Way – Ralph Rackstraw, Brenda Blossom, Miss Liebe, Ensemble
Can I Survive This Overbearing? (Finale Act 1) – Dick Live-Eye, Brenda Blossom, Miss Liebe, Ralph Rackstraw, Bob Beckett, Ensemble
ACT II
Fair Moon – Mike Corcoran
I Am the Monarch of the Joint (reprise) – Joseph W. Porter, Miss Liebe, Ensemble
Ballet Interlude: Success Story – Chief Maid, Other Little Maids, Talent Scout, Her True Love, Two More Boys, Armand, the Movie Hero, Director, Studio Assistants
Hollywood's a Funny Place – Louhedda Hobson, Joseph W. Porter
To Go Upon the Stage – Brenda Blossom
He Is a Movie Man – Joseph W. Porter, Dick Live-Eye, Ensemble
The Merry Maiden and the Jerk – Dick Live-Eye, Joseph W. Porter
Carefully on Tiptoe Stealing (music brazenly taken from The Pirates of Penzance) – Brenda Blossom, Ralph Rackstraw, Dick Live-Eye, Mike Corcoran, Ensemble
Pretty Daughter of Mine – Mike Corcoran, Ralph Rackstraw, Miss Liebe, Joseph W. Porter, Dick Live-Eye, Ensemble
Farewell, My Own – Ralph Rackstraw, Brenda Blossom, Miss Liebe, Joseph W. Porter, Louhedda Hobson, Bob Beckett, Ensemble
This Town I Now Must Shake – Louhedda Hobson, Ensemble
Finale Act 2 – Entire Company
References
^"Plays Out of Town – Hollywood Pinafore". Variety. Vol. 158, no. 10. May 16, 1945. p. 52.