Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Boobs! The Musical

2003 musical by Ruth Wallis From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Boobs! The Musical: The World According to Ruth Wallis[1] is a musical revue with lyrics and music by 1950s and 1960s star Ruth Wallis.[2] Using 20 of Wallis' songs, Boobs! tells the story of Ruth Wallis' international career and struggles in performing her naughty songs. Boobs! The Musical opened at the Triad Theater in New York City on May 19, 2003 to critical praise.[3]

Quick facts Music, Lyrics ...

The New York Times review noted that Boobs! The Musical "exudes a joyous innocence" and featured "a lot of talent onstage. The six-person cast, which also includes the talented and good-looking Kristy Cates and Robert Hunt, is expertly directed by Donna Drake and choreographed by Lawrence Leritz."[4] Boobs! eventually transferred to Dillon's Reprise Room; by closing date it had played nearly 300 performances. It had subsequent long runs in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 2004,[5] and in Wichita, Kansas, in 2005, with international productions beginning in New Zealand 2017. Broadway vets Lawrence Leritz[6] was producer/choreographer and Donna Drake, director. Also notable were the costumes by J. Kevin Draves and Robert Pease and set by two time Emmy award winning set designer Eric Harriz. The book adaptation was written by Steve Mackes and Michael Whaley.

Boobs! originally had a workshop at The Pulse Ensemble Theatre on the Off Broadway 42nd Street Theatre Row in December 2000. Various notable cast members from the three New York productions included J. Robert Spencer, Jenny-Lynn Suckling, Robert Hunt, Kristy Cates, Clyde Alves, Alena Watters, Brad Bradley, Tony Falcon, Benjie Randall, David Villella and the New York theatre debut of Gennifer Flowers.[7]

Remove ads

Musical numbers

  • Boobs!
  • Queer Things Are Happening
  • The Dingy Song
  • Man Of My Own
  • All The Clowns
  • Pizza Every Night
  • Johnny's Yo Yo
  • Ugly Man With Money
  • I Know
  • Love Is For The Birds
  • Drill 'Em All
  • Always Be A Bride

Awards and nominations

  • 2004 Mac Awards Best Musical Revue (Lawrence Leritz, nominee)
  • 2005 Big Easy Awards Best Musical (Lawrence Leritz, All Kinds of Theatre, nominees)
  • 2005 Big Easy Awards Best Costumes (Winner, Cecile Casey Covert, based on original designs by Robert Pease and J. Kevin Draves)
  • 2005 Big Easy Awards Best Musical Director (Harry Mayronne, nominee)
  • 2005 Big Easy Awards Best Director (Carl Walker, nominee)
  • 2005 Ambie Awards Best Ensemble Cast (Winners: Becky Allen, Maureen Brennan, Bob Edes, Jr., Ann Mahoney, Robert Thomas, Chris Wecklein)[8]
  • 2006 Teall Awards Best Musical (Lawrence Leritz, Cabaret Oldtown, nominees)
  • 2006 Teall Awards Best Choreography (nominee, based on original choreography by Lawrence Leritz)
Remove ads

References

Sources

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads