Showing posts with label Broadway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Broadway. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2020

The Kelly Family Way! :)

Hello Everyone!

On January 13, 1965--55 years ago today--The Family Way opened at the Lyceum Theatre on Broadway.

It closed on January 16, after only five performances.

But, Jack Kelly, the star of the play, beamed as he posed with his big sister, Nancy, in this incandescent candid image scanned from a color slide in the Kellection:


What a fantastic Kelly family portrait!

Here's the cover of the Playbill, like the one Ms. Kelly is holding:


Well, it's the TDS way to share photos and stories about JK with you, so please stay tuned for more! :)

Thursday, September 3, 2015

All the World's A Stage With JK - Pt I


Pt. I:  The Night Life Ain't No Good Life

In mid-1962, newspaper theater columns were sprinkled with items about a new work by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Sidney Kingsley. Kingsley, author of hits such as Men In White, Dead End and Detective Story, hadn't had a play produced since 1955. So, Night Life, his latest drama, was big news. The play would have a try-out run in Philadelphia before landing on Broadway in October 1962.

Kingsley described Night Life as "a realistic dream" about contemporary society. It was reported that Kingsley spent two years writing the play, which is set in a private after-hours "key" club in New York City.   


In a September 30, 1962, Pittsburgh Press interview, Kingsley explained, "This background is ideal for my subject and characters. Actually, these people and their problems would have no meaning in the daytime or in a place of normal atmosphere."

Kingsley was heavily involved in all aspects of Night Life, not only as the author, but as the producer and director as well. Before rehearsals began, Kingsley painstakingly constructed a detailed miniature version of the play's two-story set, complete with one-inch scale models of the actors and props, plus recorded snippets of dialogue. This no doubt proved invaluable when Night Life was actually staged, because there were to be 30 actors onstage at the same time, with no entrances or exits.

When the show opened at Broadway's Brooks Atkinson Theater on October 23, 1962, one of those actors was Jack Kelly, playing "Neil". However, the role almost wasn't his. According to a 10/10/1962 story in the Long Island Star-Journal, JK took over the part when Philip Bosco, who played Neil during the show's Philadelphia try-out, left Night Life in early October. A spokesman for the show explained in the Star-Journal story, "Sidney changed the concept of the role after the play opened in Philadelphia. Jack Kelly read for this part originally, flying to New York from California, but he didn't seem right for the part as it was then written. After Sidney changed the idea of the character, he called Jack and had him come to Philadelphia."

Actually, Kingsley made a lot of changes to Night Life. I know this because I own a typescript which was used during the production of the play. It provides intriguing insights into how the show evolved. Character names were changed (for example, Neil's last name went from "O'Bannion" to "Bennett"); dialogue was penciled in; entire scenes were added and deleted. The typescript says that Night Life is a "play in three acts". By the time the show reached Broadway, the Playbill stated it was a two-act play. The changes didn't stop on Broadway. I have two different copies of the Playbill and several characters were dropped or had different names by the time the show ended its brief run on December 15, 1962.


JK reportedly earned $2000 a week for Night Life, playing a character as different as night and day from Bart Maverick. Neil is an idealistic lawyer tormented by memories of his combat experiences in the Korean War. He wants to quit his law practice to work for nuclear disarmament at the United Nations.  His former girlfriend, played by Carol Lawrence, is an entertainer at the club.

Sidney Kingsley admitted in an interview that most of the characters in Night Life were "archetypes" and, indeed, the play is populated with some very recognizable types. There's a ruthless Jimmy Hoffa-type labor leader (played by Neville Brand; incidentally, Brand was slightly injured during the try-out run and Night Life ended up opening on Broadway at the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis); an emotionally unstable Marilyn Monroe-type actress (played by Salome Jens); and an obnoxious Lenny Bruce-type "shock" comedian (played by real-life comic Murray Roman, who developed somewhat of a cult following of his own before his untimely passing in 1973). Other assorted roles were filled by Jessica Walter, Barry Newman and Raymond St. Jacques, whose faces later became familiar in movies and on TV.

Not much really happens in Night Life, except for a lot of drinking and yakking which eventually leads to a murder. Unfortunately, most of the dialogue is surprisingly stilted and trite although Kingsley does attempt to push the envelope with "motherlover" and other phrases that were quite daring in 1962. All in all, things probably would have been better if everyone had just stayed home and gone to bed early instead of pretentiously ruminating about the human condition into the wee hours.

Reviewers at the time described Night Life as "a long night" and "exhausting". JK didn't seem to attract much critical notice in the large cast, although he was mentioned as being "professional" and "appropriately tight-lipped" as Neil in a couple of reviews.

To no one's surprise, Night Life closed on Broadway after only 63 performances. It was Sidney Kingsley's last play, and Jack Kelly would give Broadway one more shot (in the even worse play The Family Way) before sticking to TV, films and local stages for the rest of his acting career.

As Willie Nelson sang, "The night life ain't no good life", but there is one good thing about this Night Life: they took lots of pictures during the production!

Please note:  The following series of photos from Night Life are part of the Friedman-Abeles collection and are copyright and courtesy of the New York Public Library Digital Collection. If shared, please respect the Library's ownership and properly credit the Library as requested in their Terms of Use. Thank you.



JK as troubled lawyer "Neil Bennett"
 
 
Neil and his former girlfriend Gia (Carol Lawrence),
a singer at the club
 
 
 
Anna (Salome Jens), an emotionally unstable actress
and client of Neil's
 
Neville Brand as Will Kazar, a ruthless labor
boss...and Gia's fiancĂ© 
 
 
The main cast: Neville Brand, Carol Lawrence, JK, Carmen Mathews, Salome Jens (seated), Walter Abel (seated)

 
 A try-out rehearsal shot with Sidney Kingsley (far right) holding a playscript like the one now in the Kellection.

Stay tuned for Part II! :)
 

Saturday, August 11, 2012

It's Your Move JK :)

Hello!

Watched by young actor Michael Kearney, Jack Kelly is deep in thought as he kontemplates his next move on the checkerboard:



This is a rehearsal pic from the ill-fated play The Family Way, which ran for just five performances on Broadway in early 1965. As the info on the back of the photo says, the story takes place in a Hollywood apartment house and "concerns a young widowed actress, her man-about-town theatrical agent and her little son whose desperate search for a new father seems to get the whole town involved."

JK played the theatrical agent, and Kearney--in his Broadway debut--played the widow's son. Young Kearney also played important roles in two poignant productions: the 1963 feature film All the Way Home, which starred Robert Preston and Jean Simmons; and The Thanksgiving Visitor, an Emmy-winning 1967 TV holiday special starring Geraldine Page. 

Click here to learn more about JK's "checkered" play.  ;-)

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Jack Kelly - This "Way" For JK! :)


Hello Everyone!

Hope you're ready to do some time travelin'. And, be sure to dress warmly, because the Wayback Machine is set for December 1964. Location: The historic Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia, PA.

A new comedy is having a try-out in Philly before heading on to Broadway. It stars an erstwhile TV gambler and a young actress who had recently played an important role in a now-legendary film.

As we take our seats, we glance at the cover of the Playbill we were handed as we entered the theater. Wow! :)


It's Jack Kelly and Collin Wilcox in The Family Way. (Well, that's the name of the play, anyway. ;->)


Our tickets were a bargain:

(The highest ticket price listed is $6.50, for New Year's Eve. )

The Playbill has a nice biography of JK, and to pass the time before the curtain rises, we read all about our favorite Maverick. Hmm...he's no stranger to the stage, that's for sure. JK debuted on Broadway at age nine in Swing Your Lady, then went on to School House on the Lot, Stopover, St. Helena, and Ghost of Yankee Doodle. As a grownup with five seasons of Maverick under his belt in 1962, he performed in summer stock and on Broadway in Sidney Kingsley's Night Life.

There's lots more interesting info in JK's bio, but the play is starting...

A couple of hours pass and it's time to go back to 2010. I'm sure we enjoyed watching JK on stage as "Phil Brennan", an agent who becomes romantically involved with a widowed actress (Willcox) whose precocious young son wants his mommy to be in "the family way" so she'll get a new husband and he'll get a new daddy.

Unfortunately, though, the play wasn't exactly Neil Simon, and, not surprisingly, the critics didn't think much of The Family Way.The production made it to Broadway in early 1965. However, it lasted a mere five performances at the Lyceum Theater. The New York Times attributed its swift demise to "negative reviews".

One of those reviews came from the Times itself. It begins:
"The story of The Family Way takes place in Los Angeles, and it's a pity it didn't stay there."

But, a review in the Los Angeles Times was scathing as well. It described The Family Way as "a sniggering attempt at comedy" and "a dim-witted, blatant and tasteless charade". (Ouch!)

In an interview years later, Ms. Wilcox (who passed away in 2009) described The Family Way as "an awful play".

Which is mystifying, because it involved a lot of talent. Besides Jack Kelly and Collin Wilcox, there was playwright Ben Starr (whose curriculum vitae includes episodes of just about every classic TV show) and director Michael Gordon, who'd helmed successful film comedies such as Pillow Talk with Doris Day.

Well, sometimes plays just don't gel, no matter how skilled the personnel.
 
And while The Family Way was stinkeroo, the Playbill is still boffo for JK fans. It's full of wonderful, quirky little details. A credit reads, "Mr. Kelly's accessories from Countess Mara and Arden for Men". Another credit states, "Scotch courtesy of J & B Rare Scotch. Gin courtesy of Old Mr. Boston Gin. Bourbon courtesy of Heaven Hill Bourbon. Champagne courtesy of Eugene Cliquot." (I wonder if these potent potables were used on-stage, or off-stage to help cast and crew forget the bad reviews? ;->)

There's also a lengthy article in the Playbill titled "The Insiders Speak Out", which presents "some fundamental facts about the day-to-day economics of Broadway." One of the industry "insiders" quoted in the article says, "Since World War II, the audience for serious plays has diminished to a considerable extent in New York." His name? Warren Caro, who was the Executive Director of the Theatre Guild-American Theatre Society--and Jack Kelly's brother-in-law at the time.

Lots of photos from The Family Way here--enjoy! :)