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Any committed playgoer has on occasion found himself at odds with the prevailing opinlon of a given show. My most startling wrongo happened during the Philadelphia tryout of Gypsy. At a Wednesday matinee audience consisting of indifferent women, I witnessed a story of a devouring mother who blatantly used her performing youngsters to survive in vaudeville. This entailed a series of kiddie acts for much of the first half. When finally deserted by her rebellious daughters, Ethel Merman, as the ruthless mother, decides to go it alone in the show's biggest number, "Rose's Turn" a wail of self-pity that made any enlightened parent want to strangle her. The score was one of Jules Styne's best, but remember that in those days even inferior books were often blessed with superb music. Thus I was stunned at the critical reception on Broadway. Typical was Walter Kerr's rave quote: "Best Damn Musical in Years!". Merman's committed performance was hailed as a highlight of her career, and since Gypsy Rose Lee's best-selling autobiography "Gypsy", on which the musical was based, had set the stage, sympathy was given even the kiddie numbers. As for "Rose's Turn", its acceptance set the precedent for "Do Re Me", where Phil Silvers, a debt-ridden horse-playing no-goodnik climaxed his performance with a similar plaint, "All of My Life!". There followed a series of comedies by humorists like Neil Simon, who found laughter in themes like unemployment, bereavement and divorce.
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Assassins is about how society interprets the American Dream, marginalizes outsiders and rewrites and sanitizes its collective history. "Something Just Broke" is a major distraction and plays like an afterthought, shoe horned simply to appease. The song breaks the dramatic fluidity and obstructs the overall pacing and climactic arc which derails the very intent and momentum that makes this work so compelling... - Mark Bakalor
Which is not to say that it is perfect...
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