Archive for October, 2010

Do hockey players make the best golfers? We asked the Tampa Bay Lightning

By Rodney Page, Times Staff Writer Wednesday, October 27, 2010 WESLEY CHAPEL Here are three facts about hockey players: They have no teeth, they are all from Canada or Russia, and they love to play golf. Okay, maybe the first two aren’t facts, but it’s hard to find a hockey player who doesn’t like golf. Golf seems perfectly suited to a hockey player. After 82 games on ice, and traveling from …

Published Oct 27, 2010.
Read more: St. Petersburg Times


Album Description

Tip-Toes, which made its Broadway debut on December 28, 1925, was produced by Alex A. Aarons and Vinton Freedley, who had been the producers of the Gershwins’ smash hit Lady, Be Good! the year before. Attempting to repeat that success, they once again combined the same book writers, Guy Bolton and Fred Thompson, with the Gershwin brothers. Tip-Toes was well received by audiences and the press, and ran for 194 performances. It was given a subsequent production at the Winter Garden Theatre in London, opening August 31, 1926, running for 181 performances.

One of the most overlooked Gershwin shows, Tell Me More was also the most unlikely of Jazz Age musicals. In an era marked by lavish extravaganzas and brash star vehicles, Tell Me More, which opened on April 13, 1925, relied on charm, modesty, and an impish sense of humor. Because it failed to recoup its investment on Broadway, it was relegated to the list of Gershwin flops; because its score was largely forgotten, it has been widely regarded as a minor effort. In truth, it’s a key show. As the only full-length collaboration between George and Ira Gershwin and B.G. DeSylva, it combines the delicacy and grace of the scores George had written earlier in the decade with DeSylva and the bold wit he had pioneered in partnership with his brother Ira four months earlier in Lady, Be Good! The best of both worlds, Tell Me More was a one-of-a-kind achievement.

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This two-CD set collects a couple of shows by George and Ira Gershwin. Both produced in 1925, the two musicals–Tip-Toes and Tell Me More–are fairly obscure and don’t boast as many famous songs as contemporary Gershwin offerings such as Oh, Kay! and Lady Be Good. Still, they are bursting with wit, invention, and joie de vivre. Based on a 1998 concert production, Tip-Toes is delicious, and several songs deserve a place in the Gershwin pantheon: the ballad “Looking for a Boy,” the love duet “That Certain Feeling,” and the rousing dance number “Sweet and Low-Down.” The score is also notable for its spectacular writing for duo pianos. Tell Me More is not as immediately accessible (indeed, it had the shortest run of any Gershwin musical, with 32 performances), but it’s delivered with élan by its topnotch cast, which includes Sally Mayes, Christine Ebersole, Diane Fratantoni, and David Garrison. Under the expert musical direction of Rob Fisher (from New York’s famed Encores! series), this double set is, of course, essential for Gershwin completists. In fact, just about any fan of zany Jazz Age artifacts should relish it. –Elisabeth Vincentelli

The Gershwins:Tip-Toes/Tell Me More

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Picture taken by Steve Castle on 2007-11-25 09:42:14.