THEATRE PREVIEW
"Maggie
& Jiggs" BY Hugh Martin at SDSU Theatre
JANUARY 1998
Published
in In Theater
His songs inevitably evoke a season, an era, and the Golden Age of
Musicals: "Have Yourself a Merry
Little Christmas," "The Trolley Song," "The Boy Next
Door," "Pass That Peace
Pipe," "Buckle Down,
Winsockie," "Keep Your Sunny
Side Up." Classics, all. Written by something of a classic himself.
Hugh Martin, acclaimed composer, lyricist, vocal arranger,
performer and pianist, was recently honored in his current home-town for 60
years of making music for America: the
County and City of San Diego proclaimed November 22 Hugh Martin Day. There was a month-long Hugh Martin tribute,
which included a musical celebration and symposium, and two productions at San
Diego State University.
It was 1937 when the diminutive, syrup-speeched Southern gentleman
made his Broadway debut in the short-lived musical "Hooray for What!"
(book by Howard Lindsay & Russell Crouse, music/lyrics by Harold Arlen and
Yip Harburg; produced by the Shuberts).
Martin appeared in the cast and created the vocal arrangements. That experience gave him the guts to write
to Richard Rodgers.
"'Dear Mr. Rodgers,' I wrote, never having met him,"
Martin recalls. "' I love your music and I think you're wonderful. But one thing puzzles me,' I said. It was a
very presumptuous letter. 'I don't
understand why I never hear any vocal arrangements in Broadway shows. They sing a verse and two choruses and
that's it. When I go to the movies, I
hear exciting choral arrangements and inventive duets. But not on Broadway. And I wondered why that is.'
The next thing he knew, Rodgers had hired him to work on "The
Boys From Syracuse," where he created the show-stopping vocal arrangement
of "Sing for Your Supper"
('suppah,' in Mr. Martin's dialect).
Over the years, Martin worked with some of the greatest musical
theater and film artists of all time, including Rodgers, Hart, Hammerstein II,
Kern, Berlin, Porter, Noel Coward, Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer, Hoagy
Carmichael and Jule Styne.
With Ralph Blane, he created the scores for "Best Foot
Forward" and "Meet Me in St. Louis." He and Timothy Gray wrote "Love From Judy," a musical
version of "Daddy Longlegs" and "High Spririts," the
musical adaptation of Noel Coward's "Blithe Spirit." With and without his collaborators, he
worked with producers, directors and choreographers such as George Abbott
("like a father to me"), George Balanchine, Joshua Logan, Gene Kelly,
Gower Champion and Vincent Minelli.
He was the vocal coach for some of Hollywood's biggest musical
stars, including Lena Horne, Rosalind Russell, Nanette Fabray, June Allyson,
Gloria DeHaven, Jane Russell and Esther Williams. Liza Minelli made her stage debut in the off-Broadway revival of
Martin and Blane's "Best Foot Forward" (1963) and Judy Garland not
only made famous his three timeless songs from "Meet Me in St. Louis"
("Merry Little Christmas," "The Trolley Song" and "The
Boy Next Door"), but when she played the Palace Theatre in 1951, Martin
accompanied her on piano -- and shared a dressing room with her (separated by a
sheet) for 19 weeks.
During his Hollywood years, he worked with La Garland on four
movies; while filming "A Star is Born" (1954), they had their fatal
falling-out, over the interpretation of the Harold Arlen/Ira Gershwin song,
"The Man That Got Away."
"I wanted her to sing it moodily, quietly," says
Martin. "And so did Harold
Arlen. He thought it was an
introspective song, but Judy belted it.
George Cukor thought I was right.
The day of the recording, he said, 'Can you do anything to stop her from
yelling that song and making it such a tour de force? If she does that, I don't have a movie. If you know she's a star in the first 15 minutes, you don't have
any place to go.'"
Well, Garland had her way, Martin walked off the picture (and got
no screen credits), and that song wound up being the mesmerizing moment most
folks remember about the movie.
"Our fight was not irrevocable," Martin insists. "We still adored each other. I still dream about her at night. I think she was the world's greatest
entertainer."
Garland is only one of hundreds of fabulous memories and stories
Martin, now 83, loves to recount. He
remembers every name from every show. But
he's not just focused on the past. His
latest project is solo creation of the music and lyrics for "Maggie &
Jiggs," a musical based on the George McManus comic strip, "Bringing
Up Father." Very vaudeville and
burlesque ("but I won't have any sleaze or vulgarity"), the show was
begun over a decade ago, at the suggestion of Mickey Rooney; it was initially
written for Rooney and Martha Raye, but Rooney has since pulled out. The book, by Woody Kling (now deceased) and
Robert Hilliard (who wrote for "The Honeymooners") is currently
undergoing revision. The show recently
received a staged reading by the Musical Theatre Department at San Diego State
University, and will have another in April, before director Rick Simus shops it
around for a future life.
One of the songs from "Maggie and Jiggs" is Martin's
avowed favorite of all his compositions. "I Have Something to Say to
You" was originally composed in 1980 for "Weddin' Day," a
musical version of Carson McCullers' "A Member of the Wedding"
(written with Joshua Logan) and it appears on "The Hugh Martin
Songbook," a 1995 Michael Feinstein CD with Hugh Martin on piano.
In his Encinitas home overlooking the ocean, Martin keeps busy --
singing, composing, playing piano and working on his memoirs every day. Late in February, Michael Feinstein and
others will appear at Theater West in Hollywood for a concert reading of
"A Happy Lot," Martin's earlier collaboration with Marshall Barer
(lyricist for "Once Upon a Mattress"). The unproduced show, originally written for Jeannette McDonald,
is about the back lot at MGM, where Martin spent a lot of time, though those
weren't his happiest years.
"I was one of the few people who were in the Arthur Freed
unit [in the '40s] who were not just in seventh heaven," he admits. "Freed's unit was the place to be; it
was the sanctum sanctorum of musicals.
The problem was that Dick [Rodgers] had spoiled me. I got to make lots of the decisions when I
worked with Dick. At MGM, I felt like a
messenger boy. They'd say, 'We need a
song here; go write it.' I had nothing to do with fashioning the project, which
is the part I like best. I think of
myself not so much as a composer or a lyricist, but as a theater man, who likes
to put things together. I have a little
touch of the producer in me, or perhaps director. On "Meet Me in St. Louis," I felt very removed. I had nothing to do with them choosing
Vincent Minelli or Judy or any of the creative or technical talent. It wasn't a collaborative effort for me,
which is what I love about the theater."
The huge hit from "Meet Me in St. Louis" (1944) was
"The Trolley Song." In
discussions about which number to market commercially, Martin was the only one
who voted for "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas." "They were probably right to push 'The
Trolley Song,'" Martin admits, "but 'The Christmas Song' is the one
that's endured, and that kind of gave me the last laugh."
Nonetheless, "The Trolley Song," he says, "probably
saved my life." When he enlisted
in the Army, he went with the infantry to Belgium and France, and was then
shipped to Special Entertainment forces.
While he was singing "The Trolley Song" in a soldier show, he
damaged his vocal cords, and was sent to the hospital instead of the front.
All told, Martin has come a long way from his Birmingham, Alabama
beginnings. As he looks back on his
impressive and eventful career, what he considers the high point is a bit
surprising. It was some time after he
became a Christian, when he spent four years (1981-1985) at 'gospel camps' (like tent revivals) which originated
outside L.A. and traveled all over the U.S. and Canada, fronted by singer Del
Delker, "kind of a gospel Judy Garland." That, he says, "was more thrilling than playing the
Palace."
The low point came with the 1952 London production of one of his
favorite creations, "Love From Judy." It was Martin's longest-running show, which played for two
years. "But I got very neurotic
during that time; I was taking mind-altering drugs prescribed by Dr. Feelgood,
Max Jacobson, the drug-dispenser to the stars.
He said they were 'liquid vitamins.'
I was dead drunk on opening night of "Judy." By 1960 I'd had a nervous breakdown, and I
was hospitalized, and finally, I turned to God as a last resort... But I wouldn't do anything different if I
had it all to do over again, because all my mistakes were so valuable."
Martin is as passionate about theater as ever, but a little
disappointed in the lack of "wonder, magic and class" in musicals
today. "You give me the opportunity
to stand on my soapbox," he says with a wink. "And the banner above me is Simplicity. One of the worst things that's happened to
theater is it's too fussy. Every singer
adds about 15 cadenzas to every note.
And in film, there's wall-to-wall underscoring. I don't want waves of turgid emotional music
splashing over me; I want to hear the dialogue.... I love the theater so much;
I just wish it was more like it used to be."
©1998 Patté
Productions Inc.