THEATRE
PREVIEW
JOE MASTEROFF
AND “PARAMOUR” AT OLD GLOBE THEATRE
Published in
KPBS On Air Magazine October 1998
Mounting a brand new, world premiere musical ain’t
what it used to be. And Joe Masteroff
oughta know. Masteroff is the acclaimed
librettist of “She Loves Me” (1963) and “Cabaret” (1966), among many others.
“The world of musicals has really changed,” he
said recently from his home in Greenwich Village. “Everything takes such a long time. In the old days, producers had sources of money. They’d decide to do a show on Thursday, go
to their backers and have the money by the weekend. Then, the backers put up $1500.
Now, it’s $15 million. So people
are much less willing to take a chance in New York. These days, San Diego is one of the best regional theater cities
to start.”
So, here he is, at age 79, excited about another
new project, the world premiere of “Paramour” (at the Old Globe, through
October 31). It’s by no means a $15
million musical -- “one set, no huge
cast or chorus” -- but Masteroff has been working on it for almost ten years. And he’s been planning for it ever since he
first saw its source, Jean Anouilh’s “The Waltz of the Toreadors,” which opened
in New York in 1956. “I thought it was
a natural musical,” he says. But it
took years to acquire the rights, which are controlled by Anouilh’s widow.
Says Masteroff, “she’s the wife in the play,”
referring to the pseudo-sickly, manipulative spouse of a disillusioned older
man who can’t face his age or the compromises he’s been forced to make.
“The Waltz of the Torèadors” was one of Anouilh’s “pieces grinçantes,” or “grating pieces,” which, contrasting youth and age, concern the disaffection implicit in the struggle for survival in a decadent society.
Masteroff is writing both book and lyrics for this
“serious French farce with five attempted suicides and one attempted
murder.” He adds, with a chuckle, “no
one can say they’ve seen this before.”
“I love the play,” he exclaims
enthusiastically. “And I used a lot of
it directly in the musical. But it is a
play of its time. Some things you just
can’t say today, or people will stone you.”
So he’s made some changes, but they’re minor. The farcical elements remain intact, along
with the snappy dialogue, the chaste male secretary, the buxom young
chambermaid, the homely daughters, the sickly old wife, the frustrated young
paramour and the blustery, lecherous General (to be played by eminent
actor/singer, Len Cariou).
Masteroff is thrilled with the process and with
his collaborators: composer Howard
Marren and director Joe Hardy. In the
past, he’s often worked independently, especially when there was a
composer/lyricist team on the project (such as Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick
on “She Loves Me” and John Kander and Fred Ebb on “Cabaret”). He noted that, during “Cabaret,” he and
Kander and Ebb “almost never worked in a room together’... I didn’t much like working alone. I thought, ‘If I write the lyrics and the
book, I’d be in the same room!’
Clearly, Masteroff is having fun. “I love the actual writing. When I sit down at the word processor, I
write the show from beginning to end, including the lyrics. And it’s absolutely perfect -- because no
one else has seen it. Then I show it to
the composer, and then the director comes in.
And with each addition, it changes.
Eventually, the audiences come, and the critics come. And then I really hate the whole process. I hate the nervousness and the excitement.”
But he almost never misses an opening. He’s attended ten openings (premieres and
revivals) of his two major shows (five on Broadway, five in London’s West End).
Meanwhile, back with his “Paramour,” Masteroff has
stayed very close to the original, though he’s changed some names and
eliminated some extraneous subplots.
“The play just goes on forever,” he
complains. “Those French never know
when to shut up. When you have songs,
you can’t go babbling on.”
As for the songs, he describes the score as “not
rock... theater music. Not quite as
old-fashioned as [Richard] Rodgers and not quite as modern as [Stephen]
Sondheim.... But it is a very strange piece.
It goes from French farce to almost Strindberg. I softened it a bit so there’s not too much
of a jarring shift. But we do break
some rules. At the end of the first act
of a silly comedy, usually the boy and girl are sadly parting. Our last scene has the husband trying to
murder his wife.
“I think audiences want to be jostled a little; I
hope so. I’m always worried about
subscription audiences -- and the Globe has a big one -- which are mostly age
80 to 90. I always envision ladies with
their lorgnettes falling off....
“This show is far from just entertainment. It’s about people adjusting to the fact that
their lives are over. The General is
fighting to stay young. He’s got to
accept his mortality. There’s a great
sadness, though there’s also a great deal of fun and farce. But it’s a twilight show. The sun is setting. At my age, I relate to it very much.
“But I have no idea how it’s going to be
received. A new show is like setting
out into the woods with no path, and no idea where you’re going to wind
up. I hope we get to a nice clearing
with some sunshine.”
©1998
Patté Productions Inc.