100 Showtunes: The Podcast

No. 45. “Hello, Dolly!”

9 min · 21 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio No. 45. “Hello, Dolly!”

Descripción

Winter 1964. You’re seeing the new smash hit musical Hello, Dolly!. The production skips the overture and opens immediately on a chorus on 1880s New Yorkers instructing the audience to call on the local matchmaker before Carol Channing revealing herself as Dolly from behind a newspaper. The briskly paced farce centers on this singular creation, a widow who makes ends meet as a matchmaker (but also has a business card in her pocket offering her services for any occasion that may come up, no matter how niche or bizarre.) Quick-witted and resourceful, Dolly takes her assignment (finding a bride for Horace Vandergelder, an irracable Yonkers shop-owner), and completely subverts it, setting up machinations that will land Horace for herself while leading to love for two of his clerks and a pair of milliners. Channing is so endearing as Dolly that you are completely on her side for all of these schemes, which are set converge at The Harmonia Gardens, a restaurant Dolly frequented with her late husband. The head waiter hears that Dolly will be in attendance and instructs the waitstaff to speed up service, launching a dazzling comedic display of leaps and gags. But all comes to a standstill when Dolly arrives standing atop a grand staircase in a stunning red gown beginning the most spectacular production number you’ve ever seen. (“Hello, Dolly”) Catch up with all the songs to date! [https://www.100showtunes.com/p/the-songs] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.100showtunes.com [https://www.100showtunes.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de 100 Showtunes: The Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

19 episodios

episode No. 46. “The Impossible Dream (The Quest)” artwork

No. 46. “The Impossible Dream (The Quest)”

December, 1965. You’re closing out the year by catching THE MAN OF LA MANCHA. It’s playing at a venue that is considered “Broadway” even though it’s in the West Village, 35 blocks south of the next closest Broadway theater. You’re greeted by a stark thrust stage. After a rousing, brassy overture (seriously, are there any strings in the pit at all?) a long staircase descends from the fly space as a couple of officers in Spanish Inquisition garb bring in an older gentleman, played by the distinguished Richard Kiley, and his companion. When the guards go back up the staircase, it retracts behind them, leaving those on the ground in an inescapable prison. The older man reveals himself to be Cervantes, an idealist, poet…and tax collector who was arrested for putting a lien on a church. The other prisoners announce they will hold their own trial for Cervantes and his companion as an excuse to confiscate the new arrivals’s possessions. Those possessions turn out to be costumes, props, and scripts. (Cervantes, as it turns out, is a poet…of the theater.) Cervantes offers to present his play as a defense, and transforms himself into Don Quixote, an old man who considers himself a gallant knight, even though those haven’t existed for a few hundred years. For the rest of the evening, Cervantes recruits other prisoners to play roles in his “production” using only the tools in his trunk and whatever may be lying around. Quixote fights a windmill because he sees it as a dragon, treasures a dirty dishrag like fine gossamer, and treats a lowly barmaid (Aldonza, self-described as a “strumpet men use and forget”) as a fair lady named Dulcinea. Kiley occasionally switches back to the Cervantes persona, acting as narrator and addressing the other prisoners. Quixote remains steadfast, even as others attempt to impose their reality on his worldview. In a soaring dramatic ballad, “The Impossible Dream (The Quest),” Quixote explains how his pursuits bring him a sense of honor, even if they are unachieveable. Catch up with all the songs to date! [https://www.100showtunes.com/p/the-songs] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.100showtunes.com [https://www.100showtunes.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Ayer10 min
episode No. 45 “Don’t Rain on My Parade” artwork

No. 45 “Don’t Rain on My Parade”

June 1964. You’ve finally scored a ticket to see Funny Girl, a new musical biography of Ziegfeld/early radio star Fanny Brice. Brice isn’t really a personality that means much to you, but the young actress playing her sure does. 22-year old Barbra Streisand has already established herself as a rising supernova thanks to her scene stealing role in 1962’s I Can Get if for You Wholesale, TV appearances (including an amazing duet with Judy Garland [https://youtu.be/zFVxX3RtyhQ?si=zztMmR8jtHb_AreQ]), and two albums (the first of which recently won Grammys for Album of the Year and Best Female Vocal Performance). As a musical, Funny Girl is…adequate. But Streisand is sensational and nothing else matters much when she’s onstage. She starts as an awkward girl from Brooklyn who nonetheless believes she’s “The Greatest Star,” and you believe her! She clowns around, belts several great Jule Styne tunes (though everyone else gets decidedly less exciting material), and falls in love with inveterate gambler Nicky Arnstein. At the end of Act 1 , Arnstein runs off to play a high stakes poker game, and, despite the well-founded objections of everyone she knows, Brice decides to take a leave of absence from the Follies and follow the man she loves, telling the naysayers, “Don’t Rain on My Parade.” Catch up with all the songs to date! [https://www.100showtunes.com/p/the-songs] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.100showtunes.com [https://www.100showtunes.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

11 de jun de 20268 min
episode No. 45. “Hello, Dolly!” artwork

No. 45. “Hello, Dolly!”

Winter 1964. You’re seeing the new smash hit musical Hello, Dolly!. The production skips the overture and opens immediately on a chorus on 1880s New Yorkers instructing the audience to call on the local matchmaker before Carol Channing revealing herself as Dolly from behind a newspaper. The briskly paced farce centers on this singular creation, a widow who makes ends meet as a matchmaker (but also has a business card in her pocket offering her services for any occasion that may come up, no matter how niche or bizarre.) Quick-witted and resourceful, Dolly takes her assignment (finding a bride for Horace Vandergelder, an irracable Yonkers shop-owner), and completely subverts it, setting up machinations that will land Horace for herself while leading to love for two of his clerks and a pair of milliners. Channing is so endearing as Dolly that you are completely on her side for all of these schemes, which are set converge at The Harmonia Gardens, a restaurant Dolly frequented with her late husband. The head waiter hears that Dolly will be in attendance and instructs the waitstaff to speed up service, launching a dazzling comedic display of leaps and gags. But all comes to a standstill when Dolly arrives standing atop a grand staircase in a stunning red gown beginning the most spectacular production number you’ve ever seen. (“Hello, Dolly”) Catch up with all the songs to date! [https://www.100showtunes.com/p/the-songs] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.100showtunes.com [https://www.100showtunes.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

21 de may de 20269 min
episode No. 43. “My Favorite Things” artwork

No. 43. “My Favorite Things”

Late fall, 1959. Mary Martin is closing out the decade originating a role in a new Rodgers & Hammerstein musical. R&H haven’t really had a hit since The King and I, but you’re hopeful Mary Martin will bring out their best. The curtain rises on a gaggle of nuns in 1930s Austria singing a prelude before realizing one of their postulates, Maria, is missing. Cut to Martin emerging from a tree and singing the title song. Maria is the impish problem-child of the convent, climbing trees, scraping knees, and singing where she isn’t supposed to. The intimidating Mother Abbess calls Maria into her office for a serious discussion about her suitability for monastic life. She’s about to send Maria to serve as a governess for a widower naval captain’s seven children, which will set off musical’s main story (Nun meets Boy and Boy’s seven children, Nun teaches children to sing, Nun marries boy, and singing family runs away from Nazis). In order to get Maria into the right headspace to face her fears and accept this life-altering assignment, Mother Abbess encourages Maria to sing an old song she had once caught Maria singing in the abbey, eventually joining in herself. (“My Favorite Things”) Catch up with all the songs to date! [https://www.100showtunes.com/p/the-songs] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.100showtunes.com [https://www.100showtunes.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

7 de may de 202610 min
episode No. 42. “Rose’s Turn” artwork

No. 42. “Rose’s Turn”

Summer 1959. You’re attending Gypsy: a musical fable, based on the memoirs of famed burlesque performer Gypsy Rose Lee. But the show’s driving force is her determined and domineering mother, Rose Havoc, played by Ethel Merman. After one of the most thrilling overtures you’ve ever heard, the curtain rises on a group of adorable kids auditioning for a vaudeville act. Merman barges into the scene, shouting “Sing out, Louise!” as she walks down the aisle carrying a dog. Her daughters—the cloying Baby June and her meek older sister, Louise—are among those auditioning, and Rose will not let anything or anyone curtail their rise to stardom. She finds a patient partner, Herbie, who tries to bring some stability as Rose builds a traveling act for June (who Rose insists is a child even as she enters early adulthood) and some dancing “newsboys” (one of whom is the timid Louise). When June and the newsboys bail on the act, Rose pivots her attention to Louise without much success. When they hit rock bottom (a burlesque house in Wichita), Louise does a strip as a last minute replacement, beginning her transformation into “Gypsy Rose Lee”. As she becomes more successful than she or Rose could have hoped, Louise resents Rose’s continued meddling, and the two have a climactic argument in her star dressing room. Rejected and resentful, Rose ruminates on the sacrifices she made for her daughters and the stardom she always wanted for herself in an epic mad scene of a song. (“Rose’s Turn”). Catch up with all the songs to date! [https://www.100showtunes.com/p/the-songs] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.100showtunes.com [https://www.100showtunes.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

29 de abr de 202611 min