I've just seen the set list for Marxfest's Music of the Marx Brothers event at 54 Below on May 9, and although I don't want to give away too many surprises, I do want to assure you that this is a thrilling lineup. You may expect many favorites, but also some inspired choices from left field, some of which I'd be willing to bet you have never heard performed live before. The bill of great performers includes Dandy Wellington, Marissa Mulder, Bill Zeffiro, and Gelber & Manning.
And I'll tell you this: The great Bill Zeffiro is going to play...the Overture.
For those who have spent their lives doing things other than intensely studying the Marx Brothers: The Overture is the medley of Marx Brothers songs, with accents from Beethoven and Gershwin, played by Marvin Hamlisch before Groucho's 1972 Carnegie Hall concert. I call it The Grouchoverture. Hearing Bill play it live is going to be electrifying.
Below is a post from a couple of years ago, dealing with this very piece of music. By a fascinating coincidence, it was published on May 9, 2012 -- exactly two years before Marxfest's Music of the Marx Brothers event at 54 Below. I hope to see you there.
Sunday is the fortieth anniversary of Groucho's 1972 Carnegie Hall concert, preserved on the bittersweet LP An Evening With Groucho. (Actually, the recording draws on two concerts, one at Iowa State University.) Dick Cavett, who introduced the great man at Carnegie Hall, has reflected on the anniversary in his Times online column (read it here) and on All Things Considered (listen to it here). I'm marking the occasion by sharing the first two pages of my forever-in-progress Marx Brothers book. It's a preface about with the medley Marvin Hamlisch played at Carnegie Hall before Dick Cavett introduced Groucho Marx. (An Evening With Groucho is out of print, but available at archive.org, or right here.)
THE1972 LP AN EVENING WITH GROUCHO – a sad and joyous document with which all Marxists have struggled – begins with an Overture, performed by Marvin Hamlisch at the piano. Backstage, waiting to be introduced, is an eighty-two-year-old man named Julius Henry Marx. He has been in show business for nearly seventy years, and now he has made it to Carnegie Hall.
Hamlisch, still a few
years away from A Chorus Line and his Pulitzer, may be in awe of the venue. Julius is in awe of nothing. With a grand flourish, Hamlisch launches into Beethoven – Allegro
con brio, the first movement of Piano Sonata No. 21, the Waldstein.
He hammers the insistent opening chords before a momentarily
disoriented audience.
The
Waldstein twinkles along toward its first
release. Through parting clouds emerges a melody so intrinsic to us that we can hear the unsung lyrics: Hooray
for Captain Spaulding, the African explorer! Did someone
call me schnorrer? Hooray hooray hooray! It takes a moment to
register, and then sweet applause. Behind their glasses, eyebrows, and
moustaches, people in the audience have begun to cry.
“Hooray
for Captain Spaulding” fizzles back
into the Waldstein, and then erupts
into a second movement, “Alone” from A Night at the Opera.
This, too, is lovingly received, even though we will sometimes fast-forward this
number, later on, when we watch A Night
at the Opera in our living rooms. We will never watch it to
hear Allan Jones sing.
Hamlisch slides elegantly back to Kalmar and Ruby. At last we are to meet him, the famous
Captain Spaulding! Everyone says I love you.
Sitting
in the audience is a very great man, thirty-seven
years old, in some ways an heir to the legacy celebrated tonight. He will eventually
make a film called Everyone Says I Love
You,
but that’s ages away.
Tonight at Carnegie Hall he is sitting beside a radiant Diane Keaton.
We
descend back into A Night at the Opera – “Cosi Cosa,” another
lukewarm slab of Allan Jones. But then we
catch on: “Cosi Cosa” is delivered
this evening with a distinctive technical flourish, and the Carnegie Hall audience bursts into passionate applause,
realizing what Hamlisch is doing here: He’s shooting the keys. At’sa
fine.
He
makes a triumphant return to Captain Spaulding by way of Beethoven, and then a
coda: The unmistakable final spasm of Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, to break our hearts, and to put the boys in company with the great art of the
twentieth century.
Thanks for the description of Hamlisch's Overture and Cavett's memory of Groucho ordering dessert was classic...
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