Saratoga seemed to have everything in its favor when it opened on Broadway in December 1959: a story by Edna Ferber (Show Boat), a score by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer, and a cast featuring MGM musical star Howard Keel,... more » as well as Carol Lawrence, fresh from her triumph in West Side Story. Yet the show closed after a mere 10 weeks, a victim of a cumbersome book, unwieldy locale shifts between Saratoga and New Orleans, and a score that had to be revised during tryouts by Mercer alone after Arlen fell ill. While there are no classic tunes here, it's an enjoyable 40 minutes, with Lawrence and Keel shining on numerous duets, including the love songs "Why Fight This?" and "A Game of Poker," along with some of Arlen's trademark bluesy accents, peppy ensembles, and a female duet, "Gettin' a Man," that recalls Frank Loesser's "Marry the Man Today." --David Horiuchi« less
Saratoga seemed to have everything in its favor when it opened on Broadway in December 1959: a story by Edna Ferber (Show Boat), a score by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer, and a cast featuring MGM musical star Howard Keel, as well as Carol Lawrence, fresh from her triumph in West Side Story. Yet the show closed after a mere 10 weeks, a victim of a cumbersome book, unwieldy locale shifts between Saratoga and New Orleans, and a score that had to be revised during tryouts by Mercer alone after Arlen fell ill. While there are no classic tunes here, it's an enjoyable 40 minutes, with Lawrence and Keel shining on numerous duets, including the love songs "Why Fight This?" and "A Game of Poker," along with some of Arlen's trademark bluesy accents, peppy ensembles, and a female duet, "Gettin' a Man," that recalls Frank Loesser's "Marry the Man Today." --David Horiuchi
A good example of a not very good musical from the past
F. Behrens | Keene, NH USA | 06/06/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"As much as I am forever lamenting the decline of the tuneful Broadway musical, I never mean to imply that all of the oldies were necessarily goodies. Plenty of them were barely adequate and closed even before the original cast albums could hit the streets. A good case in point is revealed in the RCA Victor re-release of (09026-63690-2). Its credentials are great on paper: music by Harold Arlen, lyrics by Johnny Mercer, starring roles taken by Howard Keel and Carol Lawrence. And yet it closed after 80 performances, having garnered 1 favorable and 6 unfavorable reviews from the big critics in New York back then. John Chapman praised the costumes, Walter Kerr blamed the book, Richard Watts liked the first half hour, and so on. The problem seems to be that "Saratoga" looked like a period piece but did not sound like one. "I'll be respectable" is just one in the long line of "I'm-gonna-make-it" songs and one of Keel's ballads is given a Cole Porter-ish Latin beat that is totally out of keeping with the mood, time and place of the action. Still, the score is a lot of fun and miles better than the long dry recites of recent musicals in which the composers are content to come up with one good tune and go into rehearsal, as someone wrote about "Evita." Heck, Keel can save a song as no one (but Drake, of course) can; and all in all, this CD is worth the hearing.PS: It is possible that "Saratoga" suffered by comparison with other musicals that opened at the same time--"Gypsy," "Fiorello!" and "The Sound of Music" being the most notable."
A few attractive numbers in this Broadway failure.
Mark Andrew Lawrence | Toronto | 05/24/2004
(2 out of 5 stars)
"SARATOGA was flop, no question, and a deserved one too. It was ineptly put together and based on a novel that does not really lend itself to a musical comedy treatment.This would be Harold Arlen's final Broadway score and a sad farewell. Arlen reportedly became so depressed during the try-outs that he went home to New York leaving Johnny Mercer to write three songs on his own.All this might lead one to believe the score is a washout. It isn't, even though itr is nowhere near as good as HOUSE OF FLOWERS or ST. LOUIS WOMAN. "Gettin' a man" is a great comedy song ("they understand the promised land, but buying the property ...NO!") but this is followed by "Petticoat High" which has the carefully controlled Clio kicking up her heels with the peasants. Howard Keel sings so well that you imagine if SARATOGA had succeeded he would have made a career of musicals in the 1960s: He would have been far better than Sydney Chaplin in FUNNY GIRL!
Carol Lawrence is quite wonderful, but nothing in the score really shows off her voice. The most interesting voice belongs to Carol Brice who shows up in two cuts.SARATOGA is for collectors of Broadway flops and Harold Arlen fans only."
Arlen and Mercer's swan song - a dying swan.
A. Andersen | Bellows Falls, VT USA | 05/09/2001
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Two of our greatest song writers, Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer, who gave their best to the screen and tin pan alley, could not make it on Broadway. This was the last of their attempts and it is, frankly, dull. There are fifteen songs and one ballet. Out of these there are only four that spark some interest: the jaunty GETTIN A MAN, THE MEN WHO RUN THE COUNTRY, and THE CURE as well as the love song, LOVE HELD LIGHTLY. But the rest is just mediocre - acceptable but mediocre. The show lasted only 80 performances with Cecil Beaton earning the show's only Tony Noms (for Sets and Costumes), winning for Costumes. If you like Carol Lawrence or Howard Keel, then by all means buy this. If you're an Arlen or Mercer fan, don't. Remember them by their other works, the hits."
DISAPPOINTING, BUT WORTHY OF A LISTEN . . . .
J. T Waldmann | Carmel, IN, home to the fabulous new Regional Perf | 06/26/2006
(2 out of 5 stars)
"A. Anderson, in a May 9, 2001 amazon.com review sums it up in one word: dull. And it's not just the music that's dull: dullness hangs like a veil over the whole CD. It's as if everyone involved was aware that they had "a turkey that they knew would close" and are merely going through the motions, with the exception, perhaps of Carol Brice and the Robber Barons ("The Men Who Run the Country"). Even the orchestra seems to be doing nothing more than playing notes. And RCA, who gave us some of the worst-sounding cast albums in history, appears to go overboard this time with thin, tinny, edgy, unexceptional sound. As much as I admire Howard Keel and Carol Lawrence, they both seem to be holding back and looking forward to their next projects, no matter how far off they might be. Lawrence went on to SUBWAYS ARE FOR SLEEPING (1961) & Keel replaced Richard Kiley in NO STRINGS, which I saw in Los Angeles. Although Keel was rather wooden on stage, boy, could he sing!
I also find it curious that RCA would keep SARATOGA in its catalogue while deleting a score of much worthier shows: 110 IN THE SHADE, NEW GIRL IN TOWN, FANNY, TAKE ME ALONG, etc. (See my "So You'd Like To Know Where RCA's Cast Albums Have Gone?, parts 1 & 2). Not that I wish them to drop SARATOGA; I just would like RCA to preserve those shows that are part of the musical theatre's history. And although this is a disappointing work by some of America's greatest musical talents, it belongs in any serious collector's library.
"
What went wrong?
Byron Kolln | the corner where Broadway meets Hollywood | 03/11/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)
"SARATOGA is one of those musicals that would be a perfect candidate for revival by Encores! or Reprise; a musical that has a gorgeous score but a dead-weight book.It starred MGM veteran Howard Keel, and Carol Lawrence - fresh from originating the role of Maria in WEST SIDE STORY - as the love leads. The impressive supporting cast was headed by veterans Carol Brice, Odette Myrtil and Truman Gaige. The score was written by Howard Arlen and Johnny Mercer with accomplished direction from Morton DaCosta (AUNTIE MAME, THE MUSIC MAN), and lavish in design by Cecil Beaton. It was in expert hands. What went wrong? Most of the praise went to Cecil Beaton's extravagent sets, but you can't hum those, can you?Howard Keel and Carol Lawrence sing some gorgeous stuff, including "A Game of Poker" and "Why Fight This?". Just try not to get your feet tapping to the infectious "Petticoat High", or get choked up with emotion in "Goose Never Be a Peacock".I love this score, and it is rarely out of my CD player. Snap it up before it disappears...again."