Showing posts with label Harold Rome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harold Rome. Show all posts

22 February 2011

Betty Garrett in Call Me Mister

Betty Garrett died last week, and I am honoring her by presenting the cast album from Call Me Mister, a 1946 revue that was a big break for her - and is a favorite show of mine.

Betty Garrett asks South
America to take it away
Now why would Betty Garrett star in something named Call Me Mister? It's because the review pertains to soldiers who were being discharged into the postwar world, and who now could be called "Mister" rather than by their rank. Most of the cast was composed of ex-military personnel - Garrett and some others excepted.

Garrett takes on the role of a worker in a military canteen - in one scene teaching the soldiers to do the then-popular Latin American dances ("South America, Take It Away" - her show stopper); in another lamenting the fact that with the end of war came the end of her clientele ("Little Surplus Me"). She also presents an ode to conspicuous holiday consumption ("Yuletide, Park Avenue").

Lawrence Winters
The rest of the cast is uniformly excellent - the other main vocal star is Lawrence Winters, who later had a distinguished career as an operatic baritone. His numbers include "Going Home Train" (quite similar to "This Train Is Bound for Glory"); a mawkish ode to the late US President Franklin Roosevelt ("The Man on the Dime"); and "The Red Ball Express," which is about the supply-chain convoy in the European theater of war.

The music and lyrics are by Harold Rome, and with few exceptions, the songs are very strong. "South America, Take It Away" was the only hit, in a bowdlerized version by Bing Crosby with the Andrews Sisters. The original is not especially risque, but in 1946, lyrics concerning "my pan-American can" were not heard on the radio. Despite the lack of hits and the topical nature of the lyrics, the score is quite effective and affecting. It strongly conveys the joy, relief and pride of the ex-soldiers. My own favorite is the ballad "Along with Me."

Harold Rome
Call Me Mister was Rome's second notable revue, following Pins and Needles. His first book musical was Wish You Were Here, in 1952. Other scores include Fanny, Destry Rides Again, and I Can Get It for You Wholesale.

Betty Garrett went from this review to Hollywood, appearing in several notable musicals, including On the Town with Jules Munshin, who also was in Call Me Mister and is heard in one number here. She later was often on US television shows.

The cast album, conduced by the show's musical director, Lehman Engel, was first issued on 78s in 1946. This transfer is from the 10-inch LP issue of 1949. The sound is quite good.