The Fantasticks

ACL2006 Profile Photo
ACL2006
#1The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 2:05pm

I decide to revisit this show this week for the first time in about 12 years. I know the show is very cheap to run, but I have to say there was maybe 75 people in the theater the night I went. Looking at ticketmaster, there's quite a few dates just 2-3 weeks away that don't have one ticket sold. If they average between 50-75 people per show, how are they staying open? On a side note, the show was very good, still in great shape even 10 years later.


A Chorus Line revival played its final Broadway performance on August 17, 2008. The tour played its final performance on August 21, 2011. A new non-equity tour started in October 2012 played its final performance on March 23, 2013. Another non-equity tour launched on January 20, 2018. The tour ended its US run in Kansas City and then toured throughout Japan August & September 2018.

Demitri2 Profile Photo
Demitri2
#2The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 4:40pm

When I saw the show at the Sullivan Street Playhouse back in the seventies the theatre's 150 seats were at least half empty on a Saturday night no less. In fact it made me wonder the same thing then that you're questioning now. Yet it ran until 2002 and according to a 2006 NY Times article the reason it did finally close was due to dwindling audiences and the entrance of a new landlord with renovation plans that proved unreasonable to the producers. So I imagine it's overall a rather cheap show to run what with a handful of actors, minimal scenery and only a piano and harp (with the harpist sometimes doubling on percussion instruments). If I'm not mistaken the original 1960 cast album augmented the score with a second piano just for the recording. Curious to know if they're using one or two pianos in the current production?

Side note: I've seen the show many times over the years but nothing has topped the first time I saw it in a 1964 touring production starring a teenage Liza Minnelli as Luisa and a then rather dashing 26 year old Elliott Gould as El Gallo. I only wish they had recorded that cast too. Minnelli had a surprisingly wide range back then though the score was apparently rearranged in part for her voice (as was the score to the CARNIVAL stock production I saw her in that same year).

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jnb9872
#2The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 6:11pm

Well, I know they have a very active presence at TKTS. Every time I go there are promoters for that and PERFECT CRIME; two shows I would have thought would be long-closed, presumably without the help of those promoters and those discount sales.


Words don't deserve that kind of malarkey. They're innocent, neutral, precise, standing for this, describing that, meaning the other, so if you look after them you can build bridges across incomprehension and chaos. But when they get their corners knocked off, they're no good anymore…I don't think writers are sacred, but words are. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.

Gothampc
#3The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 6:29pm

"Yet it ran until 2002 and according to a 2006 NY Times article the reason it did finally close was due to dwindling audiences and the entrance of a new landlord with renovation plans that proved unreasonable to the producers."

The only reason the Sullivan Street Playhouse production closed was due to a new landlord wanting the space. Over the years, the show had rises and falls in audience members, but they had created a legacy. Original audience members later brought their children and then their grandchildren. Was it full to capacity every night? No. Did they still have an audience coming to see it? Yes.


If anyone ever tells you that you put too much Parmesan cheese on your pasta, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.

Jon
#4The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 7:30pm

The show is done with one piano and a harp. Bass and drums were added for the original cast album.

GavestonPS Profile Photo
GavestonPS
#5The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 9:08pm

I can't speak for the current production, but when we did the show in high school (many moons ago), the score was arranged for two pianos. And that's how we performed it.

If they are down to one piano, I suspect that was a cost-cutting measure employed at some point in the long run.

Jon
#6The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 9:14pm

For 40 years at the Sullivan Street Theater, there was one piano and a harp.

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GavestonPS
#7The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 9:19pm

It's not that I don't believe you, Jon. But I know the score we received from the licensing org. required two pianos.

May we hear how you know what was done at Sullivan St. for 40 years?

(ETA it occurs to me that in high school we may have substituted a second piano because we didn't have a harpist. I saw two pianists playing from the published score and perhaps I made a false assumption. I'll ask the director of that production the next time I see him.)

Updated On: 6/28/14 at 09:19 PM

peerrjb
#8The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 9:37pm

Harp and Piano in the original score. Turning the harp into a second piano due to a non-harpist situation has been done in a lot of performances. The harp part is pretty tricky, to boot. In a Chicago production with which I was involved (in late 1972) the producers had to replace the first harpist who'd been contracted because as the music-rehearsals moved forward, it was discovered she simply couldn't play the part. This caused no deal of difficulty with the Musician's Union, but eventually she was replaced, to the benefit of all.

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GavestonPS
#9The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/28/14 at 9:47pm

Thanks, peerrjb, that makes sense. (I am amused to report I was at the house of our production's musical director just two hours ago and saw his old copy of THE FANTASTICKS' printed score on the shelf. If only I'd known I needed to open the cover page! BTW, our production was done 43 years ago.)

ACL2006 Profile Photo
ACL2006
#10The Fantasticks
Posted: 6/29/14 at 12:45pm

yes, there was only a piano & harp.


A Chorus Line revival played its final Broadway performance on August 17, 2008. The tour played its final performance on August 21, 2011. A new non-equity tour started in October 2012 played its final performance on March 23, 2013. Another non-equity tour launched on January 20, 2018. The tour ended its US run in Kansas City and then toured throughout Japan August & September 2018.