jo
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Post by jo on Sept 12, 2012 15:17:56 GMT -5
Happy Anniversary, everyone!! It's September 12 once again, and 8 years ago there were many of us who were at the Imperial for a never to be forgotten memory of a finale show! How about sharing one funny or amusing incident that happened to you on that day, if any?Mine -- on the way back to where I was staying a few blocks off, I had wondered why a few people were taking a double-take on me as we crossed paths. I thought it must have been the mega-watt grin which had not left my face yet. The friend who was with me during that matinee laughingly told me, while she took a photo of me on the big Times Sq surroundings to preserve the moment, that the glittery stuff which they released from the top of the Imperial at curtain call were sticking on my face and neck! LOL! I could not easily brush them off with my hand. It took a shower to get rid of all of the stuff. LOL - I should have gone to sleep with them first - to continue to preserve the fantasy moments Jo
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Post by annetter on Sept 12, 2012 17:24:27 GMT -5
I went to the last show alone as I hadn't met any fans yet and didn't find the Ozalot board until a few days later.
I was very sad and lonely that the excitement was over and having no one to share my feelings with.
I am so grateful to have met so many people since then and have cultivated several friendships that I know will be lifelong.
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Post by mamaleh on Sept 13, 2012 0:23:39 GMT -5
What a day that was! Ret gave some of us little Hugh/Peter pins (a treasured keepsake). At one point I helped Lizzy hold up her beautifully made "goodbye" sign to Hugh. Loved when he mischievously gave Isabel Keating a real drink instead of a fake one. Before the show, there must have been hundreds of people outside the lobby entrance; Joel Grey asked for assistance in getting through to pick up his tickets, so I led the way as a sort of broken field runner for him, LOL. I recall Hugh's throwing one of his sweat-soaked towels up towards the first row of the mezz at show's end, but the throw was slightly short, and it fell down somewhere in the orchestra. And oh, the pandemonium as he left, and the emotional high he left us with as he waved from the car as it pulled out of sight on 46th St.
I second Annette's statement about the long-lasting friendships he inadvertently brought about.
That day was the capper to an amazing year.
Ellen
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 13, 2012 1:46:35 GMT -5
I wonder if we crossed paths that afternoon, Ellen Joel Grey unwittingly stepped on the feet of my friend, as we waited at the lobby for the doors to open. They were late opening the show that afternoon! Jo
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 13, 2012 5:17:01 GMT -5
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Post by ocjackie on Sept 13, 2012 9:18:38 GMT -5
I'm just so sorry I wasn't there. And I'm also sorry that I didn't meet or talk to any of you before. All of you are just like Hugh, warm and welcoming. I found that out at BOB, although I could only see it 3 times. Waiting to meet you again at Houdidni
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Post by njr on Sept 13, 2012 17:33:12 GMT -5
I got to listen to a good bit of it, including the ending, at a friend's (fellow Ozalot) finale party on speaker phone!! Wish I had been able to be there, but at least I saw the show twice--from 2nd row (front & center) in March and 3rd row on the left in June. ;D
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jo
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Post by jo on Aug 27, 2014 19:27:51 GMT -5
From a live chat hosted by The New York Daily News -- That experience, even for fans, was incredible, giddy, almost surreal, and will forever be etched in our memory banks! We were on a high for the entire show Jo
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Post by mamaleh on Aug 27, 2014 21:02:51 GMT -5
That was indeed an exhilarating day. But I think the April 18 Actors Fund performance rivaled it.
Ellen
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jo
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Post by jo on Aug 27, 2014 23:33:58 GMT -5
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jo
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Post by jo on Aug 27, 2014 23:49:56 GMT -5
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Post by foxie on Aug 28, 2014 7:11:26 GMT -5
Incredible memories!!!
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 7, 2014 19:13:44 GMT -5
After reading the accounts of how Hugh performed at the Rivers funeral, that brought back some wonderful memories of the musical score, especially QUIET PLEASE, THERE'S A LADY ON STAGE. Strange but I also realized that we are celebrating the 10th anniversary of the closing show at the end of this coming week, on September 12. We were lucky that copies of the professionally-done media/press reels of the musical numbers from the show were floating around for awhile... and which have been mostly uploaded on YouTube. As these production numbers were filmed during early previews ( they were going to be used as publicity material), the final opening number which was added towards the end of previews, was not included in those filmed numbers. From the final version of the show ( and part of the OBCR), came my favorite song from THE BOY FROM OZ. It was called THE LIVES OF ME, which encapsulated the many people and events that touched Peter's life. Hugh sings it with such a special poignancy and without all the glitter that accompanied most of the other numbers. www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OXcAOrGQ9AWith it, to bookend the show was the eleven o-clock number, ONCE BEFORE I GO. Such wonderful memories! Jo
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Post by birchie on Sept 8, 2014 13:00:30 GMT -5
After reading the accounts of how Hugh performed at the Rivers funeral, that brought back some wonderful memories of the musical score, especially QUIET PLEASE, THERE'S A LADY ON STAGE. Strange but I also realized that we are celebrating the 10th anniversary of the closing show at the end of this coming week, on September 12. We were lucky that copies of the professionally-done media/press reels of the musical numbers from the show were floating around for awhile... and which have been mostly uploaded on YouTube. As these production numbers were filmed during early previews ( they were going to be used as publicity material), the final opening number which was added towards the end of previews, was not included in those filmed numbers. From the final version of the show ( and part of the OBCR), came my favorite song from THE BOY FROM OZ. It was called THE LIVES OF ME, which encapsulated the many people and events that touched Peter's life. Hugh sings it with such a special poignancy and without all the glitter that accompanied most of the other numbers. www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OXcAOrGQ9AWith it, to bookend the show was the eleven o-clock number, ONCE BEFORE I GO. Such wonderful memories! Jo Those are my two favorite songs from TBFO and below is my favorite video commemorating the closing performance. I cried the first time I saw it. I suspect someone who was an Ozalot made the video but I never found out who it was. It's very well done and features The Lives Of Me and finishes with a few bars from the end of Once Before I Go. Have tissues handy: Sue
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 11, 2014 21:09:29 GMT -5
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 11, 2014 21:25:28 GMT -5
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 11, 2014 22:10:57 GMT -5
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Post by mamaleh on Sept 12, 2014 8:19:30 GMT -5
Once again, great memories. Thanks, Jo. I never tire of looking at the pic of Hugh giving Matt Damon that lap dance, turning around for a moment to look at the audience with that impish grin on his face. What a day that was--and oh, what crowds outside, especially post-show. I got pushed over some sort of opening in the road through which steam emerged. When I was able to move, I saw that the steam had melted some of the signatures on my poster, LOL. Not Hugh's, thankfully. That day was a zoo, but a happy zoo.
Ellen
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Post by foxie on Sept 13, 2014 15:23:38 GMT -5
Listening to the album today of course I have listen 100 times at least but it stills gives me a panicy feeling in my chest and my heart flutters we were so lucky to experience such a wonder that is what it was I don't that can ever happen again but he can come close!!!
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Post by foxie on Sept 13, 2014 15:50:31 GMT -5
I think I must watch the bad dvd I have tonite I am into it!!
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Post by foxie on Sept 13, 2014 17:05:42 GMT -5
Watching it it is so bad but it is from a preview and how muscular Hugh is remember how skinny at the end!
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 15, 2016 22:59:05 GMT -5
Oops, we missed the 12th year anniversary of the show's closing by a few days ! Here's one of the spectacular numbers from one of Broadway's Greatest Showmen -- Will we see a similar look for THE GREATEST SHOWMAN ON EARTH Jo
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Post by jo on Sept 16, 2016 16:05:04 GMT -5
And a year before that, it opened to previews on Broadway on September 16, 2003! www.ibdb.com/broadway-production/the-boy-from-oz-13424Full details on the production on this theatre site. I recall that during previews, the songlist was changing every now and then. The original opening number was not ALL THE LIVES OF ME but another Peter Allen song. If I recall right, ONCE BEFORE I GO was not yet the eleven o'clock number. And TENTERFIELD SADDLER was still part of the production. When we learned that it was taken out because it was felt that the lyrics would not resonate with Broadway audiences, we were very disappointed and had discussed that on the then official forum for TBFO...which might have been fed back to the producers because they decided to retain it in the original cast recording as a bonus feature. One of the most enjoyable early promos of the show was when Hugh appeared on Good Morning America and performed NOT THE BOY NEXT DOOR eventually on top of the piano - later joined by an elated Diane Sawyer From the viewpoint of eager fans awaiting the opening -- *On the first day of ticket sales, the queue lining up at the box office at the Imperial got a surprise visit from Hugh himself! Someone handed him a rose... which he impudently placed between his lips! That gave us an early signal that this actor will be a fun performer! *There were various reports on rehearsals and preview performances. The most confusing, and devastating to some, was when they decided to eliminate the front row ( supposedly because of lighting issues which they observed during previews). This caused some distress because the occupants of the seats had to be reassigned new seats in the house ( no longer front row because the second row, the soon-to-be-famous Row AA, became the new front row and also kept their original occupants which was very lucky for many, including moi ) or were given a choice of other dates. *During rehearsals, a much larger theatre became vacant but it was Hugh who decided he wanted the show to remain at the Imperial. Eleven years later, he would actually be back on Broadway in the general vicinity -- the theater that was available was not Circle in the Square but its famous neighbor, the Gershwin, which houses the still-running WICKED! On hindsight though, it was an excellent decision because the Imperial was considered one of the best musical houses on Broadway -- it had a sense of intimacy lacking in the cavernous Gershwin, which would play well with the way Hugh had keynoted his performance by involving the audience in many ways -- and as someone said, it did not have a bad seat even if one were seated in the balcony. *The official TBFO site and forum ( which eventually became the original site of our current forum, but of course with modifications, thanks to Valerie) emerged in July of 2013 and had gathered a group of fans eager to start sharing their impressions and hopes for the production. *Hugh did not break the 4th wall regularly during previews although the possibilities with the material were already there. It became a regular feature especially in the early weeks of the regular run, especially when it became obvious that it helped tremendously in keeping the show afloat after the devastating reviews Jo
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jo
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Post by jo on Sept 16, 2016 16:23:36 GMT -5
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