Monday, January 14, 2002
Curtain closes on 'Fantasticks'
Broadway legend had 42-year run
By Michael Kuchwara
The Associated Press
NEW YORK Try to remember a time when The Fantasticks wasn't running at the tiny Sullivan Street Playhouse in Greenwich Village. After nearly 42 years and 17,162 performances, that time has come.
The off-Broadway musical by Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt celebrated its last two performances Sunday after weeks of enthusiastic, sold-out houses and heaps of publicity. It's a fitting end for a theatrical legend that opened May 3, 1960, to mixed reviews, no advance sale and with a pugnacious producer determined to succeed.
My job as producer was to try to keep the show running, Lore Noto says simply. He did using word-of-mouth, aggressively getting items placed with newspaper columnists and even corralling people off the streets near the theater to see the musical.
As the years went by, Mr. Noto dreamed of one day catching up with The Mousetrap, the Agatha Christie murder mystery that has been playing in London since 1952. But it was not to be. Four decades later, rising costs, dwindling audiences and a new theater owner forced him to reconsider.
I still called the shots but it was getting harder and harder, said Mr. Noto, homebound because of a heart condition and several bouts with cancer. We weren't getting the groups of school kids, and people didn't want to pay the $40 top ticket price.
Yet Mr. Noto speaks with pride when he describes the four decades of roller-coaster existence that went into keeping the show alive, an existence that has been reconfirmed by thousands of stock and amateur productions around the globe.
The Fantasticks billed itself as the world's longest running musical, and it was right. By comparison, Cats, Broadway's long-run champ, notched only 7,485 performances by the time it closed in September 2000.
Based on an obscure play by Edmund Rostand, author of Cyrano de Bergerac, The Fantasticks tells of young love tested over time by adversity. Produced for $16,500, the show has paid its 44 investors a 19,465 percent return on their investment.
The musical's hit songs include Try to Remember and Soon It's Gonna Rain, recorded by scores of artists from Barbra Streisand to Ed Ames to Tony Bennett to Harry Belafonte.
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