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The Producers: The Book, Lyrics and Story Behind the Biggest Hit in Broadway History - How We Did it
 
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The Producers: The Book, Lyrics and Story Behind the Biggest Hit in Broadway History - How We Did it (Hardcover)

by Mel Brooks (Author), Thomas Meehan (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Customers buy this book with A Year with the Producers (A theatre arts book) by Matthew Broderick

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Miramax Books; annotated edition edition (1 Dec 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0786868805
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786868803
  • Product Dimensions: 29 x 24.4 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 390,391 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Book Description

ay History! When Mel Brooks turned his 1968 Academy Award-winning film, The Producers, into a Broadway musical with the help of his co-librettist, Tom Meehan, it quickly became the hottest ticket in town, won an unprecedented twelve Tony Awards and was hailed by Time magazine as "a gift from the show-biz gods". In this gorgeously illustrated book, Brooks and Meehan take us backstage, onstage and into the wings, with the entire annotated script, all nineteen songs, costume and set designs and full-colour photos throughout.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating, funny insight into making the Broadway show, 30 Dec 2001
By A Customer
As a lifelong fan of the Producers movie, I was prepared to be amused at what I saw as a reheat of a great film. I was wrong. This is no reheat, this is a whole new bigger, better and funnier Producers. The first half of the book is written by Mel Brooks and Tom Meehan as they describe how the Broadway musical version came about. As an insight into how musicals are born, their account is both entertaining and interesting. But because its the Producers, their account is achingly funny too. For die-hard fans of the movie, fear not. all the best bits are still there but with a truckload more. 17 new songs, new dance routines and, of course, even funnier jokes and one-liners, add up to Tony-award-winning excellence.

The second half of the book is devoted to the musical's words and music, with lyrics from the show. Mel Brooks has written 17 new songs and they help develop the extended plot of the 1967 movie. I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoyed the film, likes comedy, likes musicals, has a sense of humour and wants proof that the original Producers could be improved upon.

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Look at Creating The Producers!, 7 May 2004
By Professor Donald Mitchell "Jesus Makes Me a P... (Boston) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)      
Caution: This book contains vulgar three and four letter words in the libretto and lyrics of The Producers. The intent behind the use of these words is humor, rather than prurience.

The Producers is by far the best book I have ever read about the development and staging of a Broadway show. Anyone who likes Broadway, comedy, or Mr. Mel Books will find this book to be irresistible! For those who cannot get tickets to The Producers, this book is your best bet to enjoy this marvelous musical now. I strongly recommend this book as a gift item for those who don't mind some salty language and references.

This book contains reminiscences of the show's development from the first contact by Mr. David Geffen to Mr. Mel Brooks to encourage Mr. Brooks to create a Broadway musical version of the 1968 motion picture of The Producers by Mr. Brooks. Each personal statement is accompanied by beautiful, lighthearted candid photographs of the people involved. One of the most touching sections involves how Ms. Susan Stroman was chosen to direct and choreograph the show after her talented husband and artistic partner, Mike Ockrent died, and Ms. Stroman was still in mourning. The stories about the first reading for producers will leave you with a tingle of excitement. After the first act was read, Mr. Rocco Landesman offered the St. James Theatre. Fourteen producers present eventually invested in the show, after Mr. Geffen had to bail out due to other commitments. The accounts are full of one-liners to keep you laughing as you learn. For example, turning a movie with two songs into a musical with 16 more is described as being "not unlike trying to translate it from English into Serbo-Croatian."

Although the feedback was good all along, everyone kept waiting for something to go wrong. But it never did. The most negative thing anyone said about the show was Mr. Brooks. "It's not funnier than Blazing Saddles." When the New York Times Review came in, it was an amazing rave that began with "How do you single out highlights in a bonfire?" You then get some background on sets, costumes, and winning 12 Tony awards.

From there, the book presents the libretto of the show and the lyrics of the songs. The only thing that's missing is the musical score. But you can sing to yourself, and enjoy the many wonderful photographs of the 22 person cast (featuring Nathan Lane as Max Bialystock and Matthew Broderick as Leo Bloom -- with full allusions to Ulysses intended). This is an annotated version, so it includes notes about what the draft versions had called for and the reasons why certain changes were made. Having seen the changes, I must agree that the decisions were unerringly improvements. Some of the false starts are pretty funny, too, such as the planned beginning with a "Hey, Nebraska" spoof of a well-known Broadway musical.

If you are one of the few people who doesn't know the story line, let me give you a brief summary without spoiling it for you. Max has just had a flop ("Funny Boy" based on Hamlet). Accountant Leo notices that Max made a small profit and speculates that a lot of money could be made by over raising money for a flop on which little was spent. Max falls in love with the idea, and draws Leo into a plot to do this. They find a story called "Springtime for Hitler" which they feel will offend practically everybody, and hire a director to make an outrageous version. Max raises the money by romancing elderly female investors. The rest of the story takes a number of unexpected twists that will delight and entertain you. One of my favorite lines from the show comes in Act 1, Scene 1 when Max comments that "the reviews come out a lot faster when the critics leave at intermission."

The appeal of the story is that it ultimately upholds positive values while poking good-natured fun at everyone involved in the Broadway community. Since no one is spared by the satirical spear, no one can be terribly offended. There's a lot of cross-dressing to spread out the small cast that gives the show some of the sophomoric appeal of a Hasty Pudding theatrical, which is well captured in the photographs.

Creativity experts say that you can find improved solutions by trying to do the opposite of what you've been trying to do. So the notion of trying to make something bad . . . to find something good . . . is a well established one. Turning something from one form into another one is also advised. So you can learn new ways to solve old problems, even from Broadway musicals!

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5.0 out of 5 stars Where did they go right?, 23 Jan 2006
By A Customer
I came late to this wonderful show, discovering it a few weeks ago through the movie version, and was instantly captivated. This book serves both as a souvenir of the original Broadway show, which I'll never get to see now, and as a fascinating guide to the whole process of adapting an established cult classic to a new format. I'd have paid the money just for the first few chapters of background; to get the entire book and lyrics, copiously illustrated, was icing on the cake. Sometimes the wrong turnings and false starts are the most fascinating - for example, the struggles to write a fitting "eleven o'clock number" for Nathan Lane which culminated in the glorious rant, "Betrayed".

In some ways I think the movie version smartened up the characters, toning down Leo's nerdiness in the early scenes and Max's bravado and vulgarity. All that is captured here in the best production photographs I've seen in any musical theatre book. It cheers me up every time I look at it. And I relished the irony of this celebration of a disastrous show being fought over by no less than 14 leading Broadway producers.

Who produced this schlock? Give 'em a Tony for this terrific book!

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