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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not all gold but a major element of the 50s Broadway canon
For those who admire Bob Merrill's extraordinary talent [sometime music and lyrics, sometime, lyrics only: [Carnival, Take Me Along, 2 songs inserted into Hello, Dolly, Funny Girl, etc.] this album is waiting.

While not extraordinary at all, this is a prime example of true middle line musicals that made the 50s, the Golden Age. It wasn't just the runaway hits that...

Published on September 1, 1999 by Scott Fuchs

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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars So-so Musical Version of "Anna Christie"
The 1957 musical "New Girl in Town", which featured Gwen Verdon and Thelma Ritter, is a very mixed bag. Based on Eugene O'Neill's brilliant play "Anna Christie", it tells the story of a young prostitute (Ms. Verdon) who returns to her native Sweden from the United States, where she has lived since age 5.

The score is by Bob Merrill, who was named the "Worst...
Published on May 22, 2005 by Helluva Godtime


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not all gold but a major element of the 50s Broadway canon, September 1, 1999
By 
Scott Fuchs (Hudson River Valley, New York) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: New Girl In Town (1957 Original Broadway Cast) (Audio CD)
For those who admire Bob Merrill's extraordinary talent [sometime music and lyrics, sometime, lyrics only: [Carnival, Take Me Along, 2 songs inserted into Hello, Dolly, Funny Girl, etc.] this album is waiting.

While not extraordinary at all, this is a prime example of true middle line musicals that made the 50s, the Golden Age. It wasn't just the runaway hits that gave the period that name! Orchestration-wise, one can 'hear' the beginnings of the choreographic genius of Bob Fosse. One only wishes that the music from the 'Brothel Ballet' was included.

All performances are 1st rate...but what else would you expect from a team like this?!

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gwen Verdon Sings Eugene O'Neill, June 16, 2004
This review is from: New Girl In Town (1957 Original Broadway Cast) (Audio CD)
Odd how many musicals have been crafted from glum American dramatist Eugene O'Neill--think this, from Anna Christie, or other efforts from Ah Wilderness! or Desire Under The Elms. What keeps this one afloat is the puckish presence of quintessential Broadway hoofer-dancer, Gwen Verdon, perhaps better known as the original Roxie Hart in the original musical Chicago, but here starring as Anna Christie come home to her father and becoming pals with wry and raffish Thelma Ritter; the two of them are what make this 1957 effort bounce to life, Ritter particularly fun with the song "Flings," and another sung with Cameron Prudhomme, "Yer My Friend." While not the caliber of Gypsy or other 50's New York hits, New Girl ran for 431 performances, and has more than a single hot song to make it memorable, including the cynical reminisence "On The Farm," and the hummable "It's Good To Be Alive." Deserving of a better rap than it has, the Bob Merrill music should have a wider audience than most of the tuneless stuff that passes through our ears at Tony time.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I Love this CD, full of great memories and music!, July 19, 2004
By 
Katie Rosselle (Stateline, NV United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: New Girl In Town (1957 Original Broadway Cast) (Audio CD)
I grew up listening to my parents play this record over & over after seeing the broadway play and never knew how much I loved it until I heard it again over 40 years later. It has the best upbeat tunes that make you want to join in and a few slower songs and even one song (Anna Lilla) that moves me to tears. I even love the parts when Gwen Verdon is talking to "Dutchie" during the songs. This music reminds me of Rogers and Hammerstein in it's fun,lively beat and hysterical lyrics. If you love those kind of musicals, say like Oklahoma or Carousal, you will love this. It's an older one without all the high tech engineering, but I love the vintage sound and innocence. Simply a lot of fun and will keep you humming. I loved it as a kid and I love it more now that I understand what the lyrics mean. Timeless!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gwen Verdon "sings" Eugene O'Neill..., May 3, 2009
By 
Byron Kolln (the corner where Broadway meets Hollywood) - See all my reviews
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It seems that red-headed singing and dancing sweetheart Gwen Verdon could do no wrong when it came to starring in Broadway musicals. Earning Tony Awards for her sizzling performance in 1953's CAN-CAN, and as devil's assistant Lola in 1955's DAMN YANKEES; she netted her third award in 1957, playing Anna Christie in the musical version of Eugene O'Neill's celebrated play, re-titled NEW GIRL IN TOWN.

NEW GIRL IN TOWN is the tale of Anna Christie, a girl with a cloudy past who returns to her hometown in order to help her ailing father, Chris, in his ferryboat business. Anna falls in love with the ship's stoker Mat, although their relationship is to be tested by the revelation of Anna's previous life... "Anna Christie" was famously adapted for the screen as Greta Garbo's very first 'Talkie' vehicle, simultaneously filmed in English and German-language versions. Marie Dressler co-starred as Marthy.

For the musical version of "Anna Christie", pop writer Bob Merrill (FUNNY GIRL, CARNIVAL!) turned in his very first musical theatre score. Tunes like "Roll Yer Socks Up", "It's Good to Be Alive", and "On the Farm" conjure up the world of Anna and her father perfectly. There's a gorgeous love duet for Anna and Mat (George Wallace) entitled "Did You Close Your Eyes?". "Flings" is a charming number for Anna and Marthy (Thelma Ritter, who tied with Ms Verdon to win a Tony Award for her crowd-pleasing performance). Sadly, time restrictions prevented the recording of the climactic "Cat House Ballet" sequence. NEW GIRL IN TOWN opened at the 46th Street Theatre on 14th May 1957, and ran for 431 performances.

Verdon would go on to distinguish herself by winning another Tony Award the following year for REDHEAD (a rare instance where an actress has won back-to-back awards in the 'Best Actress in a Musical' category). Composer Bob Merrill's next Broadway musical would be TAKE ME ALONG, based on Eugene O'Neill's "Ah, Wilderness!", starring Jackie Gleason and Eileen Herlie.

DRG's new reissue of NEW GIRL IN TOWN comes directly from the original RCA master tapes, and while the early stereo recording is quite muddy in places, as a whole it sounds much better than last year's release on the Flare label (which had a brighter sound but unfortunately exposed more tape hiss and sonic wobble in the process). On the plus-side, Flare's disc boasts some valuable bonus tracks including a fun cover of "Flings" from Carol Burnett and Martha Raye. Buy whichever is cheaper or more convienient.

[DRG 19120]
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars NEW RECORDING OF "NEW GIRL" RECOMMENDED . . . BUT WITH RESERVATIONS . . ., January 13, 2008
By 
J. T Waldmann "yaakov98" (Carmel, IN, home to the fabulous new Regional Performing Arts Center.) - See all my reviews
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Eileen Barton's 1950 recording of "If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked a Cake" was songwriter Bob Merrill's very first pop hit, and he went on to create such pop classics as Rosemary Clooney's "Mambo Italiano," Guy Mitchell's "(There's a Pawnshop on a Corner in) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania" and Patti Page's mega-hit "How Much Is That Doggie in the Window?" However, Merrill's major claim to fame (infamy?) was writing ". . . one of the most recognizable, most parodied, and (for non-Streisand fans) most irritating lyrics of all time: People/People who need people/Are the luckiest people in the world." (Marc Steyn, in an article posted on slate.com, dated April 9, 1998) Furthermore, writes Steyn, "Merrill is the man who single-handedly produced the worst songs of the decade and so debauched the currency of mainstream Tin Pan Alley that it had no moral authority to resist rock 'n' roll."

Well, excuuuse me, Mr. Steyn. I, among millions of others growing up in the 50s, really dug Bob Merrill's novelty songs, and I also thoroughly enjoyed the songs he wrote for his first Broadway score, NEW GIRL IN TOWN. How can anyone resist such rousing, toe-tapping, full-throated ensemble numbers like "Roll Yer Socks Up," "At the Check Apron Ball," "The Sunshine Girl (Has Raindrops in Her Eyes)," "There Ain't No Flies on Me," and "Chess and Checkers"? Novelty songs? Yes, and so are Marthy (Thelma Ritter) and the girls' reminiscences about their youthful "Flings" and Anna's (Gwen Verdon) recounting of her introduction to the wayward life by her Minnesota uncles and cousins "On the Farm." Merrill's score also includes a couple of lovely ballads: Mat's (George Wallace) "Look at `Er," Anna's "If That Was Love" and "It's Good To Be Alive," later reprised by Mat. Anna's father, Chris, (Cameron Prud'homme) sings the poignant "Anna Lilla" and with Anna leads the revelers in "Ven I Valse." In his liner notes, Victor Lewis complains that some of the songs ". . . are of a one-size-fits-all brand, and could have come from any up-beat musical." Who cares? They're terrific!

All the performances are terrific as well, earning for both Verdon and Ritter the 1958 Tony for Best Actress in a Musical (a tie) and a Best Featured Actor nomination for Prud'homme. The marvelous Robert Russell Bennett/Philip J. Lang orchestrations are a far cry from today's pathetic pared-down synthesizer/drum machine-dominated pit bands. Hal Hastings directs the whole thing with a seasoned hand.

So why doesn't this recording get a five-star rating? Well, it might have if Flare, in addition to Lewis' comments, had included the original CD booklet. Missing is a synopis of the musical and a cast listing; atleast the cover art has been faithfully reproduced. James Irvin's remastering has cleaned up much of the original RCA CD's muddiness, but at the same time has introduced a brightness that makes the tape hiss more apparent. On the positive side, now and again there is evidence of the three-dimensionality often associated with RCA's Webster Hall recordings. `Tis a pity Sony/BMG didn't reissue NEW GIRL and remaster it with the same attention to detail as they did with the Lincoln Center KING AND I and the 2oth anniversary revival of MY FAIR LADY. What a smashing recording this might have been.

Highly recommended - anyway.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Odd but collectible musical version of ANNA CHRISTIE, August 6, 1998
By 
A. Andersen (Bellows Falls, VT USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: New Girl In Town (1957 Original Broadway Cast) (Audio CD)
Eugene O'Neill's Pulitzer Prize winning tragedy turned into a Broadway musical. Bob Merrill's score is typical of its time - pleasant ballads and fun up tempo numbers. It somehow misses, though. One comes away from this one remembering Gwen Verdon's Tony Award winning performance and the marvelous Thelma Ritter in a classic interpretation of drunk water rat, Marthy Owen. Her "You're My Friend, Aintcha?" is wonderful. For Broadway cast album buffs only.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gwen Verdon sings Eugene O'Neill, April 11, 2009
By 
Byron Kolln (the corner where Broadway meets Hollywood) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
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It seems that red-headed singing and dancing sweetheart Gwen Verdon could do no wrong when it came to starring in Broadway musicals. Earning the Tony Award for her sizzling performance as devil's assistant Lola in 1955's DAMN YANKEES, she netted her third trophy in 1957, playing Anna Christie in the musical version of Eugene O'Neill's celebrated play, re-titled NEW GIRL IN TOWN.

NEW GIRL IN TOWN is the tale of Anna Christie, a girl with a cloudy past who returns to her hometown in order to help her ailing father in his ferryboat business. Anna falls in love with the ship's stoker Mat, although their relationship is to be tested by the revelation of Anna's previous life... "Anna Christie" was famously adapted for the screen as Greta Garbo's very first 'Talkie' vehicle, simultaneously filmed in English and German-language versions. Marie Dressler co-starred as Marthy.

For the musical version of "Anna Christie", pop writer Bob Merrill (FUNNY GIRL, CARNIVAL!) turned in his very first musical theatre score. Tunes like "Roll Yer Socks Up", "It's Good to Be Alive", and "On the Farm" conjure up the world of Anna and her father perfectly. There's a gorgeous love duet for Anna and Mat (George Wallace) entitled "Did You Close Your Eyes?". "Flings" is a charming number for Anna and Marthy (Thelma Ritter, who tied with Ms Verdon to win a Tony Award for her crowd-pleasing performance). Sadly, time restrictions prevented the recording of the climactic "Cat House Ballet" sequence. NEW GIRL IN TOWN opened at the 46th Street Theatre on 14th May 1957, and ran for 431 performances.

Verdon would go on to distinguish herself by winning another Tony Award the following year for REDHEAD (a rare instance where an actress has won back-to-back awards in the 'Best Actress in a Musical' category).

Flare has reissued the original 1957 cast album of NEW GIRL IN TOWN with several choice bonus selections, including two songs from Gwen Verdon's 1956 solo album THE GIRL I LEFT HOME FOR ("Sand in My Shoes" and "Why Can't I?") in addition to a fun recording of "Flings" by Carol Burnett and Martha Raye.

Although Amazon currently lists this CD as out-of-print, it's still readily available via the Flare website. DRG has also recently reissued this cast album (minus the bonus tracks) so buy whichever is cheaper or more convienient.

[Flare SPEC-1032]
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BOB MERRILL'S HIGHLY ENJOYABLE FIRST BROADWAY SCORE . . ., April 10, 2009
By 
J. T Waldmann "yaakov98" (Carmel, IN, home to the fabulous new Regional Performing Arts Center.) - See all my reviews
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Essential Reading - Marc Styn's "The Worst Songwriter of All Time," posted April 9, 1998 on Slate.com: "In a century of pop music, Bob Merrill pretty much has a hammerlock on the first half of the 1950s. Even then, he wasn't exactly a household name - and, if you beg to differ, chances are your household's mixing him up with Robert Merrill, the great Metropolitan Opera baritone who appeared around the same time. Merrill (Bob) chose the diminutive deliberately to avoid confusion with Merrill (Robert), though it's hard to see why anyone would think a fellow who makes his living singing Mozart and Verdi would go home at night and write 'If I Knew You Were Comin', I'd've Baked a Cake.'"

According to Styn, Merrill ". . . wrote more determinedly happy songs than anyone in history." Novelty songs like "Mambo Italiano," "Pittsburgh, Pennsylavania," "Sparrow in the Tree Top," "Honeycomb" and "How Much Is That Doggie in the Window?" may have earned him a lot of money, but they did little for his reputation. Again, Styn: "To those who love the great American standards, Merrill is the man who single-handedly produced the worst songs of the decade and so debauched the currency of mainstream Tin Pan Alley that it had no moral authority to resist rock 'n' roll."

Regarded as "too simple-minded to write show scores," Merrill enjoyed modest success on Broadway in spite of his critics. His first musical, NEW GIRL IN TOWN (based on the Eugene O'Neill drama ANNA CHIRISTIE), received a Best Musical Tony nomination (1958) and earned Best Actress Awards for both Gwen Verdon and Thelma Ritter. And, yes, it's filled with cleverly-rhymed, "determinedly happy songs": "Roll Yer Socks Up," "The Sunshine Girl (Has Raindrops in Her Eyes)," "Flings," "Chess and Checkers," "There Ain't No Flies on Me," "At the Check Apron Ball," "It's Good To Be Alive," "Did You Close Your Eyes When We Kissed?" et. al. Even "On the Farm," the saga of Anna's initiation into the "wayward" life by her Minnesota uncles and cousins, is filled with wry humor: "Uncle Sven was kind of a preacher/Would have made a good school teacher/Studied all the natch-ral habbits/Of the horses, cows 'n rabbits/I was teacher's pet."

So, forget ANNA CHRISTIE (it's a downer) and enjoy NEW GIRL IN TOWN and its spirited, infectious score, masterfully orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett and Philip J. Lang, capably conducted by Hal Hasting, and performed to perfection by Gwen Verdon, Thelma Ritter, Cameron Prud'homme, George Wallace, and the high-energy ensemble. All that's missing is Bob Fosse's choreography.

Thank you, DRG.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars NEW GIRL IN TOWN, November 21, 2007
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'New Girl in Town' has long been out of print and now the girl has returned and welcome home. I had never heard the score before but it turns out it is a solid and surprisingly tuneful score, but the most surprising thing was Gwen Verdon the star of the show has only 5 numbers out of 18. This was Bob Merrills first Broadway show before his enchanting score for "Carnival" and he really shines on chorus numbers and who can resist a number with the lyrics "The Sunshine Girl has raindrops in her eyes" but he has also written a lovely duet called "Did You Close Your Eyes". Sometimes Mr Merrill can be clever but obvious when Thelma Ritter in a comic duet with her common law boyfriend sings "Larry the bartender says you aint fit to live with pigs but i said you are" and of course the boyfriend accepts it as a compliment.

RCA Victor first released the Broadway cast album of "New Girl..." but this reissue comes from some co in England called Flare-so it's now treated as an import with an import price and will probably go out of release a short time from now but if you are a completist this CD belongs on your shelf.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars So-so Musical Version of "Anna Christie", May 22, 2005
This review is from: New Girl In Town (1957 Original Broadway Cast) (Audio CD)
The 1957 musical "New Girl in Town", which featured Gwen Verdon and Thelma Ritter, is a very mixed bag. Based on Eugene O'Neill's brilliant play "Anna Christie", it tells the story of a young prostitute (Ms. Verdon) who returns to her native Sweden from the United States, where she has lived since age 5.

The score is by Bob Merrill, who was named the "Worst Songwriter Ever" by Spin Magazine shortly after his suicide in 1998. Although there are a multitude of clunkers, all of Ms. Verdon's numbers are killers. The best tune is "On The Farm", in which she goes through the sexual abuses she took at the hands of her cousins and uncles, and which led her to her life as a prostitute. Stephen Sondheim listed it as one of the 100 songs her wishes he had written.

Ms. Verdon, as usual, is perfection. This CD is now out-of-print, and copies that are found can be very expensive. Given that this isn't the greatest score, and it will probably never be revived again, I would say that it is for die-hard Gwen Verdon fans only.
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