iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Mack & Mabel (1974 Original Broadway Cast Recording (1992 Reissue)) by Mack & Mabel, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Mack & Mabel (1974 Original Broadway Cast Recording (1992 Reissue))

Mack & Mabel

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

The Broadway musical Mack & Mabel, having opened on October 6, 1974, closed on November 30 after 65 performances, a flop. Three days later, on December 3, 1974, the original Broadway cast album was released. The recording is destined to become one of those prized by musical theater fans who will ponder how a show with such a good score could have failed. Certainly, the portents were good. Songwriter Jerry Herman, responsible for the hits Hello, Dolly! and Mame, re-teamed with the librettist of Hello, Dolly!, Michael Stewart, and that show's director/choreographer Gower Champion, and they cast two Broadway stars, Robert Preston (The Music Man) and Bernadette Peters (Dames at Sea) in the title roles. The "Mack" and "Mabel" of the title were Mack Sennett, the director of silent film comedies featuring the Keystone Kops in the 1910s and '20s, and Mabel Normand, whom he made into a star. The two were a romantic couple, so the scenario offered a combination of the hi-jinks of the silent screen and a love story. It was, however, a tragic love story: Sennett and Normand never married; they eventually split up professionally and personally; and Normand later died young after a scandal-ridden post-Sennett career. Thus, Mack & Mabel could only be a "musical comedy" in a formalistic sense. But that may have been what attracted Herman. He had succeeded with his frothy twin hits in the mid-'60s, then stumbled in 1969 with Dear World, a seriously intended musical adaptation of the play The Madwoman of Chaillot, and had been silent for nearly five years. In that time, the musical theater had taken a distinctly dark and serious turn in the hands of rivals like Stephen Sondheim and the team of John Kander and Fred Ebb. Sondheim, for example, won the Tony Award for best composer three years in a row for his ambitious, experimental shows Company, Follies, and A Little Night Music. These were not Jerry Herman's type of Broadway musicals, and in the character of Mack Sennett he seems to have found a vehicle for expressing his opinion. Herman and Stewart's Sennett is a man who finds the injection of artistic aspirations into entertainment pretentious. In his first song, "Movies Were Movies," he looks back on his career declaring, "No one pretended that what we were doing was art/We had some guts and some luck/But we were just making a buck." He expands on this attitude in "I Wanna Make the World Laugh." And in the show's next-to-last song, the second female lead, Lottie (Lisa Kirk), reiterates the point in the Harry Warren-like "Tap Your Troubles Away," which prescribes tap dancing for all that ails the world. Ironically, this view is presented in a musical that itself eschews the traditional form of musical comedy and instead leans toward the darkness so prevalent in Sondheim and Kander and Ebb. Sennett promises a happy ending, but he can't deliver one, except as fantasy. It's often hard to say what makes a show a failure, but this one seems to suffer from a mixed message. Nevertheless, along the way there are some memorable songs, memorably performed. At the head of the list is "I Won't Send Roses," in which Sennett attempts to warn Normand off romantically. It might be the theme song for absent-minded husbands the world over, but it is remarkably acute. Equally effective is "Time Heals Everything," Normand's final number, as poignant and heartbreaking a torch song as Sondheim's "Losing My Mind" from Follies or Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart's "It Never Entered My Mind" from Higher and Higher, which is to say, as good as a torch song can be. The rest of the score is sturdy, identifiable Herman, tuneful and craftsman-like without being formally challenging. (For example, "When Mabel Comes in the Room" is very much a descendant of the songs "Hello, Dolly!" and "Mame.") Mack & Mabel may be a flop on-stage, but in the record racks it is as much of a success as any of Herman's scores.

Customer Reviews

Bernadette can do anything.

I have always been a huge fan of Bernadette Peters, so obviously I'd enjoy her part of this production, but the rest of the cast was completely mediocre. I'm aware that this play was unsuccesful on broadway, because its bright scenery contrasted the depressing mood. Also, no one really wants to see a play of one sad event after the next, with no uplifting parts. My favorite song has to be Wherever He Ain't. It's gorgeous, and Bernadette Peters sings it. If you can only buy one song, buy that. Also, Look What Happened to Mabel, I Won't Send Roses (both), and Time Heals Everything.

Perfect modern/classic broadway mix

I prefer the "in concert" version I have, but the musical by itself is wonderful. Best numbers are "movies were movies", "Look what happened to mabel" (My favorite), "Wherever He Ain't", and "I Wanna Make the World Laugh"

Romantic!

I Won't Send Roses - Robert Preston and I Won't Send Roses (Reprise) - one of Bernadette Peters best songs ever - were the most beautiful love songs - but then, I am 75 and very romantic - still! I will agree with the person who said Movies Were Movies was the top song. I have just discovered Mack & Mabel. I had no idea it existed. I am glad to announce that Composer Jerry Herman, whose credits include the musical Hello, Dolly!, Mame and La Cage aux Folles, has called Mack and Mabel (1974) his PERSONAL FAVORITE. He was, by the way, the only composer lyricist in history to have three musicals that ran for more than 1,500 performances on Broadway . . .sadly, Mack and Mabel was not one of those hits!

Mack & Mabel (1974 Original Broadway Cast Recording (1992 Reissue)), Mack & Mabel
View In iTunes

Customer Ratings

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.