One Performance Wonders:
The Moony Shapiro Songbook
It was an article on Playbill.com about Brenda Pressley joining the cast of 2025's Tony-winning Best Play, Purpose that put this show back on my radar. I had only ever heard of The Moony Shapiro Songbook in passing, usually in conversations that include Glory Days and Moose Murders. Songbook (as it was subsequently renamed) is in that rare club of Broadway shows that ran only one performance. Yep, it opened and closed on the same night. And, of course, I had to dig into it. (So you don't have to!)
Moony Shapiro Facts:
- Played at the Morosco Theatre on 45th Street (demolished for the Marriott Marquis and Marquis Theatre)
- 1st preview: April 21, 1981; 15 previews
- Opening Night: May 3, 1981
- Closing Night: May 3, 1981; 1 performance
- A London West End transfer, it won the Olivier Award for Best Musical of 1979
- In a weak year for book musicals on Broadway, the show was Tony-nominated for Best Book of a Musical (1981)
- Book by Brits Julian More and Monty Norman; More also wrote the lyrics, while Norman wrote the music. Their biggest other credit was providing the English translation for the Broadway production of the French import, Irma La Douce.
Moony Shapiro Plot:
Told as a series of pastiche scenes, the musical follows a fictional songwriter and his travels across Europe and America. The events of world history - Hollywood extravaganzas, World War I, the Great Depression, the rise of Hitler, World War II, etc. shape the song styles and the tone of the scenes.
Moony Shapiro The Cast:
As I said, Ms. Presley was the impetus for diving into this piece of flop history. Imagine my surprise when I saw who else was in it!
- Gary Beach: 3-time Tony nominee - Beauty and the Beast, La Cage aux Folles, The Producers, 1 Tony win - The Producers
- Jeff Goldblum: Emmy and Oscar nominee; Broadway: Two Gentlemen of Verona (musical), The Pillowman, Seminar; Film: includes The Fly, Jurassic Park (and sequels), and of course, Wicked and Wicked: For Good
- Timothy Jerome: Tony nominee: Me and My Girl, other Broadway: Tarzan, The Magic Show, Grand Hotel, Cats, The Phantom of the Opera
- Judy Kaye: 4-time Tony nominee, 2-time winner - The Phantom of the Opera (win), Mamma Mia!, Souvenir, Nice Work If You Can Get It (win); other Broadway: Ragtime, On the Twentieth Century, Grease, Sweeney Todd, Wicked
- Annie McGreevey: Broadway: Company, Sweet Charity, Annie, The Magic Show (original productions)
- Phillip Hoffman: Broadway: Baby, Into the Woods, The Scarlet Pimpernel, Falsettos, A Beautiful Noise
- Audrey Lavine: Broadway: Rags, Carrie (Betty Buckley's stand-by), Anna Karenina
- Brenda Pressley: Broadway: Dreamgirls (original cast), Cats, The American Plan, The Lyons, Purpose
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I guess that playing multiple roles - some of them played 20 or more in the show - prepared them all for future greatness. Even a one performance flop can lead to bigger and better things.