BetteBack August 1, 1993: Bette Midler is hoping for magic with CBS’ ‘Gypsy’

Burlington Times News
Bette Midler is hoping for magic with CBS’ ”˜Gypsy
By HAL BOEDEKER
Knight-Ridder News Service
August 1, 1993

zooworld

LOS ANGELES – The TV musical, a rare but beloved form, will come roaring back to life in December when Bette Midler brings “Gypsy” to CBS.

The star showed TV writers meeting here only a tantalizing clip of Mama Hose singing “Some People” to her father (Ed Asner). But “Gypsy” is such an ambitious TV project that it qualifies as one of the major events next season.

“I love that score,” Midler said. “It’s big, it’s bombastic, it s bright, it’s American, it’s full of fun, it’s full of jokes.”

In other words, tailor-made for the Divine Miss M.

But will they come if CBS shows it? Does the story of stripper Gypsy Rose Lee (Cynthia Gibb) and her pushy stage mother have enough oomph for a TV audience used to true-crime stories?

And will young viewers weaned on rock, rap and MTV let Midler entertain them in one of the greatest Broadway musicals? “I feel bad that the whole nation doesn’t get to celebrate these traditions more often, because it is valuable and it is well-crafted, and it’s something we should be proud of,” Midler said. “Yet we seem to throw the magical things that we’ve made aside.”

The makers of “Gypsy” are doing their best to create magic. The care lavished on the production is unusual for television. The cast rehearsed for seven weeks, as if it were putting on a Broadway show, before starting the 40-day shoot that recently ended.

“This was treated like a feature film,” Midler said. “And nothing was scrimped on. Except my salary,” she joked.

Midler, the producers and director Emile Ardolino (“Sister Act,” “Dirty Dancing”) met with the men behind the 1959 Broadway musical: director/choreographer Jerome Robbins, composer Jule Styne, lyricist Stephen Sondheim and librettist Arthur Laurents.

Ardolino, who saw “Gypsy” on stage 25 times as a teenager, was “a little nervous” about directing because the show’s creators are his idols.

But Laurents came to see the complete rehearsal and gave his blessing. “He was over the moon,” Midler said.

The star has the toughest task in following so many memorable Roses. Ethel Merman played the role first; Rosalind Russell starred in the 1962 movie; and Angela Lansbury and Tyne Daly each won Tonys for Broadway revivals.

“I was a little intimidated by the memory of Ethel Merman, but what could I do?” Midler asked. “I did the best I could and had a wonderful time doing it.”

Peter Riegert, who plays Mama Rose’s beau Herbie, recalled a race-track meeting with Jack Klugman, who originated the role. Klugman said that Merman told him, “You do the acting and I’ll do the singing, and we’ll have a big hit.”

Klugman asked Riegert, “What did Bette tell you?” Riegert: “I can’t tell you what Bette told me.”

The brassy star posed “no problems at all,” director Ardolino said. “She inspired the rest of the crew. Everybody realized that this was unique material, something you don’t find in the usual stream of television fare.”

CBS will capitalize on that angle. The two-hour, 20 minute musical will be presented with fewer commercial interruptions than usual in a three-hour block on a Sunday.

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