Fifty Million Frenchmen
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Fifty Million Frenchmen is a musical comedy written by Cole Porter and produced on Broadway in 1929. It was made into a movie which debuted in 1931.
The title is a reference to a hit song of 1927, "Fifty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong", by Willie Raskin, Billy Rose, and Fred Fisher. The lyrics of this humorous song compared free attitudes in 1920s Paris with the censorship and prohibition in the United States.
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Songs in the show
The show's best known songs include I'm Unlucky at Gambling, You Don't Know Paree, You Do Something to Me, Find me a Primitive Man and The Tale of the Oyster. While not as well known as Porter's later musicals, the show does offer witty numbers and memorable lyrics.Synopsis
The musical's plot is consistent with the standard boy-meets-girl plots of musical comedies of the first half of the twentieth century. The musical's plot concerns Peter Forbes, a young American millionaire who journeys to Paris and bets his friend Billy Baxter, that he can live without his money for a month, and in doing so, get engaged with Looloo Caroll, a woman whom he adores. In the process of trying to woo Looloo penniless, he endures lots of humiliation as a gigolo, a magician and a tour guide.The Broadway show
Fifty Million Frenchmen opened a month before the Stock Market Crash of 1929 but still managed to run for seven months. The show opened with Julián Rebolledo as Peter and Susan Owen as Looloo. The show received rave revues.The Hollywood film
The show was made into a movie in 1931 by Warner Brothers, directed by Lloyd Bacon. The cast included Ole Olsen, Chic Johnson, William Gaxton, Helen Broderick, John Halliday, Claudia Dell, Lester Crawford, and Evalyn Knapp.Later productions
The show was restored in 1991 by Tommy Krasker and Evan Halile for a concert production at the 14th Street Y in New York.External links
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