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- Anything Goes
-
-
- (December 3, 1934)
-
- Anything Goes offers an embarrassment of theatrical riches.
- Its music is by Cole Porter, who has been writing hits ever
- since he composed "Bulldog, Bulldog, Eli Yale" 21 years ago. His
- score for Anything Goes, while it does not include a melody as
- sensational as his "Night & Day" for last year's Gay Divorce,
- is as good as the best any of his peers are turning out.
-
- Leading Lady is witty, torch-singing Ethel Merman, whose face
- is as plump as her voice is sharp.
-
- Anything Goes further boasts the services of debonair William
- Gaxton and wistful Victor Moore, respectively President
- Wintergreen and Vice President Throttlebottom of Of Thee I Sing.
-
- Funny as Victor Moor was as Throttlebottom, he was funnier
- still as "Moonface" Mooney. Public Enemy No. 13. Disguised as
- a parson, he is forced to flee the country on an ocean liner,
- soon attaches himself to Billy Crocker (Gaxton), a playboy
- following a long-lost sweetheart, and Reno Sweeney (Merman), an
- evangelist turned night club operator.
-
- From time to time Anything Goes pauses in its narrative maze
- of mistaken identities and lovers' misunderstandings to turn
- lyrically topical. For example, Miss Merman sings this chorus
- of the theme song:
-
- Mrs. R. with all her trimmin's Can broadcast a bed from
- Simmons, 'Cause Franklin knows, Anything goes.
-
- Happily, the Cole Porter score needed no tinkering. Best
- tunes: "I Get a Kick Out of You." "You're the Top," "Anything
- Goes."
-
-