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Guys
& Dolls

Although Guys and Dolls eventually
became the fifth longest-running Broadway musical of the Fifties,
it was a long and difficult road getting it to the stage at all.
Producers
Cy Feuer and Ernest Martin originally envisioned the musical as
a serious romantic story along the lines of South Pacific. After
hiring composer and lyricist Frank Loesser, they eventually went
through 11 librettists before finally deciding to make the project
a comedy and settling on Abe Burrows, a radio and television writer
with no theatrical experience. Based on Damon Runyon's short story
"The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown," Guys and Dolls revolves
around Nathan Detroit, the organizer of the oldest established
permanent floating crap game in New York, who bets fellow gambler
Sky Masterson that he can't make the next girl he sees fall in
love with him. The next girl he sees happens to be Miss Sarah
Brown, a pure-at-heart Salvation Army-type reformer, and the stage
is set for an hilarious evening of complications. Guys and Dolls
opened at the 46th Street Theatre on November 24, 1950 and enjoyed
a run of 1,200 performances. The original cast included Robert
Alda, Vivian Blaine, Sam Levene and Isabel Bigley. The 1955 film
version featured Marlon Brando, Vivian Blaine, Frank Sinatra and
Jean Simmons. In 1976, a Broadway revival was staged with an all-black
cast.
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