How the Boop! Team Took the Retro Betty Boop Cartoon and Created an Original, Modern Musical | 半岛体育

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Regional News How the Boop! Team Took the Retro Betty Boop Cartoon and Created an Original, Modern Musical

Writer Bob Martin also admits the musical bears some resemblance, coincidentally, to Barbie.

Jasmine Amy Rogers, Ainsley Anthony Melham, and company of Boop! The Betty Boop Musical Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman

Step aside Barbie. Summer鈥檚 over and Betty鈥檚 back! Boop that is. The classic can-do girl of animation fame鈥攆irst introduced in 1930鈥攊s going live. In more ways than one. Not only is the character taking to the stage, but as conjured by the creative team of Boop! The Musical, she鈥檚 stepping from her cartoon world into life as we live it today. Now in a pre-Broadway run at the CIBC Theatre in Chicago through December 24, the show comes from folks packing some pretty impressive bona fides 鈥� director/ choreographer Jerry Mitchell (Kinky Boots, Legally Blonde), writer Bob Martin (The Drowsy Chaperone), 16-time Grammy-winning composer David Foster, and lyricist Susan Birkenhead (Working, Jelly鈥檚 Last Jam).

Betty Boop first made her appearance when Herbert Hoover was in the White House, but her image鈥攁 combo of pert assurance and endearing vulnerability鈥攈as endured. 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty amazing when you think about it,鈥� observes Martin, who earned a Tony nomination for his performance in The Drowsy Chaperone and shared the award for Best Book of a Musical with collaborator, Don McKeller. 鈥淚 walk down the street and I see her everywhere鈥攐n jackets, cell phone covers. What鈥檚 interesting is the vast majority of those people have probably never even seen any of her shorts. But there鈥檚 just something about her, a kind of sexy, fun, confident, independent spirit that really speaks to people.鈥�

Betty Boop was the brainchild of brothers Max and Dave Fleischer, who began their careers in animation at Manhattan鈥檚 Bray Studios before setting up a shop of their own in a basement apartment in 1921 (several years earlier, Max invented the rotoscope, a game-changing apparatus in which artists traced over live action footage frame by frame to create animated films). Betty, with her spit curls, short dress, and garter, made her debut in the Fleischer鈥檚 Dizzy Sides, playing a nightclub singer who wins the heart of a waiter drawn as a dog. The character caught on and became the star of her own seven-minute shorts. In 1932, Film Daily鈥攏oting her 鈥渙o-la-la curves鈥� and a 鈥渂oudoir languor in her walk鈥濃攈ailed her as 鈥渟omething Brand New in cartoon characterization.鈥�

As Betty came into her own, she had all kinds of adventures, getting behind the wheel of a race car and running for president, always pursued by some male she managed to shake. But changing times and the film industry鈥檚 self-censoring Motion Picture Production Code of 1930 (commonly known as the Hays Code) crimped Betty鈥檚 style. The Fleisher鈥檚 dropped her hemline and reined her in. In 1938鈥檚 On with the New, she was wearing an apron and slinging hash. She still strutted and sang her trademark 鈥淏oop-Oop-a-Doop,鈥� but instead of running off with the circus as she might have done before, she left the grind of the diner for a job looking over little ones at a nursery.

While not immediately thought of as a feminist icon, Betty Boop鈥檚 independence and self-assured sensuality struck a note with women for whom autonomy means more than a career. But as Martin notes, the Betty he and his colleagues are bringing to the stage shouldn鈥檛 be confused with Greta Gerwig鈥檚 big-screen Barbie. 鈥�Barbie was really about what it means to be a woman,鈥� he suggests. 鈥淲hat we are doing is examining what it means to be human.鈥�

Betty Boop鈥檚 fame came through a series of short animated films, each one a self-contained story. So when Martin and Mitchell set out to create a narrative for their heroine, they had both a clean slate and a challenge on their hands. 鈥淢any of the musicals I鈥檝e done鈥�Legally Blonde, Kinky Boots鈥攃ome from source material where you鈥檝e already got a story and a plot. That wasn鈥檛 the case here. All we had was a cartoon character and we had to create a story around her.鈥�

In the narrative they鈥檝e come up with, Betty鈥�played by Jasmine Amy Rogers, familiar to many from national tour of Mean Girls鈥攎anages to escape her cartoon existence and visit real-world New York, where she is surprised to learn that she holds a place in people鈥檚 hearts. 鈥淛erry鈥檚 idea for the show revolved around the idea that you really aren鈥檛 human unless you can experience love,鈥� shares Martin. 鈥淎s the book writer for a musical, I am the architect of the piece, creating the structure and setting the tone, and that was the starting point for me.鈥�

The all-you-need-is-love theme is nothing new, but it is, sadly a truth that always needs repeating.
And one that gets a whole new expression in Boop! 鈥淲e are all living in a world of cynicism and hate and I want people to really remember that there is only one thing in life that matters,鈥� says Mitchell. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have love, you鈥檙e living in black and white. If you have love, you鈥檙e living life in color. It鈥檚 that simple. Find love.鈥�

Photos: BOOP! The Betty Boop Musical in Chicago

 
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