WHY LEE? A MUSICAL SCRAPBOOK ABOUT LEE WILEY
Award-winning performers Lois Walden, Barry Kleinbort, and Paul Greenwood
will tell the largely untold story of acclaimed and notoriously enigmatic
American singer Lee Wiley while celebrating her enduring musical legacy
in WHY LEE?: A MUSICAL SCRAPBOOK ABOUT LEE WILEY during a five-night
engagement at THE METROPOLITAN ROOM (34 West 22nd Street, NYC - 212-206-0440
-
http://www.metropolitanroom.com/
) from Thursday through Monday, November 1st through 5th. The show
is directed by Jay Rogers with Mr. Greenwood serving as musical director/pianist
and William Ellison on bass. The performance schedule is: Thursday
through Saturday and Monday at 7:30 pm; Sunday at 7:00 pm.
This musical tribute features songs from Wiley's repertoire,
anecdotes and dramatic scenarios about her life - both onstage and
off - and personal reminiscences from Walden, Kleinbort, and Greenwood.
A favorite singer of George Gershwin, Cole Porter
and other legendary American composers, Lee Wiley's sophisticated
singing style influenced the most iconic recording artists of the
20th century, from Peggy Lee to Barbra Streisand. She performed
with the hottest jazz musicians of the 30s, 40s, and 50s, including
Bunny Berigan, Eddie Condon, and Fats Waller, and pioneered the
concept of the "songbook" album in the late 1930's with albums devoted
to the music of the Gershwins, Cole Porter, Rodgers and Hart, and
Harold Arlen. With her remarkable talent and astounding beauty,
Lee Wiley seemed destined for stardom, yet she virtually disappeared
in the 1950s at the height of her popularity.
WHY LEE? showcases many of Wiley's best-known and
best-loved hits, including the Gershwins' "I've Got a Crush on You,"
Harold Arlen's "Down With Love," Johnny Mercer's "Moon River," as
well as her signature songs -- Victor Young's "A Woman's Intuition"
and "Street of Dreams," and the Victor Young/Bing Crosby/Ned Washington
favorite "A Ghost of a Chance." This enchanting musical journey
also features a medley of songs from Wiley's songbook albums.
While Rosemary Clooney, Dinah Shore, Peggy Lee, and
other "girl singers" of the era enjoyed soaring careers as the entertainment
industry transitioned from radio to film and television, Wiley's
career experienced a number of roadblocks, many of them self-imposed.
Fiercely independent and principled, she frequently turned down
opportunities that could further her career, most notably in 1935
when she departed from a featured role in the top-rated Kraft radio
show because its producers refused to give billing to composer Victor
Young, her musical partner and lover. Her strong-willed behavior,
sensual singing style, enigmatic personality, severe alcohol addiction,
and legendary beauty and sophistication, coupled with her premature
retirement at age 50 and relatively small discography, have all
contributed to her mythic status.
There is a $20 cover charge plus a 2-beverage minimum.