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October 2003
Act I
The
entire action of Anything Goes takes place aboard the "S.S. American"
sailing from New York to England. Just before departure newspaper
cameramen are snapping pictures of celebrities. Among them are beautiful
American Heiress Hope Harcourt, her foppish fiancé Sir Evelyn Oakleigh
and Hope's mother. Mrs. Wadsworth T. Harcourt may not be the beauty her
daughter is, but she is slightly antique and therefore receives more
attention from Sir Evelyn, obviously an admirer of fine old things.
Other travellers arriving aboard are Bishop Dobson, shepherding two
natively garbed Chinese converts, and Elisha J. Whitney, a Wall Street
broker. Reno Sweeney, ex-evangelist turned to more profitable
employments, and her bevy of not-so-angelic Angels are also passengers
on the "S.S. American." The red dresses and cosmetic beauty of Angels
Purity, Chastity, Charity and Virtue suggest that they are more sinning
than sinned against. Next we meet Billy Crocker, an employee of
Whitney's. Reno and Billy, old friends, meet again; they
acknowledge their mutual admiration in You're the Top. Billy has not
planned to sail, but when he learns that Hope Harcourt (another, dearer
friend) is planning to marry the guffawing boob Sir Evelyn Oakleigh, he
decides to stay aboard as a stowaway and somehow contrive to break up
the proposed marriage.
We learn from crew chit-chat that Moonface Martin, Public Enemy Number
13 and a fugitive from the Feds, has boarded the liner. Since he is
disguised in clerical black, confusion is inevitable and Bishop Dobson
is arrested and heard from no more. Moonface ingeniously assumes the
title and name of Reverend Dr. Moon. His moll Bonnie sails with him. In
Bon Voyage Hope, Sir Evelyn, Billy, Moon, other trippers and the ship's
crew announce that the "S.S. American" is on her way.
Billy Crocker, having no good reason to suspect that Moon is not a man
of the cloth, gratefully accepts the passport and steamer ticket
belonging to Moon's colleague, Snake Eyes Johnson. Johnson, it develops,
will not be making the trip with Moon: at the gangplank he yielded to
the superior claim of Federal authorities.
That night on deck, Hope tries to interest Sir Evelyn in the romantic
implications of moonlight. Man of conservative taste that he is, he
replies that the general setting is "somewhat overdone." Billy joins
them and convinces the impressionable Oakleigh that he is uncontrollably
seasick. Left alone, Hope and Billy comment with enthusiastic approval
on the evening (It's Delovely).
In their stateroom Moon and Billy decide that Billy needs a disguise so
that his boss, Whitney, will not recognize him and spoil things. Moon
goes out into the corridor and returns with an armload of shoes. Billy
puts this down to Dr. Moon's generous impulses. Next, Moon enters
Whitney's stately stateroom and contrives to jostle the broker's glasses
off and take them. Extremely nearsighted, E. J. is nearly blind without
them. Moon has rendered Billy another good turn. At last Moon tells
Billy he is a Public Enemy, albeit only Number 13. Since, however,
Public Enemy Number One, Snake Eyes Johnson, is no longer active, there
is room at the top. Billy realizes he needs more than a change of shoes
to bring off an effective disguise. Bonnie volunteers a sailor suit -
the sailor is still sleeping (in her cabin!).
On deck Bonnie takes time out to lead Reno's Angels in Heaven Hop. A
celestial scene is revealed where angels and sailors perform a dance
routine recalling the cosmically lavish patterns of famed film musical
choreographer, Busby Berkeley.
Hope strolls on deck, comfortably attired in proper Thirties casuals: a
halter and a pair of enormous, flaring satin slacks. With her is Sir
Evelyn in natty knickers, and her mother. Hope tells her fiance that she
was on deck with Billy till 7:30 that morning, but fails to ignite
Oakleigh's sluggish passions. Hope despairs.
Moon and Billy's disguises are no match for Reno Sweeney's sharp eyes.
She recognizes them instantly (Reno, obviously, also knows Moonface
Martin.) Billy asks Reno to vamp Oakleigh in his stateroom, compromise
him (Moon as witness) and thus liberate Hope for himself. Reno, Billy
and Moon declare the importance, in such emergencies, of Friendship.
As Oakleigh is shaving and in semidishabille, Reno enters his quarters
and proceeds to distract him. But Moon, timing his entrance badly finds
them merely discussing American slang expressions like "I go for you."
Outside on deck, Reno describes a strange new affection she feels toward
Sir Evelyn in I Get a Kick Out of You.
On deck Billy, to be near Hope, assumes a number of disguises: first
that of an old lady, then, by making a beard from a swatch of Mrs.
Harcourt's fur stole, as a "Chinchillian" nobleman. Finally, the ship's
Purser "recognizes" Billy as Snake Eyes Johnson. Billy, a little
pridefully, accepts the error.
All are thrilled to be in the company of a celebrity except Hope, who
feels Billy may have assumed one identity too many. Reno gives voice to
everyone's feelings about the proceedings when she sings a trumpeting
assertion that Anything Goes. The girls and sailors, ever at the ready,
join in with a tap routine.
Act II
In the grand lounge of the liner, passengers and crew hymn their
praises of Billy, Public Enemy Number One, for bringing a generous
measure of glamour and excitement to the voyage. Bonnie moves that the
assembly make the best of a good time in Let's Step Out, after which
Reno seconds the motion in Let's Misbehave. Even Sir Evelyn is
sufficiently inflamed to join in singing the lyrics. Reverend Dr. Moon
is urged to hold a revivalist meeting with the notorious killer,
naturally, as chief confessor. After Moon's impromptu, altogether
incoherent sermon, Oakleigh confesses that once, while in the Orient, he
led a Chinese girl astray. "We had a romp in the rice and enjoyed it
very much," he declares rapturously. Now, Billy's turn. What should he
say? Hope suggests he tell the truth; he agrees. He scolds them all for
being proud to know a cold-blooded killer and tells them who he really
is. Justice is swift - he is arrested for impersonating a celebrity.
Moon joins him in the ship's brig. Reno, however, is ready with a song
and leads the entire company in a general confession of sins, remorse
and a change in conduct - Blow, Gabriel, Blow.
Five days later and with England's shore close at hand, Billy and Moon
are still in the brig. Billy sings of his love for Hope in All Through
the Night, while she, unseen by him, joins in from the bridge. Moon
attempts to lift Billy's spirits with sound advice: Be Like the
Bluebird. Bishop Dobson's conversion of the pair of Chinese has not been
wholly successful, it seems, for they are cast into the brig for
laundering the third-class passengers in a crap game. To bring them to
their moral senses, the Captain has punished them with a two-hour
sentence. Hope visits Billy and tells him her mother's heart is set on
having Sir Evelyn as son-in-law and she cannot bear to disappoint her.
When she leaves it occurs to Moon that he and Billy might introduce the
two new occupants of their cell to strip poker. Moon's rules are hard to
follow and in practically no time he and Billy are dressed as Chinese.
On deck Reno and her Angels are already homesick. Sir Evelyn tells
Reno that he, an upright man, has no choice but to marry Hope. Mrs.
Harcourt, somewhat impatiently, has arranged for their wedding to take
place before they dock. The Captain has scarcely begun the ceremony when
Billy and Moon, disguised, interrupt. Reno is also disguised as a
Chinese girl. Billy, adept by now at all sorts of dialects,
confronts Oakleigh with "Prum Brossom" - the girl he wronged. Both Hope
and he brilliantly penetrate the disguises and play the game. To make
fair restitution, Oakleigh generously sacrifices Hope to one of the
Chinese. The offer is accepted. A man of honour, he proposes marriage to
Plum Blossom. Reno accepts him. Disguises dispensed with, Billy
introduces E. J. Whitney to Mrs. Harcourt. They hit it off immediately.
A telegram from Washington, D.C. reveals that Moon has been kicked all
the way downstairs. No longer a Public Enemy, he is now at best a Public
Nuisance. |