Lady in the Dark: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Morality Ballad]] & [[Age Progression Song]]: "The Saga Of Jenny".
* [[Morality Ballad]] & [[Age Progression Song]]: "The Saga Of Jenny".
* [[Patter Song]] & [[List Song]]: "Tchaikowsky (and Other Russians)".
* [[Patter Song]] & [[List Song]]: "Tchaikowsky (and Other Russians)".
* [[Pimped Out Dress]]: A film version has Liza wear a dress with a mink skirt, loads of jewels, and a mink jacket.
* [[Pimped-Out Dress]]: A film version has Liza wear a dress with a mink skirt, loads of jewels, and a mink jacket.
* [[Pretty in Mink]]: A dress with a mink skirt, and a mink jacket.
* [[Pretty in Mink]]: A dress with a mink skirt, and a mink jacket.
* [[The Reveal]]: Liza's neurosis comes from {{spoiler|thinking she isn't beautiful or desirable as a result of youthful traumas}}.
* [[The Reveal]]: Liza's neurosis comes from {{spoiler|thinking she isn't beautiful or desirable as a result of youthful traumas}}.

Revision as of 23:40, 9 January 2014

Lady in the Dark is a 1941 psychoanalytic musical play by Moss Hart, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin and music by Kurt Weill.

Liza Elliott has been editor of the Fashion Magazine Allure for the last decade. Though she appears to be satisfied with her job and in complete control of her affairs, lately she has been overcome by depression and feelings of panic. Her irrational solicitude has been aggravated by the weird, fantastic dreams she has been having. It is furthermore no consolation to her that her longtime publisher, Kendall Nesbitt, has gone to the trouble of divorcing his wife so that she could be free to marry him, especially since handsome, hunky movie star Randy Curtis just walked into her office a few minutes before.

So Liza, on her doctor's recommendation, goes to visit a psychoanalyst to discover what is making her emotional state go to pieces, since she is a completely healthy woman aside from her irrational fears. The psychoanalyst, Dr. Brooks, notices the contrast between the glamorous personality Liza imagines herself as in her dreams and the real Liza's preference for severely tailored business suits, strange for a woman whose chosen career is in telling the most glamorous women what to wear. What finally helps Liza resolve all her worries is going back to memories of her childhood, in which she recalls the words of the song whose tune has haunted all her dreams.


This musical show contains examples of: