A Face In The Crowd (musical)

From The Elvis Costello Wiki
Revision as of 11:23, 4 October 2016 by Nick Ratcliffe (talk | contribs) (→‎Songs played live: add No Man's Woman)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Elvis Costello has written 17 songs for A Face In The Crowd, a planned stage musical based on Budd Schulberg's story originally published as Your Arkansas Traveler and adapted into the 1957 film A Face In The Crowd written by Schulberg, directed by Elia Kazan, and starring Andy Griffith.

The musical's book is written by Sarah Ruhl, who had previously collaborated with Elvis on an unfinished musical about WHER, the all-female Memphis radio station.

An invitation-only reading of A Face In The Crowd was held in New York on June 10. The New York Post reported that Elvis and his backers want Hugh Jackman to star. The Swiss newspaper Zürich Tages Anzeiger reported the musical was expected to premiere in 2017.

Elvis premiered nine of the songs in concert in the spring of 2016.

A detailed article about this project can be found at the ecsongbysong blog.


Songs played live

  • Vitajex, premiered April 13 in Jackson, concerns the miracle pill featured in A Face In The Crowd. (Vitajex is also the subject of song in the film, but Elvis' song is an original.)
  • Blood & Hot Sauce, premiered April 13 in Jackson, is sung by Lonesome Rhodes, the character portrayed by Andy Griffith in the film.
  • American Mirror, premiered April 17 in Bellingham, could be another Marcia Jeffries song, or possibly for Mel Miller, the character played by Walter Matthau in the film.
  • Big Stars Have Tumbled, premiered June 4 in Zaragoza, is sung by Lonesome Rhodes and was introduced as "the moment when the devil is humbled and taken down."


Unheard songs

An additional eight songs were registered with ASCAP at the same time as the nine listed above. It has not been confirmed that they are also associated with A Face In The Crowd, but the total number of songs matches the 17 written for the musical.

These songs have not been heard publicly, although Elvis used the phrase "He Makes My Water Boil" in introducing the Marcia Jeffries character at the London Palladium.

  • Byline
  • Does Your Doll Speak
  • Don't Put Me On
  • He Makes My Water Boil
  • How Could You Know?
  • Miss Hot Mischief (American Truth)
  • Nice Guys Come Last
  • Why Don't You Jump In?



Internal links

External links