The Producers (1967 film)
The Producers is a 1968 feature length comedy film set in New York City in which two con-men attempt to cheat theatre "angels" (investors) out of their investment money. Max Bialystock (Zero Mostel) is a failed, aging Broadway producer who encounters nebbish accountant Leo Bloom (Gene Wilder). The film was adapted by its writer/director, Mel Brooks into a Broadway musical in 2001.
Their plan is to oversell shares in a show and then go bankrupt and keep all the unspent funds. They set out to purposely make a flop, so that no one will ever audit the flop's books. Springtime for Hitler, a musical comedy about Adolf Hitler, is the result. Unfortunately for the con artists, their attempt to make an unwatchable play backfires as the audience finds the inept production so funny that they misinterpret it as an over the top satire on Nazism and hail it as a hit. Franz Liebkind (the writer, played by Kenneth Mars), who really believed they were producing a tribute to Hitler, is insulted by the audience's laughter. He and the producers blow up the theatre to end the production. The producers see it as a final — yet futile — plan to reap their ill-gotten gains. However, the producers end up in prison where they cast a new show amongst the prisoners while running the same scam as before.
It won an Academy Award for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay - Written Directly for the Screen and was nominated for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Gene Wilder). The film has been deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.
Musical
The movie was adapted as a Broadway musical by Mel Brooks in 2001. Its first run starred Nathan Lane (who reprised that role during the show's first run on London's West End) and Matthew Broderick and won a record-breaking 12 Tony Awards. Although the musical has many scenes and jokes taken directly from the film, there are still many differences. Ulla has a much larger role, as does Springtime for Hitler's director Roger DeBris. The character Lorenzo S. Dubois (LSD), a hippie who played Hitler in the 1968 movie, does not appear in the musical. Overall the musical is much more upbeat and ends more happily with the two producers becoming successful after being released from jail.
The Producers was nominated for the following Tony Awards in 2001:
- Tony Award for Best Musical WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Original Score WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical (Matthew Broderick)
- Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical (Nathan Lane) WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical (Gary Beach) WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical (Cady Huffman) WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Scenic Design of a Musical WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Costume Design of a Musical WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Lighting Design of a Musical WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Choreography WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical WINNER
- Tony Award for Best Orchestrations WINNER
Film
A film based on the musical has been announced and set for a 2005 release. The lead actors will be the same, with the exception of Will Ferrell as Franz and Uma Thurman as Ulla.
Quotations
From Mel Brooks' interview:
- "I was never crazy about Hitler... If you stand on a soapbox and trade rhetoric with a dictator you never win... That's what they do so well; they seduce people. But if you ridicule them, bring them down with laughter, they can't win. You show how crazy they are."
External links
- The Producers (1968) at IMDb
- Official site for the Broadway musical
- The Producers at the Internet Broadway Database
- The Producers (2005) at IMDb
- Roger Ebert's Great Movies review of The Producers [1]