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...Anthony Burgess is undoubtedly a genius. If it weren't for Christopher Plummer's nearly flawless performance and the percise, well-conceived staging of director Michael Kidd, Burgess might have succeeded in turning Edmond Rostand's intelligent play into the sentimental pap Cyrano de Bergerac clearly wasn't. Cyrano the new musical running three weeks in Boston before its Broadway debut, muffles the impact of the original play...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: The Ugliest Nose in the World | 3/24/1973 | See Source »

...Burgess did have the sense to stick to Rostand's structure. Cyrano de Bergerac, France's greatest swordsman and a distinguished poet, is hated by the nobility for his iconoclastic boorishness and unflinching sense of independence. Admired by friends, loathed by enemies, he is cursed by his grotesquely protuberant nose. Because of his ugliness, he cannot confess his deepest secret-a passionate love for his cousin Roxana. But when the heroine falls in love with an Adonean but doltish young soldier, Cyrano offers to help him by writing the love-letters whose beauty win Roxana's heart. Christian, the beautiful...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: The Ugliest Nose in the World | 3/24/1973 | See Source »

Michael J. Lewis's music is usually pleasant. only occasionally rousing. Burgess's lyrics are intermittently clever, but advance the spirit of the play only rarely. One song, "From Now 'Til ael should be dropped from the score...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: The Ugliest Nose in the World | 3/24/1973 | See Source »

Cyrano. Anthony Burgess scripted this musical adaptation of Rostand's play, so it should have plenty of panache, even if it doesn't go as smoothly as clockwork, 7:30 at the Colonial...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: the stage | 3/22/1973 | See Source »

...then Farmer Brown will frown on the old briar patch and call it wasteland and threaten to clear away all the bushes and trees," wrote Author Thornton Burgess in 1947, in "The Old Briar Patch." But in the end Farmer Brown always decided to save the patch - and so last week did the town of Sandwich, Mass. (pop. 5,000). By unanimous vote, the 800 citizens decided to spend $200,000 to buy up 57 acres of meadows, ponds and forest, including the five acres of bull and cat briars that har bored such Burgess creatures as Reddy Fox, Bobby...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Reprieve for Peter Rabbit | 3/19/1973 | See Source »

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