South Pacific South Pacific opened on Broadway on April 7, 1949, and ran for over five years. Its songs "
Bali Ha'i", "
Younger Than Springtime", and "
Some Enchanted Evening" have become standards. The play is based upon two short stories by
James A. Michener from his book
Tales of the South Pacific, which itself was the winner of the
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1948. For their adaptation, Rodgers and Hammerstein, along with co-writer
Joshua Logan, won the
Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1950. The song "
You've Got to Be Carefully Taught" was controversial due to its support of
interracial marriage. Rodgers and Hammerstein refused to remove it from the show, even if it meant the show failing. When the show was touring in Atlanta, Georgia, it offended some Georgian lawmakers, who proposed a bill to outlaw any entertainment they deemed to be inspired by Moscow. In the original production,
Mary Martin starred as the heroine Nellie Forbush, and opera star
Ezio Pinza starred as Emile de Becque, the French plantation owner. Also in the cast were
Juanita Hall,
Myron McCormick and
Betta St. John. The
1958 film version, also directed by Logan, starred
Mitzi Gaynor,
Rossano Brazzi,
John Kerr,
Ray Walston, and
Juanita Hall. Brazzi, Kerr, and Hall had their singing dubbed by others.
The King and I Based on
Margaret Landon's
Anna and the King of Siam—the story of
Anna Leonowens, governess to the children of King
Mongkut of
Siam in the early 1860s—Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical
The King and I opened at the
St. James Theatre on Broadway on March 29, 1951, starring
Gertrude Lawrence as Anna and the mostly unknown
Yul Brynner as the king. This musical featured the hit songs "
I Whistle a Happy Tune", "
Hello, Young Lovers", "
Getting to Know You", "
We Kiss in a Shadow", "
Something Wonderful", "
I Have Dreamed", and
"Shall We Dance?" The King and I was followed by
Me and Juliet, which opened at the
Majestic Theatre on May 28, 1953. When
Oklahoma! returned to Broadway on August 31, 1953, with
The King and I,
Me and Juliet and
South Pacific all still playing, Rodgers and Hammerstein had four shows appearing on Broadway at once.
The King and I was adapted for film in 1956 with Brynner re-creating his role opposite
Deborah Kerr (whose singing was largely dubbed by
Marni Nixon). Brynner won an
Oscar as
Best Actor for his portrayal, and Kerr was nominated as
Best Actress. Brynner reprised the role twice on Broadway in 1977 and 1985 and in a short-lived TV sitcom in 1972,
Anna and the King.
Cinderella , as the Prince, and
Lesley Ann Warren, as Cinderella. Based on the fairytale character and story of
Cinderella, Rodgers and Hammerstein created their only collaborative effort written for television.
Cinderella aired on March 31, 1957, on
CBS. More than 107 million viewers saw the broadcast, and
Julie Andrews was nominated for an
Emmy Award for her performance in the title role. Rodgers and Hammerstein originally signed to work with
NBC, but CBS approached them, offering the chance to work with Julie Andrews, and the two quickly agreed. Rodgers stated, "What won us over was the chance to work with Julie." Andrews played Cinderella, with
Edith Adams as the Fairy Godmother,
Kaye Ballard and
Alice Ghostley as stepsisters Joy and Portia, and
Jon Cypher as Prince Christopher. Though it was broadcast in color, and the major networks all had the new (B&W) videotape recorders from Ampex, a black and white
kinescope is all that remains. It featured songs still treasured today, "In My Own Little Corner", "Ten Minutes Ago" and "Impossible: It's Possible." After the success of the 1957 production, another version was presented in 1965 and shown annually on CBS, starring
Lesley Ann Warren,
Stuart Damon,
Celeste Holm and
Walter Pidgeon. Yet another television version first aired
in 1997 on
ABC, produced by
Walt Disney Television, starring
Brandy,
Whitney Houston,
Bernadette Peters, and
Whoopi Goldberg. Stage versions were also presented in London and elsewhere, and the musical was finally given a Broadway production, with a revised book by
Douglas Carter Beane, and incorporating four songs from the Rodgers and Hammerstein catalog, in 2013.
Flower Drum Song Based on a 1957 novel by
C. Y. Lee,
Flower Drum Song takes place in
San Francisco's Chinatown in the late 1950s. The original 1958 production was directed by dancer/singer/actor
Gene Kelly. The story deals with a young Chinese woman who illegally comes to America in hopes of marrying a wealthy young Chinese-American man, who is already in love with a Chinatown nightclub dancer. The young man's parents are traditional Chinese and want him to marry the new Chinese immigrant, but he is hesitant until he falls in love with her. Though this musical did not achieve the popularity of the team's five most famous musicals, it was nevertheless a success and broke new ground by using a mostly Asian cast. The
1961 film adaptation was a lavish, but much criticized,
Ross Hunter production released by
Universal Studios. A Broadway revival in 2002 starring
Lea Salonga had a rewritten plot by playwright
David Henry Hwang but retained the inter-generational and immigrant themes as well as most of the original songs.
The Sound of Music and children in a publicity photo (1959)
The Sound of Music, Rodgers and Hammerstein's last work together, is based on the story of the Austrian
Von Trapp Family. Starring
Mary Martin as Maria and
Theodore Bikel as Captain von Trapp, it opened on Broadway at the
Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on November 16, 1959, garnering much praise and numerous awards. It has been frequently revived ever since. The show was made into a
film in 1965 starring
Julie Andrews as Maria and
Christopher Plummer as the Captain. It won five
Oscars, including
Best Picture and
Best Director,
Robert Wise. Hammerstein died in August 1960, before the film was made, so when Rodgers was asked to create two new songs for the film ("
I Have Confidence" and "
Something Good"), he wrote the lyrics as well as the music.
The Sound of Music contains more hit songs than any other Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, and the film version was the most financially successful film adaptation of a Broadway musical ever made. The most enduring of these include the
title song, "
Do-Re-Mi", "
My Favorite Things", "
Climb Ev'ry Mountain", "
So Long, Farewell" and "
Sixteen Going on Seventeen". "
Edelweiss" was the last song that Rodgers and Hammerstein wrote together. ==Legacy==