翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Lucky Star (Johnson & Häggkvist song)
・ Lucky Star (Madonna song)
・ Lucky Star (manga)
・ Lucky Star (Shinee song)
・ Lucky Star (Superfunk song)
・ Lucky Star 2015
・ Lucky Starr (singer)
・ Lucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury
・ Lucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter
・ Lucky Starr and the Oceans of Venus
・ Lucky Girl (album)
・ Lucky Girl (film)
・ Lucky Grills
・ Lucky Guy
・ Lucky Guy (musical)
Lucky Guy (play)
・ Lucky Hill
・ Lucky Hit
・ Lucky Idahor
・ Lucky Igbinedion
・ Lucky imaging
・ Lucky in Love
・ Lucky in Love (song)
・ Lucky International Open
・ Lucky iron fish
・ Lucky Isibor
・ Lucky Jack mine
・ Lucky Jade
・ Lucky Jayawardena
・ Lucky Jim


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Lucky Guy (play) : ウィキペディア英語版
Lucky Guy (play)

''Lucky Guy'' is a play by Nora Ephron that premiered in 2013, the year after her death. It was Ephron's final work and marked Tom Hanks's Broadway debut, in which he earned a Theatre World Award. It depicts the story of journalist Mike McAlary beginning in 1985 and ending with his death at the age of 41 in 1998. The plot covers the high points and tribulations of McAlary's career as he traverses the clubby atmosphere of the New York City tabloid industry in what some regard as its heyday. The play includes his near tragic automobile accident and devotes a large portion to his recovery.
Originally conceived as a television film in 1999, the play spent years under revision before finally opening on Broadway in 2013. Regarded as an elegy, the story harkens back to the days of tabloid journalism prior to the 24-hour news reporting cycle. The production received six nominations for Tony Awards, winning two, including Courtney B. Vance for Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play. The play received considerable critical comment, partly because it was Ephron's last play and partly because of Hanks's debut. Critical reaction was generally warm to mixed, and the limited Broadway run was profitable.
==Background and composition==
Ephron first conceived of this story in 1999 as an HBO movie. Ephron focused the story on the career of New York City tabloid columnist Mike McAlary from his early beginnings to his rise to stardom, when he received the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary for exposing police brutality against a Haitian immigrant named Abner Louima in Brooklyn's 70th precinct, and his death, eight months later, of cancer.〔〔〔 Ephron, who had been a ''New York Post'' reporter, had previously written about her own career in journalism in the novel ''I Remember Nothing''. She once wrote, "I can’t remember which came first—wanting to be a journalist or wanting to date a journalist"; she had a thing for journalists like McAlary. Since McAlary lost his battle with cancer, Ephron had spent her six years battling cancer by directing a film and writing two as well as writing two plays; Chris Jones of the ''Chicago Tribune'' speculates that Ephron chose this subject because she shared a bond with a journalist who "also did some of his best writing while battling cancer".
Ephron began background interviews with McAlary's colleagues such as Jim Dwyer, in the months after McAlary's Christmas 1998 death. In 2005, the film idea was floated again, but Ephron claimed she could not get her preferred leading actor.〔 It was not until 2011 that Ephron succeeded in attracting Hanks to the project. Hanks had previously starred in Ephron's popular films, ''Sleepless in Seattle'' and ''You've Got Mail'', but he had last performed live in the theatre in 1979 for Riverside Shakespeare Company's production of ''The Mandrake''. The play is the final and posthumous work of Ephron, who died the year before its production.
Gabriel Rotello blogged about McAlary in ''The Huffington Post'' after hearing about the play. He noted that McAlary represented a lot of things to a lot of people, but as the first openly gay columnist, Rotello viewed McAlary unfavorably. According to Rotello, McAlary was an aggressive journalist who had a reputation for reporting on corrupt cops and miscreants in New York City's crack era. He relied heavily on police sources, hanging out with then-New York City Police Commissioner William Bratton and his mouthpiece, John Miller. His career was built on high-level access rather than using street sources and fact-corroboration. He became prominent in the public eye in Spring 1994 when a black lesbian reported that she had been raped in broad daylight in Brooklyn's Prospect Park. McAlary's headline on the case read "Rape Hoax the Real Crime", with a story alleging that the woman had concocted the story for political purposes such as speaking at lesbian rallies. At the time, New York had recently endured the Tawana Brawley rape allegations, and gaybashing was at its apex. The police then revealed substantial evidence in support of the story and began investigating McAlary's source. Two weeks later McAlary affirmed his story, and the police backed off the investigation. Rotello, who was then with ''New York Newsday'', got Miller on tape confirming that McAlary was begging his police contacts to back him up. McAlary lost credibility with the police and the gay community. Rotello concedes, however, that McAlary later had major success.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Lucky Guy (play)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.