Showboat Backing Tracks – After The Ball … Bill … Can’t Help Lovin’ That Man … Here Comes The Showboat … I Might Fall Back On You … It’s Only Make Believe … Life Upon The Wicked Stage … Ol’ Man River … Make Believe … Til Good Luck Comes My Way … Queenie’s Ballyhoo … Why Do I Love You … You Are Love
Showboat the musical features the music of Jerome Kern with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein.
The story, based on Edna Ferber’s novel of the same name, is set against the backdrop of the American Deep South at the beginning of the 20th Century, and tells a powerful story of freedom, loyalty and love. It is a tale that spans over 40 years, which chronicles the lives of the stage hands, performers and dock workers on a Mississippi River show boat called the “Cotton Blossom”.
It is said to be one of the most romantic musicals of all time.
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Synopsis
Act I
In 1887, the show boat Cotton Blossom arrives at the river dock in Natchez, Mississippi. The Reconstruction era had ended a decade earlier, and white-dominated Southern legislatures have imposed racial segregation and Jim Crow rules. The boat’s owner, Cap’n Andy Hawks, introduces his actors to the crowd on the levee. A fistfight breaks out between Steve Baker, the leading man of the troupe, and Pete, a rough engineer who had been making passes at Steve’s wife, the leading lady Julie La Verne. Steve knocks Pete down, and Pete swears revenge, suggesting he knows a dark secret about Julie. Cap’n Andy pretends to the shocked crowd that the fight was a preview of one of the melodramas to be performed. The troupe exits with the showboat band, and the crowd follows.
A handsome riverboat gambler, Gaylord Ravenal, appears on the levee and is taken with eighteen-year-old Magnolia (“Nolie”) Hawks, an aspiring performer and the daughter of Cap’n Andy and his wife Parthenia Ann (Parthy). Magnolia is likewise smitten with Ravenal (“Make Believe”). She seeks advice from Joe, a black dock worker aboard the boat, who has returned from buying flour for his wife Queenie, the ship’s cook. He replies that there are “lots like [Ravenal] on the river.” As Magnolia goes inside the boat to tell her friend Julie about the handsome stranger, Joe mutters that she ought to ask the river for advice. He and the other dock workers reflect on the wisdom and indifference of “Ol’ Man River”, who doesn’t seem to care what the world’s troubles are, but “jes’ keeps rollin’ along”.
Magnolia finds Julie inside and announces that she’s in love. Julie cautions her that this stranger could be just a “no-account river fellow”. Magnolia says that if she found out he was “no-account”, she’d stop loving him. Julie warns her that it’s not that easy to stop loving someone, explaining that she’ll always love Steve, singing a few lines of “Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man”. Queenie overhears – she is surprised that Julie knows that song as she has only heard “colored folks” sing it. Magnolia remarks that Julie sings it all the time, and when Queenie asks if she can sing the entire song, Julie obliges.
During the rehearsal for that evening, Julie and Steve learn that the town sheriff is coming to arrest them. Steve takes out a large pocket knife and makes a cut on the back of her hand, sucking the blood and swallowing it. Pete returns with the sheriff, who insists the show cannot proceed because Julie is a mulatto who has been passing as white and local law prohibits mixed marriages. Julie admits that her mother was black, but Steve tells the sheriff that he also has “black blood” in him, so their marriage is legal in Mississippi. The troupe backs him up, boosted by the ship’s pilot Windy McClain, a longtime friend of the sheriff. The couple have escaped the charge of miscegenation, but they still have to leave the show boat; identified as black, they can no longer perform for the segregated white audience. Cap’n Andy fires Pete, but in spite of his sympathy for Julie and Steve, he cannot violate the law for them.
Ravenal returns and asks for passage on the boat. Andy hires him as the new leading man, and assigns his daughter Magnolia as the new leading lady, over her mother’s objections. As Magnolia and Ravenal begin to rehearse their roles and in the process, kiss for the first time (infuriating Parthy), Joe reprises the last few lines of “Ol’ Man River”.
Weeks later, Magnolia and Ravenal have been a hit with the crowds and have fallen in love. As the levee workers hum “Ol’ Man River” in the background, he proposes to Magnolia, and she accepts. The couple joyously sings “You Are Love”. They make plans to marry the next day while Parthy, who disapproves, is out of town. Parthy has discovered that Ravenal once killed a man, and arrives with the Sheriff to interrupt the wedding festivities. The group learns that Ravenal was acquitted of murder. Cap’n Andy calls Parthy “narrow-minded” and defends Ravenal by announcing that he also once killed a man. Parthy faints, but the ceremony proceeds.
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Act II
Six years have passed, and it is 1893. Ravenal and Magnolia have moved to Chicago, where they make a precarious living from Ravenal’s gambling. At first they are rich and enjoying the good life (“Why Do I Love You?”) By 1903, they have a daughter, Kim, and after years of varying income, they are broke and rent a room in a boarding house. Depressed over his inability to support his family, Ravenal abandons Magnolia and Kim. Frank and Ellie, two former actors from the showboat, learn that Magnolia is living in the rooms they want to rent. The old friends seek a singing job for Magnolia at the Trocadero, the club where they are doing a New Year’s show. Julie is working there. She has fallen into drinking after having been abandoned by Steve. At a rehearsal, she tries out the new song “Bill.” She appears to be thinking of Steve and sings it with great emotion. From her dressing-room, she hears Magnolia singing “Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man” for her audition, the song which Julie taught her years ago. Julie secretly quits her job so that Magnolia can fill it, without learning of her sacrifice.
Ravenal visit his daughter Kim at the convent where she goes to school to say goodbye before leaving her forever (“Make Believe” (reprise)). On New Year’s Eve, Andy and Parthy go to Chicago for a surprise visit to their daughter Magnolia. He goes to the Trocadero without his wife, and sees Magnolia overcome with emotion and nearly booed off stage. Andy rallies the crowd by starting a sing-along of the standard, “After the Ball”. Magnolia becomes a great musical star.
More than 20 years pass, and it is 1927. An aged Joe on the Cotton Blossom sings a reprise of “Ol’ Man River”. Cap’n Andy has a chance meeting with Ravenal and arranges his reunion with Magnolia. Andy knows that Magnolia is retiring and returning to the Cotton Blossom with Kim, who has become a Broadway star. Kim gives her admirers a taste of her performing abilities by singing an updated, Charleston version of “Why Do I Love You?” Ravenal sings a reprise of “You Are Love” to the offstage Magnolia. Although he is uncertain about asking her to take him back, Magnolia, who has never stopped loving him, greets him warmly and does. As the happy couple walks up the boat’s gangplank, Joe and the cast sing the last verse of “Ol’ Man River”.
Songs
ACT ONE
- Cotton Blossom – Stevedores, Gals, and Townspeople
- Cap’n Andy’s Ballyhoo – Cap’n Andy, Parthy, the Show Boat Troupe, Stevedores, Gals and Townspeople
- Where’s the Mate for Me? – Ravenal
- Make Believe – Ravenal and Magnolia
- Ol’ Man River – Joe and Stevedores
- Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man – Julie, Queenie, Joe, Magnolia, Stevedores and Gals
- Till Good Luck Comes My Way – Ravenal, Pete, Frank and Townsmen
- Mis’ry’s Comin’ Aroun’ – Queenie, Stevedores and Gals
- I Have the Room Above Her – Ravenal and Magnolia
- Life Upon the Wicked Stage – Ellie and Townswomen
- Queenie’s Ballyhoo – Queenie, Stevedores and Gals
- You Are Love – Ravenal and Magnolia
- Act 1 Finale – The Wedding Celebration – Company
ACT TWO
- Why Do I Love You – Ravenal, Magnolia and Ensemble
- Dandies on Parade – City Folk
- Alma Redemptoris Mater/Ol’ Man River (Reprise) – Nun’s Choir, Joe
- Make Believe (Reprise) – Ravenal
- Bill – Julie
- Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man ( Reprise) – Magnolia
- Good-bye, My Lady Love – Frank and Ellie
- After the Ball – Magnolia, Andy and Ensemble
- Ol’ Man River (Reprise) – Joe
- Dance Away the Night – Magnolia
- You Are Love (Reprise) – Ravenal
- Why Do I Love You (Reprise)/Kim’s Charleston – Kim, Parthy and Ensemble
- Act 2 Finale – Joe and Company
Showboat Backing Tracks
After The Ball … Bill … Can’t Help Lovin’ That Man … Here Comes The Showboat … I Might Fall Back On You … It’s Only Make Believe … Life Upon The Wicked Stage … Ol’ Man River … Make Believe … Til Good Luck Comes My Way … Queenie’s Ballyhoo … Why Do I Love You