It’s tempting
to wonder what sort of box-office expectations the producers of this filmed
stage production had, because Sammy Stops
the World radiates sensibilities associated with the mid-’60s rather than
sensibilities associated with the late ’70s. Did anyone really think the public
was hungry for a dated musical starring an old-fashioned entertainer? In any event, Sammy Stops the World failed to restore Sammy
Davis Jr. to the big-screen popularity he enjoyed in the ’60s, and has since
fallen into obscurity. Seen today, it’s perhaps best appreciated as a record of
Davis’ incredible stamina, though casual fans might prefer tracking down
concert footage of Davis’ familiar hits. Instead of “Candy Man” and “I Gotta Be
Me,” Sammy Stops the World comprises
unmemorable songs by UK tunesmiths Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley, of Doctor Dolittle and Willy Wonka fame. That’s because Sammy Stops the World records a performance of Davis in the 1966
Bricusse/Newley show Stop the World—I
Want to Get Off. The most famous tune to emerge from the musical is “What
Kind of Fool,” not to be confused with the Barry Gibb song of the same name
popularized by Barbra Streisand.
Performing against a circus-themed backdrop
and accompanied by a small cast of singers and dancers, Davis plays Littlechap,
an everyman whose life journey forms a ham-fisted satire about modern
existence. He gets married, takes a soul-sucking job to pay the bills, and
sells out his principles for professional and social advancement, eventually
becoming so adept at telling people what they want to hear that he becomes
President of the United States. Periodically, Littlechap addresses the audience
by exclaiming “Stop the world!” and uttering introspective asides. Eventually,
the story resolves into a moral lesson because Littlechap rediscovers his
integrity at a crucial moment.
The fashionable anti-Establishment lingo of the
original play was reconfigured slightly for Davis, hence some awkward
references to race relations. (The performance in this film, recorded in Long
Beach, California, was part of a national tour.) As a movie experience, Sammy Stops the World is underwhelming
at best, exhausting at worst. Davis works his ass off, but he also mugs
shamelessly and milks emotional moments—which is to say that he offers his
usual shtick. And while his leather-lunged belting is physically impressive, it’s
not particularly artful. Worse, the show doesn’t properly showcase his
remarkable dancing. Incidentally, mention should be made of costar Marian Mercer, who plays
multiple roles, since she performs the show’s cutesy dialogue and lyrics with
welcome edginess.
Sammy Stops the World: FUNKY
1 comment:
the poster art is terrifying!
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