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Tuesday, 14 April 2026

19 April: Carousel

On this date in 1945 The Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Carousel opened on Broadway. 10 facts about it:

  1. It was the second musical Rodgers and Hammerstein wrote together, the first being Oklahoma! two years earlier.

  2. Carousel was based on a 1909 play by Ferenc Molnár which was written in Hungarian and set in Budapest. The play was called Liliom, and wasn’t a hit first time around, but when it was revived after the first world war it was a success. Rodgers and Hammerstein saw a production of it and liked the story, but at first were unsure about acquiring the rights to it. Molnár had refused to grant the rights in the past; also the ending of his play was possibly too dark for musical theatre.

  3. However, they did get the rights. They changed the setting to Maine and re-worked the ending so that it was more hopeful.

  4. So what’s it about? It’s the story of a carousel barker Billy Bigelow who gets together with millworker Julie Jordan. They marry, she gets pregnant, but they both lose their jobs. Billy plans a robbery with his friend Jigger, but it fails and Billy commits suicide. In the afterlife, he is processed by a Starkeeper who tells him he’s not good enough to get into heaven but after fifteen years of purgatory he gets a chance to return to Earth for a day to try and redeem himself by helping his daughter, Louise. In the original play, he fails and goes to hell; in the musical, he succeeds and also tells Julie that he loves her, and is allowed into heaven.

  5. The leading actors in that first production were John Raitt as Billy and Jan Clayton as Julie. Carousel initially ran for 890 performances on Broadway. Stephen Douglass and Iva Withers played the lead roles when it opened in London’s West End in 1950. A film version was made in 1956, starring Gordon MacRae and Shirley Jones.

  6. Carousel won the first-ever New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Musical in 1945-1946.

  7. The dress rehearsal went badly, and some last minute changes were made to the pantomime scene. There were fears the show would be a flop. Indeed, Rodgers thought it was as he watched the opening performance. He had a back injury at the time and had to watch it propped up in a box behind the curtain, dosed up on pain killers. He couldn’t see all of the stage and couldn’t hear the audience applauding. He only found out later what a resounding success it had been.

  8. The best known songs from the show are If I Loved You, June is Bustin’ Out All Over and You’ll Never Walk Alone.

  9. Act One begins with a scene which has become known as “The Bench Scene.” This scene is seen as an exemplary example of a musical theatre scene, and is studied in most musical theatre performance classes.

  10. Carousel, like many productions of its time, is not without its issues for audiences today. Billy is abusive to both Julie and Louise. At the time, the fact that Billy is a good man at heart, that he never actually plans to hit women, and doesn’t hit them very hard, doesn’t cut much ice in the 21st century.





I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/


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