Flower Drum Song: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[The Illegal]]: Mei and Dr. Li.
* [[The Illegal]]: Mei and Dr. Li.
* [[The Ingenue]]: Mei Li, helped by the fact that she's a foreigner.
* [[The Ingenue]]: Mei Li, helped by the fact that she's a foreigner.
* [[Keep Circulating the Tapes]]: The movie did not come to DVD until 2006, seven years after Rodgers and Hammerstein movies started coming to DVD. Even the long-lost TV special ''[[Cinderella (Film)|Cinderella]]'' and the widely panned ''State Fair'' remake beat it to the punch.
* [[Keep Circulating the Tapes]]: The movie did not come to DVD until 2006, seven years after Rodgers and Hammerstein movies started coming to DVD. Even the long-lost TV special ''[[Cinderella (film)|Cinderella]]'' and the widely panned ''State Fair'' remake beat it to the punch.
* [[Lady in Red]]: Helen in her [[Qipao]] during the New Year's celebration, though she doesn't fulfill the [[Femme Fatale]] role in the film and musical.
* [[Lady in Red]]: Helen in her [[Qipao]] during the New Year's celebration, though she doesn't fulfill the [[Femme Fatale]] role in the film and musical.
* [[Lighter and Softer]]: the musical to the novel.
* [[Lighter and Softer]]: the musical to the novel.
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* [[Ms. Fanservice]]: Linda.
* [[Ms. Fanservice]]: Linda.
* [[Naked in Mink]]: evoked in the movie version of "I Enjoy Being A Girl."
* [[Naked in Mink]]: evoked in the movie version of "I Enjoy Being A Girl."
* [[Parody]]: The fanfic [[Selleck Waterfall Sandwich (Fanfic)|Selleck Waterfall Sandwich]] is a parody of this movie.
* [[Parody]]: The fanfic [[Selleck Waterfall Sandwich]] is a parody of this movie.
* [[Qipao]]: many of the female characters wear a qipao at least once in the movie.
* [[Qipao]]: many of the female characters wear a qipao at least once in the movie.
* [[Retool]]: The 2002 revival utilized a new libretto, in which Mei Li emigrates to America to escape Communism, and joins a theater troupe run by Wang Ta's father. This version didn't last on Broadway very long.
* [[Retool]]: The 2002 revival utilized a new libretto, in which Mei Li emigrates to America to escape Communism, and joins a theater troupe run by Wang Ta's father. This version didn't last on Broadway very long.
* [[Stylistic Suck]]: the costumes in "Gliding Through my Memories."
* [[Stylistic Suck]]: the costumes in "Gliding Through my Memories."
* [[Why Waste a Wedding]]
* [[Why Waste a Wedding?]]
* [[Woman in White]]: Helen in her [[Dream Ballet]].
* [[Woman in White]]: Helen in her [[Dream Ballet]].



Revision as of 07:00, 9 April 2014

 A hundred million miracles are happening every day!

Flower Drum Song is a 1957 novel by C.Y. Lee that was adapted into a musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein in 1958. The Movie adaptation of the musical came out in 1961.

The novel is about Wang Chi-yang, an aging Chinese immigrant to San Francisco, and his trouble assimilating into American culture. The Lighter and Softer musical changes the focus to his son Ta's search for a bride.

The musical begins with Mei Li and her father Dr. Li's illegal arrival to San Francisco. Mei is in an arranged marriage with Sammy Fong, but he is already going steady with a showgirl at his nightclub, Femme Fatale Linda Low. Linda has left Sammy because she is frustrated he won't marry her. Trying to get out of the marriage with Mei, Sammy introduces the new arrivals to Master Wang whose son Ta, a university student, is single. Mei quickly falls for Ta but Ta falls for Linda during a group date. Linda sets her sights on him as her future husband. But then there's a third love interest, Helen Chao, Linda's Girl Next Door friend who is also in love with Ta...

Although not among the most well-known musicals by the song-writing duo, the stage and film productions are notable for having almost all-Asian casts. Flower Drum Song averts many negative tropes associated with Asians in American media during the 50s and 60s, including Me Love You Long Time, Mighty Whitey as seen in another Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, The King and I; and Yellowface, though not all actors were Chinese or Chinese-American.


Flower Drum Song contains examples of: