Sunday, June 7, 2020

143. EARL OF RUSTON. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975


Ragan Courtney, C.C. Courtney.
For background on this series and a list of previous entries, click here.

EARL OF RUSTON [Musical/Family/Mental Illness/Southern] B/LY: C.C. Courtney, Ragan Courtney; M: Peter Link; D: C.C. Courtney; DS: Neil Peter Jampolis; P: David Black; T: Billy Rose Theatre; 5/5/71-5/8/71 (5)

Leecy R. Woods Moore, Ragan Courtney.
This country-rock musical is about a mentally challenged, small-town Louisiana man, Earl Woods, who died in 1969 and to whom the book and lyric writers were related. The character of this “town crazy” was played by both the Courtney brothers, but they were unable to effectively capture his personality. To give even more authenticity to the depiction, Woods’s real grandmother played a part in the show, although not a professional performer.

C.C. Courtney, Jean Waldo Beck.
A simply designed show using numerous lighting changes instead of elaborate sets, Earl of Ruston moved episodically through Woods’s life. Like many other such musicals in the post-Hair period, it had barely any book to speak of.

The show was faulted for being garrulous, over-amplified, inconclusive, dull, and ill-advised. Earl of Ruston ran an hour and 40 minutes without an intermission—uncommon at the time, unlike these days—and used an onstage band called Goatleg. It was gone in less than a week.