Wednesday, July 1, 2020

193. FUN CITY. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

Joan Rivers, Gabriel Dell.
FUN CITY [Comedy/Romance] A: Joan Rivers, Lester Colodny, and Edgar Rosenberg; D: Jerry Adler; S: Ralph Alswang; C: Ann Roth; L: Jules Fisher; P: Alexander H. Cohen and Rocky H. Aoki; T: Morosco Theatre/ 1/2/72-1/8/72 (9)

Joan Rivers, Paul Ford, Gabriel Dell, Rose Marie.
A gag-filled exercise coauthored by and starring top nightclub comedienne Joan Rivers as Jill Fairchild, a pop singer of Jewish background living in New York City and beset with numerous problems of urban living and family relationships. Many of the urban jokes reminded critics of their more successful treatment in Neil Simon’s The Prisoner of Second Avenue.

Jill’s live-in boyfriend, Paul Martin (Gabriel Dell), plays the violin in the Radio City Music Hall orchestra. She uses her involvement as an activist in various liberal causes to avoid marrying him until, after a seven-year affair, Paul decides to get hitched.

The critics bewailed the absence of a play and characters amid the nonstop stream of wisecracks about the city and its ethnic types. Despite a driving pace and comedically talented players, including Rose Marie, Paul Ford, and Louis Zorich, the farce fell on its face. Brendan Gill called it “totally without merit,” John Simon said it was “not within its feeble power to be about anything,” and Mel Gussow noted its lack of form and momentum. All in all, Fun City was anything but fun.