Ray Colbert, Tuesday Sommers. |
Christine Rubens, Steven Alex-Cole, Jim Rich. |
If you think that the title of this show means what you think it means, you're right! Let My People Come was, perhaps partly because of its provocative title, an impressively successful Off-Broadway revue that ran for
two and a half years at a small theatre, had numerous touring versions, both
national and international, and eventually moved to Broadway, even though the
critics weren’t formally invited to review it. Those who went did so on their
own or their outlets’ initiative.
Song titles included “Whatever Turns You On,” “Give It to Me,” “Fellatio 101,” “Poontang, “Come in My Mouth,” and “The Cunnilingus Champion of Company C,” to cite some of the more obvious examples. The numbers covered a wide variety of sexualities,"straight, gay, bi, pansexual," as Paul Tenaglia, who later joined the show, informs me. (An earlier version of this entry noted that only "a smattering" of the show deviated from a heterosexual orientation into bisexual material.) Tenaglia notes that songs like "I'm Gay," "And She Loved Me," and "Take Me Home with You" explored alternative sexual orientations.
Complete nudity was greatly in evidence, and the naked cast
greeted the spectators at the exits as the audience left. Filthy words were
spoken and simulated sex acts were performed, although with a “gingerly” touch,
according to Mel Gussow.
Steven Alex-Cole, Marty Duffy. |
Gussow enjoyed the “ingenuousness and adolescent giddiness,”
but he thought the score—by the son of one of New York’s best-known gossip
columnists—derivative and the straight comic skits not up to even the
less-than-acceptable bits in Oh! Calcutta!. That 1969 show, of course, is the one that opened the floodgates for products like Let My People Come to rush into the
mainstream. The cast was considered merely “adequate.”
Tuesday Sommers, Robin Charin, and others. |
Let My People Come was
the center of several controversies. One was when the State Liquor Authority
asserted that the Village Gate’s liquor license was in jeopardy because of the
theatre’s mixing nudity and booze. Another came when protests emerged from
members of the New York League of Theatre Owners and Producers, who were
unhappy with the presence of a semi-pornographic show in a respectable Broadway
theatre just when they were struggling to remove from the Times Square area the
blight of porn and prostitution.