Friday, December 25, 2020

421. RAINBOW JONES. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

Peggy Hagen Lamprey, Gil Robbins, Ruby Persson, Andy Rohrer, Stephanie Silver.
RAINBOW JONES [Musical/Animals/Fantasy/Romance] B/M/LY: Jill Williams; D: Gene Persson; MS (CH): Sammy Bayes; S: Richard Ferrer; C: James Berton Harris; L: Spencer Mosse; P: Rubykate, Inc. i/a/w Phil Gillin and Gene Bambic; T: Music Box Theatre; 2/13/74 (1)

One more coffin in the cemetery of single-performance flops so prevalent in the early 70s, Rainbow Jones was called a “coy and simpering” fantasy by Clive Barnes, “embarrassing” by Martin Gottfried, and “idiocy” by Douglas Watt. Gene Persson directed his wife, Ruby Persson—suggesting to Gottfried that this was a vanity production—in the title role of Rainbow Jones, a young woman who blames herself for the auto accident that killed her parents. She lives with an eccentric aunt (Kay St. Germain) whose chief activity is watching TV quiz shows.

Unable to keep a job, the dispirited Rainbow finds her only consolation in going to Central Park with a copy of Aesop’s Fable. There she communes with a speaking dog, lioness, fox, and lamb who materialize whenever she opens the pages. A romance blooms with an ad writer (Peter Kastner) who jogs in the park, but the relationship weakens when he is skeptical about her fantasies. She leaves for Ohio, but eventually returns to the guy in the park.

Kind words were scarce for this show. Barnes said, “The book is as bad as the music, the music is as bad as the lyrics, and the lyrics are as bad as either.” No pot of gold awaited Rainbow Jones.