Newsies

Newsies
Newsies

Theatrical release poster by John Alvin
Directed by Kenny Ortega
Produced by Michael Finnell
Written by Bob Tzudiker
Noni White
Starring Christian Bale
David Moscow
Bill Pullman
Robert Duvall
Ann-Margret
Aaron Lohr
Max Casella
Gabriel Damon
Music by Music
Alan Menken
Lyrics
Jack Feldman
Underscore
J. A. C. Redford
Cinematography Andrew Laszlo
Editing by William Reynolds
Distributed by Walt Disney Pictures
Release date(s) April 10, 1992 (1992-04-10)
Running time 121 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $15 million
Box office $2,819,485

Newsies is a 1992 Disney musical film starring Christian Bale, David Moscow, and Bill Pullman. Robert Duvall and Ann-Margret also appeared in supporting roles. The movie is widely claimed to have gained a cult following after its initial failure at the box office. The film marked the directorial debut of choreographer Kenny Ortega (Dirty Dancing and High School Musical) and featured the music of composer Alan Menken (Little Shop of Horrors, The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, Enchanted, Tangled) alongside J.A.C. Redford (Oliver & Company and A Kid in King Arthur's Court).

Although the film was not originally intended to be a musical, it contains twelve songs and multiple dance sequences (for which the young cast trained for approximately ten weeks). Musical highlights include "Carrying the Banner," "Santa Fe," "Seize the Day," "The World Will Know," and "King of New York."

Contents

Plot

Newsies is based on the true story of Newsboys Strike of 1899 in New York City. Thousands of homeless children are living in Newsboys lodging houses, including 17-year old Manhattan newsboy Jack "Cowboy" Kelly (Christian Bale), who is a regular newsboy selling newspapers for Joseph Pulitzer (Robert Duvall) and his paper, the New York World. The newsboys wake up and get ready to sell papers ("Carrying the Banner"). Jack meets David Jacobs (David Moscow) who leaves school temporarily and joins the Newsies along with his little brother Les (Luke Edwards) to help his family while his father is out of work with a broken arm. Though the injury was work-related, he lacked the protection of a union; he was deemed useless and fired with no severance. Les looks up to the older Jack. Jack, seeing this as an opportunity to make money by using Les because he is younger and cute, teaches Les how to trick people into buying a paper by pretending to be sick and making up headlines. The three of them duck into Irving Hall to escape being chased by a cop. Jack introduces Les and David to Medda "Swedish Meadowlark" Larkson (Ann-Margret), a vaudeville star who performs at Irving Hall ("Lovey Dovey Baby"). After they witness a violent part of the trolley strike and Les begins to fall asleep, David invites Jack back to his house to meet his family and sister Sarah. After declining to spend the night, Jack confesses his desire to escape to Santa Fe ("Santa Fe"). Soon, Jack and Sarah find themselves in love. Shortly afterward, the price of newspapers for purchase by the newsboys is raised one-tenth of a cent, decided by joint decision of Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst.

Feeling they will be unable to bear the added cost, Jack organizes a strike with the aid of David ("The World Will Know" and "Seize the Day"). As the protagonist, Jack struggles with his past as he forms an important friendship with David and his family. Between his dream of one day going to Santa Fe and currently wanting to help his friends, he faces many difficult decisions involving money and loyalty. Along the way, the boys are aided by newspaper reporter Bryan Denton (Bill Pullman) and Medda, as well as being hindered by Snyder (Kevin Tighe), warden of "The Refuge" juvenile detention facility. Jack and the Newsies gain the cooperation of rival newsboy groups from New York and Brooklyn to team up and strike against the big-shot newspapermen. They eventually win their hard-fought demands after self-publishing and distributing a sympathetic newspaper flier ("Once and For All") and gaining the support of other non-union child workers around the city and Snyder is arrested. Denton tells Jack that Governor Theodore Roosevelt, was grateful Jack brought the strike to his attention and Roosevelt is offering to give him a ride anywhere, and Jack requests to be taken to the train station to catch a train to Santa Fe. His friends are disappointed to see him leave, but Roosevelt gives Jack advice convincing Jack to change his mind and decides to stay with his friends in New York City and David is accepted as an official Newsie. Sarah catches up to Jack and the two share a passionate kiss. Jack and the other Newsies dance into the crowds as the film comes to a close.[1][2]

Cast

Songs

  • "Prologue" – Racetrack Higgins
  • "Carrying the Banner" – Newsies
  • "My Lovey Dovey Baby" – Medda Larkson
  • "Santa Fe" – Jack Kelly
  • "The World Will Know" – Jack Kelly and Newsies
  • "Seize the Day" – David Jacobs and Newsies
  • "Seize the Day (Chorale)" – Newsies
  • "King of New York" – Mush Meyers, Racetrack Higgins, Spot Conlon, Kid Blink, Jack Kelly, Boots, Les, Snipeshooter, David Jacobs, Bryan Denton, and Newsies
  • "High Times, Hard Times" – Medda Larkson and Newsies
  • "Santa Fe (Reprise)" – Jack Kelly
  • "Once And For All" – Jack Kelly, Bryan Denton, David Jacobs, Les Jacobs, Sarah Jacobs
  • "The World Will Know (Reprise)" – Les Jacobs, Racetrack Higgins, Newsies, and Company
  • "Carrying the Banner (Finale)" – Company

Reactions

Newsies received harsh reviews from most critics and audiences and made $2,819,485 at the U.S. box office, becoming a box office bomb. On Rotten Tomatoes, its average score was 30%. However, Newsies has since gained a measurable cultural fan base. Christian Bale is reportedly not a fan of the film. He said: "Time healed those wounds. But it took a while."[3] He's also acknowledged that while it was not a commercial success, its fanbase is surprisingly large, saying: “You say something bad about Newsies and you have an awful lot of people to answer to.”[4]

The film was not a commercial success when first released; ranking among the highest-costing and lowest-grossing Disney live-action films in the studio's history. Movie critic/historian Leonard Maltin christened it "Howard the Paperboy" (in reference to another infamous box-office flop, Howard the Duck). However, the picture gained fans when it was released on VHS and was played on the Disney Channel. After much petitioning, Newsies was released on DVD in 2002. It has since gained a modest yet enthusiastic following.[5][6][7]

Newsies!: The Musical

A stage musical based on the film played at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, NJ. It premiered on September 25, 2011 and ran for one month[8] . Newsies!: The Musical contains songs from the movie, as well as several new numbers. [9] [10] The songs "My Lovey Dovey Baby" and "High Times Hard Times" were left out of the stage adaptation. Due to enthusiastic reviews, the show will move to Broadway at the Nederlander Theatre for a limited engagement lasting from March 15-June 10, 2012.[11] If the musical is a hit, the run could become open-ended.[12] On September 19, 2011 the cast, accompanied by composer Alan Menken, performed "Seize the Day" and "Santa Fe" on The View.[13]

The stage production was received with many favorable reviews.[14][15][16]

Historical strike

The actual Newsboys Strike of 1899 lasted from July 20 to August 2. The leader of the strike was a one-eyed young man nicknamed "Kid Blink," who spoke with a heavy Brooklyn accent that was often phonetically transcribed when he was quoted by newspapers. Kid Blink is featured in the film as a minor supporting character, while the role of strike leader is given to the fictional Cowboy. The actual strike ended with a compromise: The World and Journal agreed to buy back all unsold copies of the newspapers. The history of the newsboys strike of 1899 is told in David Nasaw's book Children of the City: At Work and at Play (Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1985; Oxford University Press, 1986).

Awards

Young Artist Award (1993)

Nomination
"Outstanding Young Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture"

13th Golden Raspberry Awards

  • Worst Picture - Nominated
  • Worst Director (Kenny Ortega) - Nominated
  • Worst Supporting Actor (Robert Duvall) - Nominated
  • Worst Supporting Actress (Ann-Margret) - Nominated
  • Worst Original Song ("Hard Times, High Times") - Won

See also

References

External links


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