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Funny
Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
A
Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, which was the first
Broadway production to boast music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim,
drew most of its farcical situations directly from the plays of
Titus Maccius Plautus (254 BC-184 BC). The writers, hoping to
give Broadway a taste of what once convulsed ancient Roman audiences,
carefully studied all 21 of Plautus' surviving comedies and then
created their own original story, drawing characters and situations
freely from many of the old scripts. The plot revolves around
Pseudolus, a slave who will do almost anything to gain his freedom.
When Pseudolus is left in charge of his owner's young son who
has fallen madly in love with a beautiful courtesan, the fun begins.
The young boy promises Pseudolus his freedom if he can arrange
a marriage before his father returns. Pseudolus, of course, agrees.
But not even the conniving slave can foresee the tangled web that
he is about to weave. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the
Forum opened at the Alvin Theatre on May 8, 1962, with Zero Mostel
playing the part of Pseudolus. The production ran for 964 performances.
The 1966 screen version starred Zero Mostel and Phil Silvers.
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