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Irene
Charm
is the word for IRENE ... a special kind of charm, made up of
equal parts of comedy, vivacity, romance and nostalgia. And as
a special attraction, IRENE contains some of the best loved, most
singable numbers in the history of the musical theatre. Originally
produced in 1919, this new version carries its age with grace
and style, for its story is of a delightful Irish lass who believed
in women's lib before the term was invented.
Irene
O'Dare helps her widowed mother in a little music shop in New
York City. She's not unhappy, but she feels there must be more
to life than this - the world, she says, must be bigger than Ninth
Avenue. Against all tradition, she intends to be a successful
business woman. In fact, she installs a telephone in the shop
- the first in the neighbourhood. And the very first time the
phone rings, Irene is asked to tune the pianos at a very swanky
Long Island house. There she meets Donald Marshall, a young tycoon,
and despite his rather aloof manner, she is immediately captivated
by him. Donald is intrigued by this cheerful lass, so unlike the
society girls his mother has been urging him to marry. He is particularly
taken by her description of her adventures when she wore her favourite
dress - her 'Alice Blue Gown'.
Donald's
addle-pated cousin Ozzie arrives with a new idea. He wants to
open a dress salon, to be run by a wild eccentric who calls himself
Madame Lucy. Donald agrees to finance the project, with the proviso
that his new discovery, Irene O'Dare.. shall take charge of the
business. She is a great success a t this, and some of her Ninth
Avenue friends are taken on at the salon as models, under the
tuition of Madame Lucy. It is arranged that Madame Lucy's fashions
are to be introduced at a society ball, where, to impress the
gathering, Irene is announced as the Contessa Irena O'Dari. She
captivates everyone with her Continental chic. But when Donald
insists that she continue to play the role for business purposes,
Irene is outraged. She will not live a lie, for Donald or anyone
else. She reflects that 'I'm Always Chasing Rainbows'. Her Ninth
Avenue friends cheer her up with the rousing and spectacular number
'Irene'. At a party at the Marshall house, Donald confesses his
love for Irene with 'You Made Me Love You'. Mrs. O'Dare suddenly
meets the man who was her own long-lost love - none other than
Madame Lucy. And Donald introduces the lovely Contessa O'Dari
as the girl he will marry - Irene O'Dare.
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