7/10
The era of live television
12 June 2018
This was a real find. I remember watching this on TV in my salad years at the ripe age of 10. I was developing an interest in musical theater and knew in fact who Cole Porter was. At that age I still liked children's fables as well and could appreciate Aladdin on that level. Watching it again 60 years later I can now appreciate the wit that went into some of Porter's lyrics.

Though Sal Mineo plays the young protagonist Aladdin and Anna Maria Alberghetti is the royal princess of China a woman way beyond his station, the real star of Aladdin is Cyril Ritchard who is the sorcerer who pulls a palace coup and becomes the Emperor through his control of the magic lamp temporarily taken from Aladdin's control is the real star of this show. Ritchard had gotten some great reviews with his Captain Hook in Mary Martin's Peter Pan on Broadway and television. There's quite a bit of Hook in what Ritchard does here as the sorcerer named by book author S.J. Perelman, Sui Generis. Ritchard is having one great old time hamming it up in a role that calls for it.

The Porter wit is still sharp with such songs like No Wonder Taxes Are High and Opportunity Knocks. Ritchard really delivers them with gusto. He also opens the show with Come To The Supermarket In Old Peking that Barbra Streisand sang when she made her first album. Veteran musical performer Dennis King sings Trust Your Destiny To Your Star which I knew over the years because Bing Crosby had recorded it and knew it being the Crosbyphile I am. It was nice to see the context that they were written in.

Sadly the ballads that young lovers Mineo and Alberghetti were given were second rate. No Night And Day or I Concentrate On You are in Aladdin's score.

Today of course Aladdin would be done with Asian performers. In that sense Porter's rival songwriter giants Rodgers&Hammerstein were ahead of Porter when they did Flower Drum Song on Broadway. It was a nearly all Asian cast on Broadway and 100% Asian on the big screen.

Live television did have its pitfalls. I recall seeing Ritchard being hoisted on some strong shoulders during one of the numbers and it looked for a second as if he was going to be dropped. Still seeing it was like going to the opening night of a Broadway musical without leaving your home.

Geoffrey Holder plays the genie of the lamp with appropriate fierceness. He borrowed a bit from that other genie Rex Ingram from The Thief Of Bagdad. The tall Mr. Holder had some obvious lifts so he could really towe over the slender juvenile Mineo. Basil Rathbone plays the Emperor of China and he borrows a bit from his Louis XI in If I Were King. Howard Morris plays Aladdin's best friend who is a pickpocket and whose talents come in handy in the climax. And Una Merkel is a fine Una Merkel as Aladdin's mother.

The creaks and flaws of 50s television are showing here. Still while hardly Cole Porter's best Aladdin can still be appreciated by today's audience.
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