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Gypsy (Theatre)

 Gypsy (Theatre)
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Gypsy (Theatre)
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Gypsy
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Gypsy: a musical fable is a 1959 Musical with book by Arthur Laurents, music by Jule Styne, and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, loosely based on the life of striptease artist Gypsy Rose Lee. The original production, starring Ethel Merman and Sandra Church, is one of the most acclaimed shows in Broadway history. It was later adapted into a 1962 film starring Rosalind Russell and Natalie Wood and a 1993 Made-for-TV Movie starring Bette Midler and Cynthia Gibb.Stage Mom Rose Hovick is determined to make her daughters Louise and June stars — June more so than Louise initially — but while June is extroverted and talented, Louise is shy and quiet. Rose's act for the two is based on childish, innocent stage personae that they become unable to keep up as they grow older.Eventually, June runs away, and Rose decides to put Louise in the spotlight, with an act still similar to the one with June. But there are various problems: Louise is a good singer and dancer but she can't do the kind of routines that June excelled at, Rose's ideas for acts to get Louise in the spotlight are too old fashioned and out of date to work in the changing entertainment landscape, and her relationship with her lover, manager and business partner Herbie are deteriorating due to Rose's ruthless, uncompromising ambition. On top of all that Vaudeville has died out save for the Burlesque theaters, and the only reason the show was even taken on was that it would be a clean act, giving less of an excuse for police raids.Yet that doesn't last long, and the act is finally broken up. Rose pushes Louise to do one last act for an arrested stripper — causing Herbie to finally leave her for good — but insists that Louise do it clean. "Make 'em beg for more, and then don't give it to them!" Louise, now given the stage name Gypsy Rose Lee, takes that advice to its logical extreme, by always leaving the men wanting more of her. This makes her the most successful in the business, but her mother is disgusted.Finally realizing she lost everyone, Rose breaks down and realizes that everything she did was for herself and out of her own selfish desire to be noticed. Upon admitting that, Rose and Gypsy start to reconcile.The film is also notable for inspiring The Faith Dane Clause, to prevent the legal problems that Faith Dane created when she claimed that her acting style "created" the role of Miss Mazeppa. All actors must sign a waiver now relinquishing claims on the characters they play since.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_108c268e
type
Hotter and Sexier
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_108c268e
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"May We Entertain You", the innocent vaudeville song June and Louise sang as children, slowed down and turned into the stripper song "Let Me Entertain You". Not so much "Dark" as Hotter and Sexier. One could consider it a Subverted Trope, as it scares Louise at first but she obviously grows a liking to it as her career goes on.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_14beeefd
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Darker and Edgier
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Darker and Edgier: Patti Lupone's Rose is downright frightening.
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Does This Remind You of Anything?
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_14ed6ab7
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Does This Remind You of Anything?: There's a reason drag queens found the "I'm a pretty girl, mama" scene resonating to them, as well as MTF's later: a girl being forced to act and dress like a boy by their overbearing parent(s), til they discovered happiness as a different gender.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_16bf5630
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Secretly Selfish
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_16bf5630
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Secretly Selfish: Mama Rose might be the Trope Codifier in musical theatre. She spends her entire life pushing June and Louise to be stars, all the while claiming that she's doing it for them. But in the end, Rose finally admits that deep down, it was always about herself—she didn't get the chance to be a leading lady, so she tried to mold her daughters to fulfill the dream that she never achieved.
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The Dutiful Son
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The Dutiful Daughter: Louise, after June cuts and runs.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_1bc2e445
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End of an Age
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_1bc2e445
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End of an Age: The bulk of the show takes place in a time where Vaudeville entertainment was in decline. Even though Herbie explains this to Rose in one scene she refuses to accept it, which is just to be expected of her at this point.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_1c571556
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The Tease
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_1c571556
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The Tease: Invoked by Louise during her striptease act (after all, it's in the name). She makes her career out of Rose's advice: "Make 'em beg for more, and then don't give it to them!" Louise's "gimmick" involves removing relatively few articles of clothing and, even when she does strip, always covering up with curtains or coats, all the while chatting directly with men in the audience and playfully flirting with them. This strategy makes her the hottest stripper in burlesque.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_237404cc
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Ironic Echo
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_237404cc
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Ironic Echo: Baby June starts her act with, "Hello everybody, my name's June, what's yours?" Louise adapts the phrase for her much more mature burlesque act ("Hello everybody, my name's Gypsy, what's yours?") and Rose adapts it during her BSoD Song (""Hello everybody, my name's Rose, what's ''yours''?"") when she dreams about being a star.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_25f0ed12
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Hollywood Tone-Deaf
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Hollywood Tone-Deaf: The singing in "You Gotta Get A Gimmick" is deliberately harsh and off-key as the strippers openly admit they have "no talent" and are relying on their gimmicks.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_2740531a
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She Cleans Up Nicely
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She Cleans Up Nicely: Louise just before her first performance as Gypsy.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_2978c012
type
Stage Mom
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_2978c012
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Stage Mom: Perhaps the Ur-Example, to the point where critics have called Mama Rose a uniquely American character archetype. She forces June, and later Louise, to be stars, managing every aspect of their lives and sacrificing their happiness and dignity in the name of fame. As with other stage mothers, it's also projection, as Rose desperately wants to be a star herself and so forces her daughters to make her own dream come true.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_2d364c81
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Tomboy and Girly Girl
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Tomboy and Girly Girl: Louise and June - though Louise is probably not a tomboy by choice. Louise becomes a Girly Girl as Gypsy - while retaining her tomboyishness.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_2f62653b
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Borrowed Catchphrase
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_2f62653b
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Borrowed Catchphrase: Gypsy's entire burlesque act is taking Baby June's act and making it seductive. Mama does it in her "Rose's Turn", too.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3149c4b0
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It Will Never Catch On
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3149c4b0
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It Will Never Catch On: Jack Benny was going nowhere, according to Rose.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3149c4b0
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_38718ea8
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Beautiful All Along
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Beautiful All Along: In the film, when Louise first gets beautiful clothes and has her hair done, she looks in the mirror, and incredulously says: "I'm pretty. I'm a pretty girl, Mama." Justified, in that Mama Rose had been dressing her in boys' clothes most of her life, so she could be a background dancer in her sister's act. Referenced in, of all things, the stage version of Hairspray, which can be explained by the fact that Hairspray premiered on Broadway in the same season as a revival of Gypsy.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3929e0db
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You Need to Get Laid
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You Need to Get Laid: June and Louise both sing "If Mama Was Married," which is basically them dreaming about what life would be like if their mom would stay married, calm down, and leave them be.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3dfdc686
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Time-Passes Montage
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3dfdc686
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Time-Passes Montage: Gypsy is depicted in increasingly expensive theaters, while showing how her act becomes more and more confident.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3f1f6c04
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The Cover Changes the Meaning
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_3f1f6c04
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The Cover Changes the Meaning: "Let Me Entertain You" as sung by June as an innocent little girl, and then as sung by Louise as a stripper.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_44606d14
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Becoming the Mask
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Becoming the Mask: Gypsy grows into the role.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_44f5d199
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Pretty in Mink
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_44f5d199
comment
Pretty in Mink: In one of June's acts, she's playing a farm girl going off to Broadway, and to look like a star she's wearing a white rabbit coat, muff, and hat. Yet those furs are in the style for girls a few years younger than June, to fit the "Dainty June" image her mother wants. At the end Gypsy is going to a party wearing a mink coat, and she lets her mother wear it after she invites her to come along. In the first film version Gypsy is doing a photoshoot, and she wears a dress with a slit skirt of white fox.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_44f5d199
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_453871ec
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What Could Have Been
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_453871ec
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What Could Have Been: An In-Universe example with "Rose's Turn", where she laments she was born too early to become a vaudeville star in her own right.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_4781adbb
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Jerk with a Heart of Gold
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_4781adbb
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Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Tessie Tura and Mazeppa come off as brash and rude at first, but show themselves to be good friends to Louise and the girls after their first impressions.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_4781adbb
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_4e3d253b
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Downer Ending
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_4e3d253b
comment
Downer Ending: Most productions have a Bittersweet Ending in which Rose and Gypsy reconcile in someway, but the 1974 and 2008 revivals played the conversation as more devious on Rose's part, and ended the same dialogue with Gypsy exiting the stage laughing at Rose's futile attempt to con her again, leaving her mother all alone in her madness.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_512b00e0
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BSoD Song
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_512b00e0
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BSoD Song: "Rose's Turn," which Rose sings after her relationship with Louise seems dead for good.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_557838d1
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Adaptational Attractiveness
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Adaptational Attractiveness: The real Gypsy Rose Lee was less of a conventional beauty than her sister June Havoc. It was her style and humor that made her a star in burlesque. Most actresses who play Louise are more classically pretty, especially Natalie Wood in the film version. This also applies to some actresses who play Rose, such as Bernadette Peters, compared to the real Rose Hovick.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_5c98d100
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One of the Boys
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_5c98d100
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One of the Boys: Tulsa, one of the boy dancers Rose picks up, says he and the guys all consider Louise this. She is not flattered.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_5c98d100
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_5da37ab5
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Triumphant Reprise
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_5da37ab5
comment
Triumphant Reprise: June’s version of “Let Me Entertain You� has a dark undertone due to how much June grows to resent her stage persona, but when Louise sings it, it’s all about personal empowerment in a career she loves.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_5f9fbd83
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Not Allowed to Grow Up
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_5f9fbd83
comment
Not Allowed to Grow Up: The kids in the act are never older than ten, no matter what anyone says. To drive this point home, every year there are only ten candles on their cakes. In Real Life, Rose actually faked their birth certificates to make them seem three years younger.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_70f9a879
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Family-Friendly Stripper
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_70f9a879
comment
Family-Friendly Stripper: Gypsy's strip routines never go as far as actual nudity, as Gypsy was usually like in real life. She preferred "tease" more than the "strip".
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_70f9a879
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_72852a93
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Henpecked Husband
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_72852a93
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Henpecked Husband: Poor, poor Herbie is always under Rose's thumb. Arguably made worse by the fact that he and Rose never actually get married.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_7453bc5b
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Spared by the Adaptation
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comment
Spared by the Adaptation: In Real Life, not only did Rose cry out "Rape!" when the hotel manager was angry she was hoarding 12 people in the room, she threw him out the window to his death.
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Spotlight-Stealing Squad
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_76a5eaf8
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Spotlight-Stealing Squad: Rosalind Russell as Rose manages a one-woman example and even won a Golden Globe.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_77fb9fbe
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Cathartic Crying
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_77fb9fbe
comment
Cathartic Crying: In the final scene, after Rose admits to Louise that everything she did to make her daughters into stars was really because ''she'' wanted to be noticed, Louise makes a "Not So Different" Remark: "Like I wanted you to notice me." Hearing this, Rose breaks down crying in her daughter's arms, the first and only time she ever cries over the course of the show.
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I Reject Your Reality
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_7a1856ba
comment
I Reject Your Reality: Mama Rose talks constantly about how vaudeville isn't going anywhere, and that someday, June, and later Louise, will be stars. As time passes and their act falters and flops, it becomes increasingly obvious to everyone but her that vaudeville is dead (except in burlesque) and will never come back. But Rose won't hear it, insisting that every new popular entertainment is just a fad.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_7d89315b
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"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_7d89315b
comment
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: Rose delivers one to Louise, of all people, when the latter cries "Mama, you have GOT to let me go!" Once Rose is alone afterwards, she directs this rant at her absent daughter:
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_823c6e3e
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Large Ham
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_823c6e3e
comment
Large Ham: Anyone playing Rose is required to be this, like Ethel Merman, Rosalind Russell, Bette Midler or Patti Lupone. Miss Mazeppa as well.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_863fa679
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What Happened to the Mouse?
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: June is never seen and barely mentioned after she runs away. It's never discussed what becomes of her. In real life, she became a successful film, stage and television actor. Also, the lamb and other various pets.
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Badass Boast
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_86b21114
comment
Badass Boast: When Rose gets uneasy about Louise's newfound confidence and independence as Gypsy Rose Lee and tries to tear her down, Louise busts out one of these that stops Rose cold.
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 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_898ff050
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Villain Protagonist
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_898ff050
comment
Villain Protagonist: Just how bad she seems can vary depending on the production, but if there's any villain in Gypsy, it's Momma Rose.
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Pimping the Offspring
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_8e8484ec
comment
Pimping the Offspring: Downplayed. Mama Rose Hovick, in a last-ditch effort to launch one of her kids to stardom, signs her daughter up to replace the arrested star of the burlesque and do a striptease act. Louise, while already a young woman, is a sexual innocent who has only ever done cutesy vaudeville dances, and as such is not happy being signed up for this, while Herbie, her mother's partner, is so disgusted that he leaves Rose for good. Ironically, this enables Louise to become the world-famous Gypsy Rose Lee, getting out from under her mother's thumb for good.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_8e8484ec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_8e8484ec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_8e8484ec
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_97ee3a58
type
Vicariously Ambitious
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_97ee3a58
comment
Vicariously Ambitious: Rose's dreams of stardom never got realized, and this directly feeds into her motive for being one of the most famous Stage Moms in all of fiction.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_97ee3a58
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_97ee3a58
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_97ee3a58
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_984ef9ef
type
"Not So Different" Remark
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_984ef9ef
comment
"Not So Different" Remark: At the end, when Rose admits she did it all because she wanted to be noticed, Louise says it's the same as how she always wanted Rose to notice her.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_984ef9ef
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_984ef9ef
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_984ef9ef
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a46ea5c1
type
LightFeminineDarkFeminine
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a46ea5c1
comment
Light Feminine Dark Feminine: The bubbly and virginal June as the light feminine, the "Queen Of The Striptease" Gypsy as the dark.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a46ea5c1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a46ea5c1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a46ea5c1
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a5e0c01
type
As Himself
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a5e0c01
comment
As Himself: Jack Benny has a cameo as himself in the 1962 film.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a5e0c01
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a5e0c01
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a5e0c01
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a7382a73
type
Imagine Spot
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a7382a73
comment
Imagine Spot: "Rose's Turn" has Rose imagine being the star for a change, with her name up in lights.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a7382a73
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a7382a73
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a7382a73
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a823fa03
type
The Un-Smile
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a823fa03
comment
The Unsmile: Louise puts one on for the photoshoot right after a fight with Rose. It's not particularly creepy, but it's definitely fake.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a823fa03
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a823fa03
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_a823fa03
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ad641426
type
Trademark Favorite Food
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ad641426
comment
Trademark Favorite Food: Rose and her girls love chow mein.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ad641426
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ad641426
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ad641426
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_af7d483f
type
Dreaming of Things to Come
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_af7d483f
comment
Dreaming of Things to Come: Rose likes to invoke this trope, claiming that she's had psychic visions of what the act needs come to her in her dreams. They're all Blatant Lies, of course, but her utter conviction to the bit makes it funny.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_af7d483f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_af7d483f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_af7d483f
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b01abe4f
type
Catchphrase
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b01abe4f
comment
Catchphrase: June starts every act with "Hello everybody! My name's June! What's yours?" Later on, Louise uses that line with her stage name, and with a whole new meaning. Rose says it again in "Rose's Turn."
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b01abe4f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b01abe4f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b01abe4f
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b032e4ed
type
Ms. Fanservice
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b032e4ed
comment
Ms. Fanservice: The 1962 film features Natalie Wood in a series of stunning outfits—especially an elegant blue dress—and strutting across a burlesque stage like a pro.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b032e4ed
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b032e4ed
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b032e4ed
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b0c3cb64
type
Hometown Nickname
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b0c3cb64
comment
Hometown Nickname: The boys Rose picks up for June's act are known only by the names of the cities where she "acquired" them.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b0c3cb64
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b0c3cb64
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b0c3cb64
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b29cc937
type
Sidekick Song
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b29cc937
comment
Sidekick Song: "You Gotta Get a Gimmick" for the strippers, and "All I Need is the Girl" for Tulsa.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b29cc937
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b29cc937
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b29cc937
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b58c51d8
type
My Beloved Smother
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b58c51d8
comment
My Beloved Smother: Rose plays this trope to a T.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b58c51d8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b58c51d8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b58c51d8
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b64ea263
type
Westminster Chimes
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b64ea263
comment
Westminster Chimes: The final cadence of "Everything's Coming Up Roses" is a modified version.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b64ea263
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b64ea263
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_b64ea263
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_baaff343
type
The Gimmick
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_baaff343
comment
The Gimmick: The first three strippers that Louise meets (Tessi Turra, Mazeppa and Electra) introduce her to their gimmicks, proposing that this is the way to stand out in show business (Look here and see the camp for yourself.) Later, when Louise is more or less pushed into a stripper role, she takes their advice to heart. She's so nervous that the only thing she "strips" in her first performance is a single glove; the audience loves her innocence, and removing the glove (in addition to talking directly to patrons) becomes her gimmick.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_baaff343
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_baaff343
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_baaff343
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bb18a227
type
It's All About Me
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bb18a227
comment
It's All About Me: In the end, Rose admits that she pushed her daughters to become stars because she never got to be one, and couldn't get over her lost opportunities.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bb18a227
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bb18a227
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bb18a227
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bdb0438e
type
Everything's Better with Sparkles
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bdb0438e
comment
Everything's Better with Sparkles: Louise’s striptease dresses in the 1993 movie version are SPARKLY.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bdb0438e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bdb0438e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_bdb0438e
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c2ecf3b8
type
Show Some Leg
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c2ecf3b8
comment
Show Some Leg: Most Rose's wear a dress with a split that allows them to show off a gartered leg during "Rose's Turn".
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c2ecf3b8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c2ecf3b8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c2ecf3b8
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c5249b29
type
Nice Guy
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c5249b29
comment
Nice Guy: Herbie really wants the best for the girls, and eventually leaves when it's clear Rose won't change her ways.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c5249b29
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c5249b29
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c5249b29
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c75df49a
comment
Referenced in, of all things, the stage version of Hairspray, which can be explained by the fact that Hairspray premiered on Broadway in the same season as a revival of Gypsy.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c75df49a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c75df49a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_c75df49a
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ca3a6dbd
type
Informed Ability
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ca3a6dbd
comment
Informed Ability: Subverted in "Ya Gotta Have A Gimmick." The strippers appear to actually have no talent, but the truth is that their talent is finding the right gimmick to appeal to the crowd.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ca3a6dbd
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ca3a6dbd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_ca3a6dbd
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_d9cf40fa
type
Screw This, I'm Outta Here
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_d9cf40fa
comment
Screw This, I'm Outta Here: At the end of the first act, June, Tulsa, and the other boys in the act understandably get sick of Rose's crap and leave. This results in Louise and Herbie being stuck with Rose in all her Stage Mom glory.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_d9cf40fa
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_d9cf40fa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_d9cf40fa
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_e4b69188
type
Very Loosely Based on a True Story
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_e4b69188
comment
Very Loosely Based on a True Story: Of Gypsy Rose Lee and Baby June, who'd later adopt the stage name June Havoc. June was not very pleased with how she was portrayed in the musical, but was paid to keep her mouth shut for her sister's sake. The musical caused the tension in their relationship to grow until Gypsy became ill later in life and died. Gypsy Rose Lee herself often embellished elements of her life when she told stories from her past.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_e4b69188
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_e4b69188
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_e4b69188
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f15c2859
type
NO INDOOR VOICE
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f15c2859
comment
No Indoor Voice: Miss Mazeppa. Mama Rose as well.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f15c2859
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f15c2859
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f15c2859
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
type
Dark Reprise
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
comment
Dark Reprise: "May We Entertain You", the innocent vaudeville song June and Louise sang as children, slowed down and turned into the stripper song "Let Me Entertain You". Not so much "Dark" as Hotter and Sexier. One could consider it a Subverted Trope, as it scares Louise at first but she obviously grows a liking to it as her career goes on. "Rose's Turn" contains reprises of and lyrical callbacks to about half of the songs in the show. Rose can barely get through a tearful reprise of “Small World� when Herbie leaves her.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f8600b
type
Cool Big Sis
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f8600b
comment
Cool Big Sis: Despite it all June does seem to regard Louise as this. Of course, Louise is Natalie Wood in the film version.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f8600b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f8600b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_f8600b
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_faa71569
type
Romantic False Lead
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_faa71569
comment
Romantic False Lead: Tulsa is set up as Louise's love interest, even having a nice little moment with her in "All I Need is the Girl." Then, at the end of the first act... he elopes with June and is never mentioned again.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_faa71569
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_faa71569
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_faa71569
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fdf7d23d
type
Lady in Red
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fdf7d23d
comment
Lady in Red: Many productions have Rose wear a red dress during "Rose's Turn" when she imagines herself as a star, including the revivals with Angela Lansbury, Tyne Daly and Patti LuPone, and the TV version with Bette Midler, as seen here.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fdf7d23d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fdf7d23d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fdf7d23d
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
type
Brick Joke
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
comment
Brick Joke: Mama's "Rose's Turn" is Call Backs to previous lines.
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_fe0330fb
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_name
comment
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gypsy (Theatre) / int_name
 Gypsy (Theatre) / int_name
itemName
Gypsy (Theatre)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Age Cut / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
As the Good Book Says... / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Beautiful All Along / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Burlesque / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Common Knowledge / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Cut Song / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Distracted by My Own Sexy / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Enforced Method Acting / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Extra! Extra! Read All About It! / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Family-Friendly Stripper / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Forgotten Trope / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Former Child Star / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
"Gaining Confidence" Song / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hair-Contrast Duo / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
High-Class Gloves / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hollywood Tone-Deaf / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hometown Nickname / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
"I Am" Song / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
"I Want" Song / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
It Will Never Catch On / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Lyrical Cold Open / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Medley Overture / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Meta Casting / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Minor Character, Major Song / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Minsky Pickup / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Mononymous Biopic Title / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Non-Singing Voice / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Not Allowed to Grow Up / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Orphaned Reference / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Pantomime Animal / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Pimping the Offspring / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Pretty in Mink / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Produce Pelting / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Protagonist Title / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Railroad to Horizon / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Sanity Slippage Song / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Screw This, I'm Outta Here / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Secondary Character Title / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Secretly Selfish / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Sexophone / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Stage Mom / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Stage Names / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Stylistic Suck / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Film of the Play / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Gimmick / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Musical Musical / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Show Must Go Wrong / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Un-Smile / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Title In / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Tomboy and Girly Girl / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Travel Montage / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Voice Types / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
Westminster Chimes / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
You Can Leave Your Hat On / int_43c9273b
 Gypsy (Theatre)
hasFeature
You Need to Get Laid / int_43c9273b