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Oklahoma! (Theatre)

 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
type
TVTItem
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
label
Oklahoma! (Theatre)
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
page
Oklahoma
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
comment
Oklahoma! is a 1943 musical, possibly the most influential musical in the genre. It was based on the play Green Grow the Lilacs and adapted by Rodgers and Hammerstein. Set in 1906, it tells the story of a young cowboy named Curly, and a farm girl, Laurey. They're obviously in love, but neither of them will admit it. The sinister farmhand, Jud, asks Laurey to a dance. Laurey is afraid of him, but she accepts to spite Curly. The story takes a dark turn as Laurey realizes that Jud is dangerous, and that, if she were to turn him down, he could become violent.The musical, which ran a then-unprecedented 2,212 performances (up to then, even hit musicals rarely ran more than a year), is a radical departure from the mostly fluffy musical comedies that had preceded it. It integrated the book (the spoken dialogue) with the music and used the songs to create Character Development and subtext. Its use of dance as adding to the plot and atmosphere was also a change from the showgirls of previous musicals. It was not the first to use such techniques (Show Boat, which also featured lyrics and libretto written by Hammerstein, predated it by nearly 20 years), but its impact is unmistakable.Oklahoma! was successfully adapted to film in 1955 (by director Fred Zinnemann, starring Gordon MacRae, Shirley Jones, Gloria Grahame, and Rod Steiger, among others), and has been revived numerous times on Broadway and in London. It was also the first American musical to release recordings of all its songs performed by the original cast and orchestranote Though with Alfred Drake (Curly) singing Jud's solo "Lonely Room," as the original Jud, Howard Da Silva, was unavailable when it was recorded. (essentially inventing the "Original Broadway Cast Album" format), and has received many other recordings since then.If you're looking for information on the state where the musical was set, see Oklahoma (U.S.A.).
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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2024-03-14T02:32:35Z
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DBTropes
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_10134c97
type
Artistic License – Gun Safety
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_10134c97
comment
Artistic License – Gun Safety: Aunt Eller firing a gun in the air in a crowded party is risky enough, but she proceeds to also point it directly at people with her finger still on the trigger (in the 1999 filmed performance, she even puts it directly to Andrew's head).
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_108c268e
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Hotter and Sexier
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_108c268e
comment
Hotter and Sexier: The 2019 revival, sometime nicknamed "Sexy Oklahoma" or the coarser "Fucklahoma".
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_141a6acb
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Madness Mantra
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_141a6acb
comment
Madness Mantra: "Think you're better than me..."
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_141a6acb
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_143939c1
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Trailers Always Spoil
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_143939c1
comment
Trailers Always Spoil: The ad for the general theatrical release of the CinemaScope version of the movie revealed who Laurey would pick, and how the other man would exact his revenge. (Text in the trailer seems to basically state, "This musical has become so famous by now, that everyone knows how the story goes.") Ads for the movie's home video releases also tend to spoil the former.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_14beeefd
type
Darker and Edgier
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_14beeefd
comment
Darker and Edgier: The 2019 revival placed much more emphasis on the darkness of the show, achieving this primarily through staging the most uncomfortable scenes completely in the dark, leaving the lights on otherwise so the audience was complicit, giving more sympathy to Jud as an outsider ostracized by the town, and changing the ending into a case of Suicide by Cop while keeping the cheery finale song.
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_14beeefd
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_16364a29
type
Evil Sounds Deep
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_16364a29
comment
Evil Sounds Deep: Jud Fry is almost always cast as a bass, although the 1979 revival saw Martin Vidnovic play Jud, and "Lonely Room" was transposed up a third (still keeping it in baritone territory, but with a tessitura higher than a bass's song would have.)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_16364a29
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_1ccad9a3
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Villain Song
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_1ccad9a3
comment
Villain Song: "Lonely Room," and it's a damn good one. This is the moment that it becomes clear that, Curly being kind of a jerk to him aside, Jud is actually quite dangerous and Laurey may be in trouble. Doubles as an Obsession Song.
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_1ccad9a3
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_20f689e9
type
Adaptational Villainy
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_20f689e9
comment
Adaptational Villainy: In the movie, Jud not only tries to kill Curly at the wedding but tries to kill Laurey as well via setting their hayride on fire. The removal of his "Lonely Room" song, where he initially angsted about his life and his shattered dreams, also serves to make him more villainous than onstage.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_23473ae7
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Adaptation Expansion
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_23473ae7
comment
Adaptation Expansion: The Will Parker/Ado Annie subplot was invented by Hammerstein to give the show a Beta Couple; Will Parker doesn't appear in the original play, though Curly mentions knowing another cowboy by that name.
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_23473ae7
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_24c685bf
type
Good Bad Girl
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_24c685bf
comment
Good Bad Girl: Ado Annie "cain't say no" but she's not treated unsympathetically, and her background doesn't keep her from getting a decent man.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_24c685bf
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_26ac510e
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Mythology Gag
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_26ac510e
comment
Mythology Gag: The movie having Jud set the hayride on fire is a reference to the play Oklahoma! was based on, Green Grow the Lilacs, where Jeeter Fry did the same thing.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_26ac510e
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_2d364c81
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Tomboy and Girly Girl
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_2d364c81
comment
Tomboy and Girly Girl: Some versions of Laurey (the rough-and-tumble farm girl) and Ado Annie (a voluptuous Farmer's Daughter who enjoys male attention).
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_2dc0d2bf
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Hidden Depths
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_2dc0d2bf
comment
Hidden Depths: Ali Hakim may be a womanizing peddler, but he is the one who tells Aunt Eller about "the little wonder", saving Curly's life.
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_2dc0d2bf
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_2f8a9975
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Sex Dressed
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_2f8a9975
comment
Sex Dressed: At the end of the show, Ado Annie reappears with mussed hair, a contented expression on her face and straw clinging to the back of her dress. It looks like she's resolved her quarrel with Will the Good Bad Girl way.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_30b41d96
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Blood-Splattered Wedding Dress
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_30b41d96
comment
Blood-Splattered Wedding Dress: For the 2019 revival, the ending was changed to have Curly shoot Jud at point-blank range, leading to his groom outfit and Laurey's wedding dress being covered in blood.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_31da1e24
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Shipper on Deck
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_31da1e24
comment
Shipper on Deck: Pretty much the entire town for Laurey/Curly, as the song "People Will Say We're in Love" hints at. Most definitely Aunt Eller.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_32ec6393
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Shotgun Wedding
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_32ec6393
comment
Shotgun Wedding: Ali Hakim seems to attract these— Carnes tries to force him to marry Ado Annie. He escapes that one, only to be forced to marry the intolerable Gertie Cummings.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_3a92b459
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Please, I Will Do Anything!
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_3a92b459
comment
Please, I Will Do Anything!: Not outright stated in dialogue, but in the dream sequence Laurey suggests that she will do anything to have Jud spare Curly's life.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_3fb5ab75
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The Eleven O'Clock Number
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_3fb5ab75
comment
The Eleven O'Clock Number: The title song, added between tryouts and the show's Broadway premiere, provides a big boost of energy right before the show's ending. The song was so catchy it replaced "Away We Go" as the show's title.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_437820dc
type
Villainous Crush
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_437820dc
comment
Villainous Crush: Jud is obsessed with having Laurey to himself, and will do whatever he has to do to get her, including threats and murder. Since he never follows through on a threat and ends up dead, how much one considers Jud to be a villain is up for debate.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_43d612b7
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Disney Acid Sequence
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_43d612b7
comment
Disney Acid Sequence: The traditional dream ballet starts out normal enough as Laurey and Curly happily dance and are to be wed, then takes an abrupt turn into nightmare territory when Jud appears and takes control of the dreamscape as burlesque dancers appear and force Laurey into joining their number. Then dream-Jud kills dream-Curly during a fight, with the 1955 movie adaptation adding an even more surreal tone by having their fight take place in a tornado and Jud not reacting to gunshots at all before closing in on Curly. The 2019 revival of the show portrayed the dream ballet with a single dancer who represented Laurey's self-consciousness and intimacy, and fled as cowboy boots fell from the sky while Jud swept them offstage, with electric guitars heard nowhere else on the soundtrack to emphasize the feeling of being out-of-place. Previews additionally had Curly and Jud strip down and swap clothes, metaphorically walking in each other's skin.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_48d9f820
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ThreeFacesOfEve
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_48d9f820
comment
Three Faces of Eve: Aunt Eller is the Wife, Ado Annie is the Seductress, Laurey is the Child.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_48d9f820
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_4a5fcde
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Adaptational Alternate Ending
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_4a5fcde
comment
Adaptational Alternate Ending: The 2019 revival changed the ending where instead of attacking Curly with a knife at the wedding, Jud gives him a gun as a wedding present and essentially forces Curly to shoot him. After this, the cast reprised "Oklahoma!" but done in a way that they all looked broken by what had occurred.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_4a5fcde
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_4a5fcde
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5285297a
type
Eyepiece Prank
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5285297a
comment
Eyepiece Prank: A deadly version with "The Little Wonder," which is a kaleidoscope with a hidden blade attached. When the victim looks through the eyepiece, the killer springs the blade.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5285297a
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: The play and movie begin with Curly singing, "Oh What a Beautiful Mornin'" before asking Laurey out to the dance, and end with everyone singing the song while celebrating Curley's and Laurey's marriage and Oklahoma's becoming a state.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_549a92e7
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Minimalism
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_549a92e7
comment
Minimalism: The 2019 revival eschewed the orchestras favored by earlier productions and had just 7 musicians, with a minimalist set that overlapped with the audience to make them just as much a part of the show.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_55edb17e
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Irrelevant Act Opener
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_55edb17e
comment
Irrelevant Act Opener: Subverted with "The Farmer and the Cowman," which begins like this, but soon turns into a heated argument and a fight between the farmers and cowboys, which Aunt Eller has to break up with a "Shut Up!" Gunshot.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_58dc613c
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Poster-Gallery Bedroom
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_58dc613c
comment
Poster-Gallery Bedroom: The walls of the smokehouse where Jud lives are plastered with pink pictures of women from old covers of Police Gazette.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_58dc613c
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5941d75
type
Beta Couple
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5941d75
comment
Beta Couple: Will and Ado Annie. Their romance is more straightforward that Laurey and Curly's in that both actually admit that they love each other, but is complicated by Annie's promiscuity and Andrew's dislike of Will as a suitor for his daughter.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5d3e7c6
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Kangaroo Court
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5d3e7c6
comment
Kangaroo Court: The final sequence is the entire town holding a mock trial to excuse Curly for a murder charge. Regardless of whether or not he should have been guilty, they didn't even bother to hide that they were going to happily let him go after a few seconds.
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5d3e7c6
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5e2e55e4
type
The Casanova
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_5e2e55e4
comment
The Casanova: Ali Hakim, who has a girl (or two or three) in every town along his peddling route.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_6112fb53
type
Obsession Song
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_6112fb53
comment
Obsession Song: Jud Frye's song "Lonely Room" starts off as a self-pitying reflection of how empty and meaningless his life is, but turns into an angry obsession song by the end as he decides he is going to leave his room and take what he believes is his by rights, i.e. Laurey.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_659ef759
type
Implacable Man
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_659ef759
comment
The traditional dream ballet starts out normal enough as Laurey and Curly happily dance and are to be wed, then takes an abrupt turn into nightmare territory when Jud appears and takes control of the dreamscape as burlesque dancers appear and force Laurey into joining their number. Then dream-Jud kills dream-Curly during a fight, with the 1955 movie adaptation adding an even more surreal tone by having their fight take place in a tornado and Jud not reacting to gunshots at all before closing in on Curly.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_6d332aea
type
Driven to Suicide
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_6d332aea
comment
Driven to Suicide: Curly attempts to do this to Jud in "Pore Jud is Daid", telling him how much people would appreciate him once he was dead.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_6da1d9ae
type
Parental Marriage Veto
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_6da1d9ae
comment
Parental Marriage Veto: Andrew Carnes' won't give his consent to Will marrying his daughter Ado Annie unless Will can prove that he can earn, and hang on to, $50 ($1,400 in today's money).
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_6da1d9ae
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_705148cf
type
Location Song
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_705148cf
comment
Location Song: "Oklahoma!", about the joy of living there.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_707bb8ce
type
Pair the Spares
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_707bb8ce
comment
Pair the Spares: Ali Hakim and Gertie, although Ali Hakim would have been happier to end up alone.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_707bb8ce
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_71268450
type
Adaptation Title Change
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_71268450
comment
Adaptation Title Change: Oklahoma is based on the play Green Grow the Lilacs.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_71268450
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_72651184
type
Car Song
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_72651184
comment
Car Song: "The Surrey with the Fringe on Top", describing Curly's new sweet ride he's rented for the box social.
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_7301ae04
type
Serial Killer
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_7301ae04
comment
Serial Killer: Jud tells Curly about a farmhand who fell in love with his employers' daughter and when she rejected him, he burned down the farmhouse, killing the girl and her parents, and got away with it. Whether this is Jud disguising a story about something he did himself or just an example of misguided admiration is unclear, but hinting it to be the former keeps him from being too sympathetic.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_7301ae04
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_7301ae04
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_7301ae04
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_75a63013
type
Farmer's Daughter
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_75a63013
comment
Farmer's Daughter: Ado Annie is the beautiful and promiscuous daughter of tough-as-nails farmer Andrew Carnes, who doesn't take kindly to hearing that Ali Hakim has been seeing her, and "suggests" he marry her.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_75a63013
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_75a63013
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_75a63013
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_77bc8a56
type
Unable to Support a Wife
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_77bc8a56
comment
Unable to Support a Wife: This is Will's problem, which is why he needs to prove to Annie's father Andrew Carnes that he has $50 ($1,400 in today's money) to show he can earn, and hold on to, enough money to support Ado Annie.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_77bc8a56
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_77bc8a56
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_77bc8a56
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8338de89
type
"I Want" Song
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8338de89
comment
"I Want" Song: Jud's "Lonely Room" has him resolving to pursue Laurey and not to leave her alone. Given his general character, this comes off as quite a bit of an Obsession Song.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8338de89
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8338de89
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8338de89
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8b68d9a7
type
Stalker with a Crush
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8b68d9a7
comment
Stalker with a Crush: Jud idolizes Laurey, but his poor social skills and abrasive demeanor make her uncomfortable just being around him. Her intuition is right: when she firmly rejects him, he threatens her and later makes an attempt on her husband's life.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8b68d9a7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8b68d9a7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8b68d9a7
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8c170cb1
type
Ethical Slut
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8c170cb1
comment
Ethical Slut: Ado Annie is equal-opportunity in terms of loving the man she's with.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8c170cb1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8c170cb1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_8c170cb1
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_99db72ee
type
Immune to Bullets
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_99db72ee
comment
Immune to Bullets: Jud in the movie's Dream Ballet doesn't even react to Curly's shots.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_99db72ee
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_99db72ee
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_99db72ee
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_a70223
type
Karma Houdini
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_a70223
comment
Karma Houdini: Curly's conversation with Jud during "Pore Jud is Daid." Nothing is done to point out how wrong this is. Also, Curly is allowed to go free after killing Jud, with no arrest or trial. Downplayed in the original play, where Curly goes to jail to await trial, but the townsfolk allow him to escape for one night so he and Laurey can have a honeymoon.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_a70223
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_a70223
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_a70223
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b1346878
type
Fate Worse than Death
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b1346878
comment
Fate Worse than Death: Ali Hakim's forced marriage to Gertie Cummings. "I thought it would be better to be alive, but now I ain't so sure."
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b1346878
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b1346878
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b1346878
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b680713e
type
Melancholy Musical Number
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b680713e
comment
Melancholy Musical Number: Curly attempts to persuade Jud to hang himself, and "Lonely Room" begins with Jud detailing how miserable his life is. However, at the end, rather than deciding to kill himself, he decides he will instead take what he wants (i.e. Laurey) and kill whoever stands in his way.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b680713e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b680713e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b680713e
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b7e0c5ff
type
Love Triangle
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b7e0c5ff
comment
Love Triangle: Curly, Laurey, and Jud; Will, Annie, and Ali Hakim. Even Laurey, Curly, and Gertie Cummings qualify to a lesser extent.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b7e0c5ff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b7e0c5ff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_b7e0c5ff
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bcd27e37
type
Improbable Aiming Skills
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bcd27e37
comment
Improbable Aiming Skills: Curly shows these off during his confrontation with Jud, shooting through a knothole "no bigger than a dime".
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bcd27e37
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bcd27e37
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bcd27e37
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bd635007
type
Fauxreigner
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bd635007
comment
Fauxreigner: Ali Hakim can be one depending on the production. Despite the character claiming to be Persian, the part was written for a "Jewish Comic"-type actor, and it is in line with the characterization for Hakim to be more worldly than the characters (which a Jew from New York City would be in the setting), but still lying about his background in being American-born. The role finally went to an actual Muslim (although not an Iranian) in a major production when the 2002 Broadway revival gave the part to Aasif Mandvi.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bd635007
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bd635007
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bd635007
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
type
Really Gets Around
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
comment
Really Gets Around: Ado Annie. She is a girl who can't say no, after all.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_bf1255fa
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c59cfa2e
type
Felony Misdemeanor
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c59cfa2e
comment
Felony Misdemeanor: Zigzagged with Jud's bid for Laurey's picnic basket at the box social. Laurey is horrified to the point of having nightmares at the thought. Several of the townsmen bid more than they can afford to save her. Curly sells all his possessions to keep it from happening. And in the end Jud DIES for it. On the other hand, Jud is Laurey's stalker, and it's quite clear that her picnic basket isn't what he's after.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c59cfa2e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c59cfa2e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c59cfa2e
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c9df837a
type
Alternate Show Interpretation
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c9df837a
comment
Alternate Show Interpretation: The 2019 Broadway revival, which restaged the show in modern times, stripped down the orchestrations to a minimalist bluegrass band, and had more of an emphasis on the community ostracizing Jud, Curly's darker side, and gun violence. It went on to win the Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c9df837a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c9df837a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_c9df837a
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d2b59903
type
Cool Old Lady
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d2b59903
comment
Cool Old Lady: Aunt Eller. At one point, she brandishes a gun at everyone, in order to make sure everyone gets along.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d2b59903
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d2b59903
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d2b59903
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
type
What the Hell, Hero?
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
comment
What the Hell, Hero?: Curly tries to Mind Screw Jud into committing suicide. Why? So that Jud won't be around to ask Laurey out. Even in the productions that add the rapey undertones, this scene happens before Jud does anything worse than express an interest in the same girl as Curly.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d5574e62
type
Mobile Kiosk
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d5574e62
comment
Mobile Kiosk: Ali Hakim the peddler has one of these, from which he sells just about everything, including the 'magic potion' (i.e. laudanum) Laurey takes to receive her dream vision.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d5574e62
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d5574e62
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_d5574e62
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dbd2c15e
type
Everyone Can See It
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dbd2c15e
comment
Everyone Can See It: Laurey and Curly have an entire song about how obvious their mutual feelings are to everyone around them in "People Will Say We're In Love".
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dbd2c15e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dbd2c15e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dbd2c15e
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
type
Adaptation Name Change
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
comment
Adaptation Name Change: Jud is named Jeeter in the original play.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_df7b8f5
type
Sharpshooter Fallacy
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_df7b8f5
comment
Sharpshooter Fallacy: In order to try to impress/threaten Jud, Curly shoots a knothole in a beam on the ceiling and claims it was his target. When Aunt Eller comes in to inspect the shot, he tries to make the same claim and she points out that there are a lot of knotholes up on the ceiling.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_df7b8f5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_df7b8f5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_df7b8f5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e25ae563
type
Final Love Duet
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e25ae563
comment
Final Love Duet: "Let People Say We're in Love" - which, unlike most instances of this trope, is actually a reprise (with different lyrics) of the earlier flirty duet "People Will Say We're in Love."
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e25ae563
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e25ae563
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e25ae563
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e38b0f45
type
Snake Oil Salesman
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e38b0f45
comment
Snake Oil Salesman: Ali Hakim, who peddles patent medicines alongside everything else.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e38b0f45
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e38b0f45
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e38b0f45
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e54f93d5
type
Never Bring a Knife to a Fist Fight
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e54f93d5
comment
Never Bring a Knife to a Fist Fight: A lesson Jud would do well to learn, as he falls on his own knife when Curly dodges his attack.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e54f93d5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e54f93d5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e54f93d5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e802aecd
type
Threatening Mediator
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e802aecd
comment
Threatening Mediator: When the number "The Farmer and the Cowman" breaks up into a feud between the two groups, Aunt Eller intervenes and holds the ensemble at gunpoint to finish the number through to the Aesop.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e802aecd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e802aecd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_e802aecd
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
type
Dream Ballet
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
comment
Dream Ballet: After "Out of My Dreams", Laurey sniffs smelling salts, leading to one of these where she faces choosing between Curly and Jud. Originally choreographed by Agnes de Mille, it's probably the Trope Codifier.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f26d5e66
type
Brainless Beauty
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f26d5e66
comment
Brainless Beauty: Ado Annie attracts the attention of many men but is too naive to understand the difference between a man who really loves her and a man who wants nothing to do with her after their one night together.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f26d5e66
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f26d5e66
featureConfidence
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f26d5e66
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
type
Dark Reprise
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
comment
Dark Reprise: The 'sarcastic echo' version occurs in the supposedly friendly and upbeat "The Farmer and the Cowman", which keeps being undercut as the farmers and the cowmen interject sarcastic comments into the praises of the other. Unlike most other sarcastic echoes, the other party does notice and it nearly leads to a Bar Brawl at the social.
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_f3fd818b
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_name
comment
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_name
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_name
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 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
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Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_name
 Oklahoma! (Theatre) / int_name
itemName
Oklahoma! (Theatre)

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

 Cannibal! The Musical
seeAlso
Oklahoma! (Theatre)
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Adaptation Title Change / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Adaptational Alternate Ending / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Adaptational Attractiveness / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ambiguously Absent Parent / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ambiguously Jewish / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Annoying Laugh / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Bachelor Auction / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Beta Couple / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Big Finale Crowd Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Blood-Splattered Wedding Dress / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Brainless Beauty / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Breakthrough Hit / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Burlesque / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Car Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Career Resurrection / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Chewbacca Defense / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Cut Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Dances and Balls / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Deep South / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Depending on the Writer / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Designated Hero / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Disney Acid Sequence / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Down on the Farm / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Dream Ballet / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Esoteric Happy Ending / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Excited Show Title! / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Eyepiece Prank / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Farmer's Daughter / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Fauxreigner / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Filmed Stage Production / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Foreign Farewell / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Funetik Aksent / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Genre Turning Point / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Good Bad Girl / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Grief Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Harpo Does Something Funny / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hero vs. Villain Duet / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hoist by His Own Petard / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
"I Am" Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Intercourse with You / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Intermission / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Irrelevant Act Opener / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Last Chorus Slow-Down / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Location Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Melancholy Musical Number / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Mobile Kiosk / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Nephewism / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Never Bring a Knife to a Fist Fight / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Never Speak Ill of the Dead / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Obsession Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma
seeAlso
Oklahoma! (Theatre)
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Pair the Spares / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Parental Marriage Veto / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Picnic Episode / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Plot Parallel / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Poster-Gallery Bedroom / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Quarreling Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Really Gets Around / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Red-Flag Recreation Material / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Red Oni, Blue Oni / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Rewritten Pop Version / int_a0075eb5
 RodgersAndHammerstein
seeAlso
Oklahoma! (Theatre)
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Setting Introduction Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Sex Dressed / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
She Is Not My Girlfriend / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Shotgun Wedding / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
"Shut Up!" Gunshot / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Sidekick Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Snake Oil Salesman / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
"Somewhere" Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Spelling Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Suicide Dare / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Talent Double / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
That Reminds Me of a Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Edwardian Era / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Prom Plot / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Runner-Up Takes It All / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Three Faces of Eve / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
"The Villain Sucks" Song / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
This Is My Name on Foreign / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Threatening Mediator / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Tomboy and Girly Girl / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Traveling Salesman / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Triumphant Reprise / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Trope Codifier / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Unable to Support a Wife / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Villainous Crush / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Villainous Lament / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Voice Types / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
Working Title / int_a0075eb5
 Oklahoma! (Theatre)
hasFeature
You Can Leave Your Hat On / int_a0075eb5