Kansas City

Kansas City

From: Oklahoma
By: Rodgers
Voice Type(s): Tenor

Full
A ♭/G ♯
Melody
A ♭/G ♯

Show Synopsis:
Curley McLain and Jud Fry have both asked Laurey Williams to the box social dance, and even though she likes Curley, Laurey accepts Jud to spite Curley's teasing nature. Ado Annie has been seeing the Persian peddlar Ali Hakim while her sweetheart Will was in Kansas City and does not want to choose between the two of them. Annie's father Andrew forces Ali to propose to Annie while Curley tries to convince Jud to go to the dance with someone else. Laurey has a smelling salt-induced nightmare where she realizes that Curley is the man she wants, but she leaves for the dance with Jud anyway. Ali buys all of Will's souvenirs from Kansas City so that Will will have an acceptable amount of money for Andrew to approve of him proposing to Annie. In the basket auction, where men bid on the women's baskets and thus win dates with them, Ali tries to outbid Will so that Will will save his money, and Curley and Jud enter a bidding war in which Curley sells everything he has to win Laurey's basket. Annie promises Will she will not flirt with other men if they marry and Jud threatens Laurey, who accepts Curley's proposal of marriage. Three weeks later, a drunken Jud reappears at their wedding and tries to kill Curley, accidentally killing himself in the process. Laurey and Curley go off on their honeymoon.	

Character:
Will Parker, a happy-go-lucky cowboy who is in love with Annie but does not know how to show it.

Song Context:
Will has just returned from Kansas City, eager to marry Annie, and shows off his newfound wordliness with descriptions of the city. 	

Fun Facts
1. This musical was based on a play by Lynn Riggs called Green Grow the Lilacs. 
2. The role of Will Parker was originated by Lee Dixon, and it was his final role on Broadway. 
3. This musical was the first collaboration between Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II.
    

"I got to Kansas City on a Frid'y - 
By Sattidy I larned a thing or two 
For up to then I didn't have an idy 
Of whut the modren world was comin' to! 

I counted twenty gas buggies goin' by theirsel's 
Almost ev'ry time I tuk a walk. 
'Nen I put my ear to a Bell Telephone and a strange womern started in to talk! 
Whut next? 

Ev'rythin's up to date in Kansas City 
They've gone about as fur as they c'n go! 
They went and built a skyscraper seven stories high, 
About as high as a buildin' orta grow. 

Ev'rythin's like a dream in Kansas City, 
It's better than a magic lantern show! 
Y' c'n turn the radiator on whenever you want some heat. 
With ev'ry kind o' comfort ev'ry house is all complete. 

You c'n walk to privies in the rain and never wet your feet! 
They've gone about as fur as they can go, 
They've gone about as fur as they can go! 

Ev'rythin's up to date in Kansas City 
They've gone about as fur as they can go! 
They got a big theayter they call a burlesque. 
Fer fifty cents you can see a dandy show. 

One of the gals was fat and pink and pretty, 
As round above as she was round below. 
I could swear that she was padded from her shoulder to her heel, 
But then she started dancin' and her dancin' made me feel
That ev'ry single thing she had was absolutely real.

She went about as fur as she could go, 
She went about as fur as she could go!"