![]() ![]() And Nora and Delia would say, ‘Well, what would you say?’ I said, ‘Well, I would say this, la la la.’ And they took that and they put it in the movie.” You know what I’d say to the little bastard if I was going out on a date and he tried -’ and I just kept going on, all this kind of stuff. Oh, boo hoo, my son doesn’t want me to go out. “So here are these two women that are running rehearsals, and I was complaining continuously that they were women and I was a man,” Hanks recalled. ![]() Hanks suggested changing the dialogue between his character and onscreen son (played by Ross Malinger) during a fight scene on set. I had everybody telling me I was a big shot. “When we first met for ‘Sleepless in Seattle,’ I was a big shot. “She told me I was a writer when I didn’t realize I was a writer,” Hanks said during the “Q with Tom Power” podcast. Tom Hanks recently praised late filmmaker Ephron, with whom he collaborated on both “Sleepless in Seattle” and “You’ve Got Mail.” Hanks credited Ephron for encouraging his writing career. “Sleepless,” however, might be the first musical to use a song titled “Rock Stars” to describe two characters in mourning.Tom Hanks and Liev Schrieber Try to Escape with a Death Ray in New ‘Asteroid City’ Clip - Watch With “Sleepless,” songwriters Ben Toth and Sam Forman gives us an array of song titles that define the word “generic”: “We’re Doing Fine,” “Stuck Here,” “We Can Make It,” “Look at Me Now” and “Something’s Calling Me.” There’s a word nobody uses anymore to describe these tunes: “jingles.” And when a character sings “a new inning,” you know that “spinning” and “beginning” are soon to follow. In “ West Side Story,” the Tony character lets us know “Something’s Coming.” But that’s Bernstein and Sondheim. Otherwise, they’re just kind of marking time, yearning half-heartedly for somebody or something. That moment never arrives in the musical “Sleepless” because Sam and Annie spend most of their stage time with a girlfriend Victoria (Katharine Leonard) and a fiance Walter (Robert Mammana) they don’t much care about. In good musicals, characters generally break into song because the emotional stakes are so high that merely speaking the words no longer suffices. It helps if you’ve seen the movie before seeing the musical, which makes seeing this musical completely superfluous. That’s the scene in the movie where Annie is driving and falls in love at first listen upon hearing Sam’s voice on the radio talking about his dearly departed wife, and the radio shrink dubs him Sleepless in Seattle. Oh, wait a minute, it’s not a bumper car at an amusement park. In the musical “Sleepless,” it’s not clearly established in the beginning that Sam (Tim Martin Gleason) and Annie (Chandra Lee Schwartz) actually live in different cities, or that Sam’s wife is dead, or why he and son Jonah (the big voiced Joe West) take up residence on a house boat, or what Annie is doing in a bumper car at an amusement park. If ever there were characters who had no need to sing, they are Sam of Seattle and Annie of Baltimore, the now-unfortunate would-be lovers of “ Sleepless in Seattle - the Musical,” being given its world premiere at the Pasadena Playhouse. “Sleepless,” the movie, ran on the fumes of Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan’s charm and the slight conceit that they played lovers who didn’t really meet until the movie’s final minutes. The 1993 romantic comedy “Sleepless in Seattle” has been turned into a stage musical that can best be described as pointless in Pasadena.
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