Neil Simon musical about a dancer adapted into a 1969 Shirley MacLaine movie: 2 wds.

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Sweet Charity.

Last seen on: Daily Celebrity Crossword – 3/30/19 Smartypants Saturday

Random information on the term “Sweet Charity”:

Lew Fields (January 1867 – July 20, 1941), born as Moses Schoenfeld, was an American actor, comedian, vaudeville star, theatre manager, and producer.

Lew Fields was half of the great comic duo Weber and Fields, the other half being Joe Weber. Fields and Weber started performing in museums, circuses and variety houses in New York City. The young men had a “Dutch act” in which both portrayed German immigrants. Such “dialect acts” (German dialects, Irish dialects, Jewish/Yiddish dialects, Blackface and Black/African American vernacular English) were extremely common at the time, the comedy coming from the actors’ mangling of the English language and dropping of malapropisms as they undertook life in America.

In the case of Weber and Fields (or “Mike and Meyer” as their characters were known) and many of the other acts of this genre, this often involved stereotyping by dress and behavior, as well as comedic and often sympathetic portrayals of the characters’ attempts to fit into American society. “Crafty schemes” of “making it big” in America, as well as the attempts of mere survival of immigrant poverty in America, were written into the script of these acts. A typical “Mike and Meyer” routine involved Mike, the short and clever one, unsuccessfully trying to coach Meyer, the tall and simple one, in a scheme to get them a free lunch at a working-class saloon.[1]

Sweet Charity on Wikipedia