Synopsis, with Music

Love Life Synopsis
by Mark N. Grant

As performed on Broadway in 1948

Note: Alan Jay Lerner described Love Life as a cavalcade of American marriage. The unusual structure of the show alternates scenes chronicling the Cooper family’s progression through successive periods of American history starting in the 1790s with vaudeville-style acts that comment on the main story. The two types of scenes do not overlap until the end of Part II. The Coopers’ ages do not change despite the 150-year lapse of time.

Part I

The curtain rises on a magic show. The magician saws a woman in half and levitates a man. The man and woman start a conversation. She points out that her current state reflects her whole life; her desires and responsibilities are always uncomfortably divided. "Where does that leave me?" asks the man. "Right where you are, in mid-air," she replies. We learn that the man and woman are married--unhappily--to each other.

The scene shifts to a small New England town in 1791. Curious townspeople gather around a new store ("Who Is Samuel Cooper?"). Sam, the levitated man from the previous scene, enters and gives an account of himself; he has moved with his wife, Susan, and two children, Johnny and Elizabeth, to the town from Boston to practice his carpentry trade. Sam tells Susan (previously sawed in half) that he never wants to leave their new home ("Here I'll Stay"). As the scene ends, a male octet assembles in front of the curtain to sing about the effects of economic development on human relationships ("Progress").

We return to New England in 1821. Factories dot the landscape, and Sam decides to close up shop and join the industrial labor force. Sam and Susan reminisce about the first chair he made for her ("I Remember It Well"). Susan asks Sam to join her at the springtime dance ("Green-Up Time"), but Sam has to work late in the shop. Next a male quartet sings about the conflicts between love and money ("Economics"). Then--in a number dropped from the original Broadway production but commonly performed in revivals--they take a sympathetic look at Susan's actual life contrasted with her longings ("Susan's Dream").

Now it's 1857 and the Coopers have moved. Sam is about to go to work for the railroad. Susan fears that he will be away from home all the time and tells him she wants another child, but Sam puts her off. As that scene ends, three children enter and comment on Susan's state of mind ("Mother's Getting Nervous"), which segues into a ragtime/Dixieland-style dance as a trapeze artist performs overhead.

Next we see the Coopers in the early 1890s. Sam relaxes on the front porch ("My Kind of Night"). But as Johnny and Elizabeth wonder when Susan will get home from her suffragettes' meeting, the lights fade out on Sam and come up on the women's rights rally. Susan and the suffragettes insist on equality for women ("Women's Club Blues"). Then a hobo comes out to sing his message that love, not progress or economics, is the only answer, but nobody listens ("Love Song").

The scene shifts to a New Year's Eve in the 1920s; Sam and Susan are on a Caribbean cruise. Sam spends his time shmoozing and proclaims that he will do anything to advance his business ("I'm Your Man"), while another businessman makes a pass at Susan. Then Sam himself is tempted by a young blonde. But Sam and Susan wind up together, rather sheepish and not particularly happy, as the evening ends.

Part II

New York City, 1948. Sam now works at a bank and Susan has taken a management job at a department store. One night in the Cooper apartment, Sam, Susan, Johnny, and Elizabeth are arguing about which radio program to listen to. The children leave and Sam and Susan, finding nothing to talk about, retire to separate rooms. Next, a chorus materializes and performs an Elizabethan-style a cappella madrigal about modern anxiety and neurosis ("Ho, Billy O!"). Then Susan helps Sam pack a suitcase as he prepares to move into a hotel; they have agreed to divorce. After a reminiscence of happier times, Sam departs. Susan wonders who’s to blame for their marital troubles ("Is It Him or Is It Me?"). The proceedings play out in a satiric ballet scene in commedia dell’arte style ("Punch and Judy Get a Divorce"). Sam moves into a hotel room, where he exults in his newfound bachelor freedoms, though he also misses his kids and has moments of loneliness ("This is the Life").

The final scene is a “minstrel show” in which the interlocutor and minstrels review some foolish responses to love and marriage ("We're Sellin' Sunshine"): using astrology to find the right mate ("Madame Zuzu"), avoiding love altogether ("Takin' No Chances"), and insisting on unattainable perfection, which inspires Susan to sing about her own ideal man ("Mr. Right"). But when the minstrels urge them to face reality, Susan and Sam, now freed of illusion and determined to make their marriage work, inch toward each other on a tightrope as the curtain falls.