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1%% Administrivia.ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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3[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/South_Pacific_1105.jpg]]
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5->''Some enchanted evening, when you find your true love\
6When you feel her call you across a crowded room,\
7Then fly to her side, and make her your own\
8Or all through your life you may dream all alone!''
9-->-- "Some Enchanted Evening"
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11''South Pacific'' is a [[TheMusical musical]] by Creator/RodgersAndHammerstein, originally produced in 1949. It was nominated for ten Tony Awards, and won all of them, including the second-ever Tony for Best Musical. ''South Pacific'' is also the only musical to win Best Production, Best Direction, and all four acting awards at one time.
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13Nellie Forbush is a Navy nurse from Arkansas serving in the South Pacific during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. She has met a local French plantation owner named Emile de Becque. Lieutenant Joe Cable arrives on the island to take part in a spy mission.
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15Cable tries to get Emile to agree to be his guide for the mission, but Emile will have none of it. Bloody Mary introduces Cable to a beautiful Tonkinese girl named Liat. Cable is enamored, but is shocked to discover that she is Bloody Mary's daughter. Nellie also makes a discovery about Emile that forces her to face her deep-seated racial prejudices.
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17Adapted from several stories in Creator/JamesMichener's 1947 book ''Literature/TalesOfTheSouthPacific'', the show has several well-known numbers, including "Some Enchanted Evening," "I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outta My Hair," "Younger Than Springtime," "Nothing Like a Dame," "Honey Bun," and "Wonderful Guy."
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19The musical received a film adaptation in 1958, starring Mitzi Gaynor as Nellie and Rossano Brazzi as Emile. It made more money than any other movie of the year. A [[TheRemake remake]] was done in 2001, starring Creator/GlennClose, Harry Connick Jr. and Rade Šerbedžija.
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21Not to be confused with the 2009 NatureDocumentary series.
22----
23
24!!This musical provides examples of:
25* AdaptationAmalgamation: The musical ties together elements of five stories from ''Literature/TalesOfTheSouthPacific'': "Fo' Dolla'" (Cable and Liat), "Our Heroine" (Nellie and Emile), "The Cave" (the mission to spy on Japanese troop movements), "The Milk Run" (a massive rescue mission to rescue a single downed serviceman), and "A Boar's Tooth" (Luther and the native ceremony). The stories originally had no direct connections or shared characters (apart from the unnamed narrator, and he doesn't have a corresponding character in the musical).
26* AdaptationDistillation: In ''Literature/TalesOfTheSouthPacific'', Emile has eight children, of multiple ethnicities, from four earlier relationships. Some of them play significant roles in other stories, but for the story of Emile and Nellie, the ones that matter are the Polynesian ex and the two half-Polynesian children that trigger Nellie's anti-black prejudices, so the musical dispenses with all the rest.
27* AgeGapRomance: Emile is older than Nellie, old enough for him to feel a little awkward courting her.
28* AllMusicalsAreAdaptations: Weaves together two separate stories from Creator/JamesMichener's ''Literature/TalesOfTheSouthPacific'', and incorporates characters and events from several others.
29* AnAesop: Racism is bad, and not a natural state of humanity, as summed up by the song “You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught”.
30* AnguishedDeclarationOfLove: Emile, when Nellie is leaving him.
31* BetaCouple: Cable and Liat is a rare tragic example.
32* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: So, Nellie puts aside her racial prejudices because she loves Emile and his children, but Cable is killed and leaves Liat and Bloody Mary in limbo, since Liat refuses to marry anyone else...]]
33* {{Bookends}}: "Dites-Moi" starts and ends the show.
34%%* ChekhovsGun: [[spoiler: Nellie's home town of Little Rock]].
35* ChivalrousPervert: Multiple; whatever they may say or fantasize among themselves, the sailors are completely respectful to the nurses. Luther is the most fleshed-out example: he's very interested in "the women who dance with just skirts on!", yet he stops Emile from talking to Nellie because he thinks Emile hurt her, when Nellie tells him how wonderful he is for giving her flowers he admits they aren't from him, and when she emotionally opens the note from Emile he says he'll be around if she needs him.
36* CompositeCharacter:
37** Luther Billis is a composite of the book's Luther Billis, a similar character called Atropine Benny, who was the one who facilitated Cable's courtship of Liat, and Bus Adams, who was the focus of the rescue mission in "The Milk Run".
38** The spying mission was originally a separate story with unrelated characters; in the musical, Joe and Emile take the place of the original protagonists.
39** Captain George Brackett stands in for the various commanding officers in the original short stories.
40* CrowdSong: "Bloody Mary" and "Nothing Like a Dame" are sung by Luther and a crowd of sailors; "I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outta My Hair" is sung by Nellie and a chorus of nurses.
41* DarkReprise: Both romantic songs, "Some Enchanted Evening" and "Younger Than Springtime," get sad reprises, the first after Nellie leaves Emile in a tearful fit, the second after Joe Cable and Liat are separated.
42* DemotedToExtra: In ''Literature/TalesOfTheSouthPacific'', William Harbison was a significant recurring character, a superficially fine officer who proved to have feet of clay. He was originally intended to be a significant character in the musical as well, but as the plot firmed up he was reduced to a minor character with few distinguishing features and little in common with the book's Harbison beyond his name.
43* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: In the book, Joe Cable is killed in action during a big battle (the one that everyone embarks for at the end of the musical); it's a different character, named Anderson, who goes on the spying mission and is killed there. Joe's death in the musical (killed by a Japanese air attack) is also different from Anderson's in the book (captured and beheaded by Japanese ground troops).
44* EveryoneLooksSexierIfFrench / EverythingSoundsSexierInFrench: Emile, depending on the actor in question.
45* FourthDateMarriage: Nellie and Emile, who have only known each other for a "few short weeks" but are then engaged. [[spoiler: Even when they reunite and reconcile at the end of the story, they've still only known each other a few months at most.]]
46%%* FunnyForeigner: Bloody Mary.
47* GungHolierThanThou: Joe has traces of this.
48* HaveAGayOldTime: Joe sings to Liat that he's "gayer than laughter" when he's with her.
49* HoldingHands: The Broadway version and movie end with [[spoiler: Nellie and Emile grabbing each other's hands underneath the table while the children have lunch.]]
50* HornySailors: The chorus of sailors all agree--in song, no less!--that "There's Nothing Like A Dame", but whatever they may say or fantasize among themselves, the sailors are completely respectful to the nurses.
51%%* IAmSong: "A Cockeyed Optimist."
52* ICantBelieveAGuyLikeYouWouldNoticeMe: Emile and Nellie in "Twin Soliloquies". Nellie worries that a "cultured Frenchman" can't really be interested in her, a "little hick", while Emile worries that, surrounded by "younger men than I, officers and doctors," she won't choose to be with him.
53%%* IrrelevantActOpener
54* IvyLeagueForEveryone: Joe Cable's background includes "Princeton, NJ," as part of "My Girl Back Home."
55%%* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Billis.
56* LoveAtFirstSight: Nellie and Emile (see "Some Enchanted Evening").
57* LoveRedeems: [[spoiler: Nellie eventually allows her love for Emile to overpower any negative feelings she had regarding his bi-racial previous marriage.]]
58* MalignedMixedMarriage: Nellie (who is from [[TheDeepSouth Little Rock, Arkansas]]) is dismayed to learn that her love interest Emile has fathered a number of children due to his relationships with local Polynesian women, though she does eventually overcome it, accepting both him and them.
59%%* MildlyMilitary
60* MoodWhiplash: At the beginning of Act II, Bloody Mary and Liat entertain Joe Cable with "Happy Talk" in attempt to get him to fall for Liat. However, he turns down the opportunity to marry her afterward, causing Bloody Mary to aggressively end their romance.
61* MyGirlBackHome: TropeNamer and subversion. In this case he sings this song before ''cheating'' on his "girl back home."
62* PepTalkSong: "Happy Talk:"
63-->''Happy talk, keep talkin' happy talk,''\
64''Talk about things you'd like to do.''\
65''You got to have a dream,''\
66''If you don't have a dream''\
67''How you gonna have a dream come true?''
68* PrejudiceAesop: The moral of the story is largely about Nellie learning to overcome her suspicion of the non-white members of Emile's family and realize they are the same as anyone else. The show is nowhere more explicit about how unnatural and strange racial hatred is than in the song "You've Got to be Carefully Taught". It explicitly says that hate doesn't come naturally, it gets drummed into people in their youth. When some Southerners asked to cut that song, Creator/RodgersAndHammerstein said "If you cut that song, you might as well cut the whole musical."
69* SexyDiscretionShot: It's not all ''that'' discreet, considering that they're both half undressed, but the stage still fades to black as Joe and Liat embrace and fall to the floor.
70* SympatheticMurderBackstory: De Becque had to flee his homeland because he killed a man in a BarBrawl. The guy was trying to kill him at the time, and the actual death was an accident (so this would be self-defense at most, but he might have a hard time proving it).
71* TaughtToHate: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPf6ITsjsgk "You've Got to be Carefully Taught"]] is the TropeNamer. Lieutenant Cable, a white American man in an interracial relationship with Tonkinese Liat, becomes angry at his own internalized racial hangups about the romance and breaks out into a song to the effect that bigotry isn't something humans are born with, it's something they learn and, by implication, they should damn well un-learn it. The playwrights were requested to cut the song for being too {{Anvilicious}},[[invoked]] and retorted that its PrejudiceAesop was the point of the whole musical.
72%%* ThatRemindsMeOfASong: "Honey Bun."
73%%* TrappedBehindEnemyLines
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75
76!! The film adaptation provides examples of:
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78* AdaptationExpansion: The Collector's Edition DVD boasts that it might be Rodgers and Hammerstein's only movie to run longer than the play that inspired it.
79* AdvertisingByAssociation: A trailer for a theatrical re-release boasts, "From the same Rodgers and Hammerstein who gave you 'Theatre/TheSoundOfMusic'."
80* {{Bowdlerise}}: In the play, Bloody Mary calls men "stingy bastards" after they turn down her offers. The movie changes this phrase to "stingy stinker."
81* EpicMovie: Filmed on location in Hawaii, the movie beat ''Film/{{Vertigo}}'' and ''Film/{{Gigi}}'' to become the #1 film of 1958. However, several Rodgers and Hammerstein fans regard it as the weakest film adaptation due to garish MoodLighting (achieved through color filters) and poor pacing.
82* FeetFirstIntroduction: Liat has one in the General Release / Home Video version.
83* MovieBonusSong: "My Girl Back Home." The movie also incorporates the CutSong "Loneliness of Evening," as a spoken poem Emile writes to Nellie.
84* ReCut: Two versions are known to exist: A roadshow version that runs 172 minutes and a 157-minute general release version. The roadshow version was considered lost until 2005; the 2006 DVD and 2009 Blu-Ray include both the general release and roadshow versions. The version that played in Europe more closely follows the play by showing Nellie's and Emile's first scene together before the song "Bloody Mary."

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