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- No_Way_to_Stop_It abstract "\"No Way to Stop It\" is a show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The Sound of Music, but not included in the later film version from 1965. It was introduced in the show by Marion Marlowe, Kurt Kasznar and Theodore Bikel. It is sung by Max Detweiler and Elsa Schrader, with Georg von Trapp joining in later in the song. The song is often compared with, and spoken of in conjunction with, fellow The Sound of Music song, \"How Can Love Survive?\"; in addition to addressing the relationship between Georg and Elsa, the two songs are the only ones which Max and Elsa sing and both were omitted from the film version of the story. The satiric cynical number, which is about \"amoral political compromising\" (and in fact an anti-protest song), is theorised by Broadway Musicals: A Hundred Year History to be the first-ever rock song to be introduced to a Broadway musical. The book cites its similarity to songs by the Kingston Trio from around that time. The song, along with \"How Can Love Survive\" (which was also cut from the film), was cited in The Oxford Companion to the American Musical: Theatre, Film, and Television as an example of Rodgers and Hammerstein's \"wry sense of sophistication\". The American Musical and the Formation of National Identity compares the song to So What? from Cabaret, in that they both \"articulate [the] general sense of indifference among many constituencies that would eventually allow the Third Reich to expand its influence beyond the point of return\". Both these songs include the theme of obsessive circular motion in order to create a sense of inevitability. In the case of \"No Way to Stop It\", the lyrical motif is the orbit of various satellites, and by the end of the song, it is implied that \"I\" is the centre of the universe. As a result of \"No Way to Stop It\" and the duet \"How Can Love Survive\" (in which the Captain and the Baroness \"attempt to work out their competition and the complexities of a dually rich marriage\") being cut from the film, class and political tensions are eliminated, secondary characters become less complex, and Maria and the children become most of the film's focus.".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It composer Richard_Rodgers.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Song.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=%22no%20way%20to%20stop%20it%22%20sound%20of%20music&f=false.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageExternalLink blyrics.html.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageID "11570598".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageLength "9104".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageRevisionID "689520721".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Anschluss.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Category:1959_songs.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Category:Songs_from_The_Sound_of_Music.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Category:Songs_with_lyrics_by_Oscar_Hammerstein_II.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Category:Songs_with_music_by_Richard_Rodgers.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Category:The_Sound_of_Music.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Kurt_Kasznar.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Marion_Marlowe.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Musical_theatre.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Nazism.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Oscar_Hammerstein_II.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Rodgers.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Rodgers_and_Hammerstein.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Show_tune.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Song.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink The_Sound_of_Music.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink The_Sound_of_Music_(film).
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLink Theodore_Bikel.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageWikiLinkText "No Way to Stop It".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It writer Oscar_Hammerstein_II.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It composer Richard_Rodgers.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It name "No Way to Stop It".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It published "1959".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type "Song from The Sound of Music".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_song.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Rodgers_and_Hammerstein.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:The_Story_of_the_Trapp_Family_Singers.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It writer Oscar_Hammerstein_II.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It subject Category:1959_songs.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It subject Category:Songs_from_The_Sound_of_Music.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It subject Category:Songs_with_lyrics_by_Oscar_Hammerstein_II.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It subject Category:Songs_with_music_by_Richard_Rodgers.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It subject Category:The_Sound_of_Music.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It hypernym Tune.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type MusicalWork.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Song.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Work.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Redirect.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Work.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type CreativeWork.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type MusicRecording.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Thing.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Q2188189.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It type Q386724.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It comment "\"No Way to Stop It\" is a show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The Sound of Music, but not included in the later film version from 1965. It was introduced in the show by Marion Marlowe, Kurt Kasznar and Theodore Bikel. It is sung by Max Detweiler and Elsa Schrader, with Georg von Trapp joining in later in the song.".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It label "No Way to Stop It".
- No_Way_to_Stop_It sameAs Q586454.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It sameAs No_Way_to_Stop_It.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It sameAs m.02rjky6.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It sameAs Q586454.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It wasDerivedFrom No_Way_to_Stop_It?oldid=689520721.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It isPrimaryTopicOf No_Way_to_Stop_It.
- No_Way_to_Stop_It name "No Way to Stop It".