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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bestlittlewhorehouse4.jpg]]
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3->''"If you grew up anywhere in Texas, you knew at an early age they was selling somethin' out there - and it wasn't poultry!"''
4-->--'''Deputy Fred'''
5
6''The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas'' is a musical comedy with a book by Larry L. King and Peter Masterson, and songs by Carol Hall. The story follows Miss Mona Stangley, who owns the Chicken Ranch, a century-old brothel. She is on good terms with Sheriff Ed Earl Dodd, with whom she once had an affair. Unfortunately, their good times are disrupted by [[MoralGuardians moralist]] "consumer advocate" Melvin P. Thorpe, who brands the Chicken Ranch "The Devil's Den". When Thorpe acts to try to shut down the Chicken Ranch, Mona and the Sheriff must take action.
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8The stage production ran on Broadway from June 1978 to March 1982, and then staged a return engagement from May until July. A [[TheMovie film adaptation]] was released around this time, directed by Colin Higgins (''Film/NineToFive'') and starring Creator/BurtReynolds as the Sheriff, Music/DollyParton as Miss Mona, and Creator/DomDeluise as Thorpe. Featuring Creator/JimNabors as the Sheriff's Deputy and Creator/CharlesDurning as the Governor of Texas, it had several new songs written and performed by Parton, including her famous "I Will Always Love You".
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10The film received mixed reviews but was commercially successful, being (at the time) the highest-grossing live-action movie musical, held until ''Film/{{Dreamgirls}}'' 24 years later. It has become something of a CultClassic over the years.
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12----
13!!The best little tropes in Texas:
14* BlatantLies: The senator who was paying for the Aggie Thanksgiving party at the Chicken Ranch, who was caught along with the football players with one of the Chicken Ranch girls, claims that he has no memory of going there and that he must have been drugged by Communist agents.
15* CoverInnocentEyesAndEars: A mother is shown covering her child's ears during "Texas Has a Whorehouse in it".
16* DownerEnding: The play ends with [[spoiler:the whorehouse being shut down, the Sheriff and Mona not getting together (since there is only implied to be a past series of flings between the two) and Mona singing the downer song "The Bus from Amarillo"]].
17** Thanks to some ExecutiveMeddling, TheMovie upgraded it to a BittersweetEnding, and [[spoiler:Mona sings "I Will Always Love You" (yes, the ''first'' instance of this song appearing [[Film/TheBodyguard on film]]) instead.]]
18** The film's WhereAreTheyNow voiceover also reveals that [[spoiler:Earl and Mona [[HappliyEverAfter got married]]]].
19* FalseReassurance: Thorpe spends his first meeting with Ed acting as if he'll leave the Chicken Ranch alone, saying that he'll leave that kind of MoralGuardians crusade to the preachers. Then he walks onstage, denounces the Chicken Ranch, and directs his audience toward Ed Earl, while denouncing him as a pawn of the prostitutes.
20* FanserviceExtra: Plenty of the scantily clad prostitutes are lucky to get a single solo line in any of the songs.
21* FeetFirstIntroduction: Mona.
22%%* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Mona.
23* HypocriticalHumor: Thorpe is introduced talking about how he fights for "truth in advertising"...while putting on a girdle, shoulder pads and a [[GagPenis sock]]. He also mentions being originally from UsefulNotes/NewJersey despite his Southern drawl.[[note]]His actor is from New York; however, his real-life model Marvin Zindler ''was'' a Texas native.[[/note]]
24* IntentionallyAwkwardTitle: Marketing in some states had to alter the title.
25* InterruptedIntimacy: Many instances, [[spoiler:including one involving the Governor]].
26* MathematiciansAnswer: One line in the musical but not the film, a reporter asks the Governor what is behind rising unemployment numbers. The governor replies that the cause of unemployment is that so many people are out of work, then changes the subject.
27%%* MissKitty: Mona.
28%%* MoralGuardians: Melvin P. Thorpe.
29* MovieBonusSong: The film has three: [[https://youtu.be/zT13_2KH2hY?si=G9oNaU2ItFqvU9tQ "Sneakin' Around"]] by Mona and Ed Earl; but two were cut, [[https://youtu.be/FtywKzgxQxA?si=9Dc3Sw5zeWhpbolo "Where Stallions Run"]] by Ed Earl (this one was used in some broadcast versions); and [[https://youtu.be/uPUFkL-Vj6A?si=5TIli9j0kU_h2XBa "A Gamble Either Way"]] (would appear on Dolly's 1983 album, ''Burlap & Satin'').[[note]]"I Will Always Love You" doesn't count, as it was written and first performed in 1974.[[/note]]
30** Onstage, the 2001 Broadway revival starring Creator/AnnMargret included "A Friend to Me".
31* TheNarrator: The Bandleader onstage, and Deputy Fred in the film.
32* OfCorsetsSexy: Mona wears a lot of corseted outfits and looks damn sexy, too.
33* OhCrap: Thorpe gets one when Ed gives him a right hook after he insults the Chicken Ranch with Dodd behind him.
34* ThePowerOfLust: This adaptation adds the incentive that the winners of a football match-up between the Longhorns versus the Aggies get to visit the Chicken Ranch, which is a brothel that used to take live poultry as payment during the Dust Bowl years.
35* RagsToRiches: The SlaveToPR governor refers to himself as ''"A poor boy, come to greatness."'' during his musical number.
36* ScoobyDoobyDoors: The Governor does this, popping back and forth among some pillars, near the end of his "Sidestep" musical piece. In this case, it's the ''[[BreakingTheFourthWall audience]]'' whom he's dodging rather than pursuers.
37* StrangeMindsThinkAlike: Ed's initial reaction to Mona's expensive panties is that it's a "Japanese slingshot". Not too long after, the Deputy assumes the same.
38* UnresolvedSexualTension: [[spoiler:Mona and the Sheriff.]]
39* VictorySex: As an incentive in the intrastate rivalry between the Texas Longhorns and the Texas Agriculture And Markets Aggies, the winning team was feted at the Chicken Ranch, with the "fees" being paid by the team's booster clubs. Y'know, Win One for the Boner.
40* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: The musical was inspired by the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_Ranch_(Texas) Chicken Ranch Brothel]] in La Grange, Texas. Various names were changed as the characters were dramatized, but the basic facts of the closure because of the investigative reporter were true. However, Thorpe's real life counterpart Marvin Zindler wasn't a moral crusader, but he was attacked by the sheriff (including being punched and having his wig pulled off as in the film).
41* VillainSong: [[https://youtu.be/0ch-bvP8vdo?si=PfsDRwI_OHk7GJpt "Texas Has a Whorehouse in It"]] and, to an extent, [[https://youtu.be/G1WvIKd2YVc?si=pTGAd48MNJy5-0vz "The Sidestep"]].

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