The Boy From...
"The Boy From..." is a song with lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and music by Mary Rodgers. It was originally performed by Linda Lavin in a 1964 Off-Broadway revue entitled The Mad Show.
The song is essentially a parody of The Girl from Ipanema. The melody and lyrics are relatively close to the original, and Lavin's delivery of the song was reminiscent of Astrid Gilberto's simple, breathy style.
The song's content differs from the original in that it is sung in reference to a male character. Though both songs are about unrequited desire for the title character, "The Boy From..."'s humor stems partly from the fact that the narrator is completely unaware of her crush's blatant homosexuality, as, for example, illustrated in the song's second bridge: "Why are his trousers vermilion? / Why does he claim he's Castilian? / Why do his friends call him Lillian? / And I hear at the end of the week, / he's leaving to start a boutique."
The other humorous aspect of the song comes from the fact that every verse ends with a statement of the title character's hometown (hence the title), a fictional Latin American village called "Tacarimba La Tumba Del Fuego Santa Maliga Sacategas Lo Onto Del Sol Y Cruz." This is only enhanced by the ending, where the narrator laments that her beloved is "moving to Wales / to live in Llanfairpwllgwyngyrgogeryllllantrwbgwyntasiliogogogoch."
Sondheim wrote the song's lyrics under the pseudonym of Esteban Ria Nido, which is a literal Spanish translation (from German) of his name.
"The Boy From..." is also used in the Sondheim tribute revue Side by Side by Sondheim.