30 Musicals in 30 Days

I found this little game on Facebook and thought it might be a great idea to kickstart my blogging again. Time hasn’t been on my side the past couple of months and this seems like a relatively easy commitment. I’ll be posting a video from each of the categories listed in the game every day. I’ll be posting the first one shortly. Feel free to jump in and comment at any time with what your favourite songs in each category are!

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OPENING NIGHT: HOW TO SUCCEED… on Broadway

Playbill for HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING

Above: Playbill for HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING

The second Broadway revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying opens tonight. The Pulitzer Prize-winning musical features a score by Frank Loesser with a book by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock and Willie Gilbert. Rob Ashford, the Tony Award winning director-choreographer who has staged shows like Promises, Promises, Thoroughly Modern Millie and Cry-Baby), is at the helm of this production.

The show stars Daniel Radcliffe as J. Pierrepont Finch, with Tammy Blanchard as Hedy La Rue, Christopher J. Hanke as Bud Frump and Rose Hemingway as Rosemary Pilkington. Rob Bartlett will play Twimble/Wally Womper, Mary Faber will play Smitty and Ellen Harvey will play Miss Jones. John Larroquette will appear as J.B. Biggley and the book’s voice will be recorded by CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

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NEWSFLASH: ROCK OF AGES on the Silver Screen in June 2012

ROCK OF AGES

To purchase the Original Broadway Cast Recording of ROCK OF AGES, click on the image above.

We’ve known for some time that Rock of Ages will become a movie musical under the direction of Adam Shankman, who said the following about the way he wants to cast the film:

“I’m thinking big, and absolutely am going to attempt to cast with movie stars. Now that musicals are working again, actors are much more open to it.”

And we then discovered that Tom Cruise was offered a role in the film! Now we have confirmation that Rock of Ages will be released in 2012. Cruise has been confirmed to play Stacee Jaxx, with Alec Baldwin playing Dennis, Julianne Hough playing Sherrie Christian and Mary J. Blige playing Justice. The musical’s book writer, Chris D’Arienzo has adapted his book for the musical, incorporating revisions by Shankman and Justin Theroux. The film will be a Warner Bros and New Line co-production.

Regular readers of this blog will now I’m not really a fan of the show, so it will come as little surprise that I’m not really a fan of Rock of Ages becoming a film either. It’s a pointless exercise, although one certainly made more attractive by some of the casting ideas. Will I see it? Of course. I hope that Shankman has learned from the mistakes he made making Hairspray, though many of the errors made in that film were in the adaptation of the material rather than with his direction. At least Rock of Ages doesn’t have any kind of pedigree to begin with.

I wonder how the constant breaking of the fourth wall, that is a trademark feature of the show, will be dealt with successfully in the adaptation.

Any other thoughts, dear readers?

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RIP Hugh Martin

American musical theater and film composer Hugh Martin died today. Best known for the seasonal standard, “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas”, which is taken from the 1944 MGM musical Meet Me In St. Louis. Martin contributed material to 5 Broadway musicals: Best Foot Forward (1941), Look Ma, I’m Dancin’! (1948), Make a Wish (1951), High Spirits (1964) and a stage version of Meet Me In St. Louis (1989). He was a true songwriting legend. Here is another of his songs from Meet Me in St. Louis, “The Trolley Song”:


Rest in Peace

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Disney’s New ALICE IN WONDERLAND Musical

Alice in Wonderland

ALICE IN WONDERLAND

So word on the street – first reported in an exclusive from Playbill – is that Disney has a new idea for their next big stage production: an adaptation of their most recent version of Alice in Wonderland. Linda Woolverton will adapt her own screenplay and Burton will act as a consultant. No timeline for the production has been announced: is Disney is waiting to see how Wonderland sells before committing to the production completely? Also conspicuously missing from all of the rumours around this project is the mention of any composer or lyricist. It sounds like the kind of thing Jeanine Tesori accepts all too easily and she has done a fair amount of work for Disney, although I hope Tesori is looking for a more challenging follow-up to Shrek.

 

As far as I’m concerned, this sounds like a terrible idea. Alice in Wonderland was one of the most disappointing films of last year and Linda Woolverton should not be allowed near screenplays or books for musicals. Her work – amongst other works, she’s produced the workmanlike Aida and the outright flop Lestat – is really never good enough. The piece for which she has garnered the most acclaim, Beauty and the Beast, was a result of the collaborative efforts of herself, Howard Ashman and the process through which all animated films are made. It’s not as if she sat down and wrote a screenplay that was directly translated to the screen. Oh well, I suppose it keeps her busy when she could be inflicting a new project onto the world.

Any other thoughts on this idea?

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NEWSFLASH: No more Tambor in LA CAGE AUX FOLLES

LA CAGE AUX FOLLES

To purchase the 2010 Broadway Revival Cast Recording of LA CAGE AUX FOLLES, click on the image above.

While it’s relatively the big news is that there are new principles in Broadway’s current revival of La Cage aux Folles, including Harvey Fierstein, whose tweets leading up to his first performance were majorly entertaining, as Albin, it’s perhaps even bigger news that the show’s other leading man, Jeffrey Tambor, withdrew from the production this week.

The official line, as reported on Playbill, is that Tambor is having complications from a recent surgery, but other reports have appeared citing vocal discomfort (this one was in The New York Post) and stage fright because of this being Tambor’s musical debut (a report from “insiders” on various forums, blogs and and gossip sites).

In the meantime, we wait to see who the new Georges will be. Chris Hoch, the understudy, is playing the role at present.

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New PORGY AND BESS Musical Adaptation (with Audra!)

Audra McDonald

Audra McDonald as photographed by Jesse Frohman

Which part is the real news here? That Diane Paulus, Suzan-Lori Parks and Diedre Murray are adapting the classic George Gershwin and DuBose Heyward opera, Porgy and Bess, as a contemporary-styled musical theatre piece? That the producers are Hair alumni Jeffrey Richards and Jerry Frankel, which might mean that the show – set to bow at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts in September – might be aiming for Broadway at the end of the 2011/2012 season? Or that Audra McDonald, who is leaving Private Practice, is in talks to star as Bess?

It all sounds pretty good to me. When the announcement regarding the production was made, Paulus said that the team (which also includes choreographer Ronald K. Brown, set designer Riccardo Hernandez, costume designer Emilio Sosa and lighting designer Christopher Akerlind) was hoping ‘to create a version of Porgy and Bess that will have a unique identity as a musical’:

Diane Paulus said:
I am delighted to be working with Suzan-Lori Parks on making the characters in the story more fully realized. With one of the most incredible scores ever written, we want to bring Porgy and Bess to life on the musical stage in a way that feels essential, immediate, and passionate.

Parks assured that the ‘approach is fresh and respectful’, with the team ‘working to retain all the best-loved elements of the original while crafting a piece that speaks to contemporary audiences.’

Let’s hope it all works out…

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JUMBO: the SPIDER-MAN of 1935

JUMBO Poster

A Poster for JUMBO

I just read a rather interesting article by Michael Sommers of the New Jersey Newsroom comparing the follies of Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart’s Jumbo with those of Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, the show that has caused such a great stir because of its extended preview period, with opening night having been shifted several times, injuries suffered by some of the actors in the production and threats from critics (some of whom have “taken action”) to review the show before opening night.

While the comparison is interesting, reading some of the facts and figures and anecdotes about Jumbo is even more so – and at least the critics of that time seemed to have something better to do than bemoan the postponement of the show’s opening. As it is described in the article, the show certainly was not short on spectacle:

Starring Jimmy Durante and featuring a score by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, Jumbo boasted Paul Whiteman and his Orchestra, a real elephant (plus 500 other animals) and a 100-member company of Broadway artistes and circus performers. The mammoth 4,500-seat Hippodrome, located at 43rd Street and Sixth Avenue, was rebuilt into a circus environment complete with a big top, grandstands, a revolving stage and aerial rigging plus sideshow arcades in the lobby.

If you’d like to read more, the full article is available here.

Jumbo was was adapted for film in 1962 with a plot that was altered from what had transpired on stage in the original production. I wonder if there is any viable way of reworking the apparently flimsy book and the concept for a contemporary audience. With animal circuses no longer considered en vogue, I suppose not – unless, perhaps, the score and book were placed within a framework that told the story of the making of the musical, which (according to the article) seems to be a very interesting one indeed.

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NEWSFLASH: ANNIE Remake: Will + Willow + Jay-Z

ANNIE

Above: ANNIE in its original Broadway production

So this is how it goes:

1. Will Smith is discussing the possibility of producing a remake of Annie with Sony.
2. Willow Smith would star in the film.
3. Jay-Z will help retool the music, but no word on whether there will be original songs.

That’s all the facts there are for now, so how about a little conjecture?

Maybe it will all be updated and Annie will be a poor black orphan from recent times, with the depression being replaced by the recent recession and the “New Deal” subplot being replaced with the most recent election race. FDR out; Obama in. Warbucks can have made his money off of the Gulf War. Leapin’ lizards – a contemporary setting like that would allow Willow to whip her hair back and forth as much as she likes!

On the other hand, maybe the classic Charles Strouse, Martin Charnin and Thomas Meehan musical will remain a period piece that is cast non-traditionally (like the Pearl Bailey Hello Dolly! or the 1976 revival of Guys and Dolls). Then we could have Ving Rhames as Warbucks, Beyoncé Knowles as Grace, Queen Latifah as as Miss Hannigan, Jamie Foxx as Rooster and Anika Noni Rose as Lily. But would audiences accept a black FDR? Probably not, and at this point it’s starting to sound a bit like a blaxploitation film from the 1970s albeit one without the stereotypes that were prevalent in that genre. However, once the cast becomes multiracial, racial politics begin to emerge because of the historical setting of the show, even though the action of the show is a pure flight of fancy. If a black Annie is mistreated by a white Miss Hannigan, it begins to change the dynamic of the mistreatment. Although I loved her in the role and wouldn’t have things any other way, many people criticised the non-traditional casting of the brilliant Audra McDonald as Grace in the recent television series for reasons along these lines. The point is that whatever path Smith chooses to follow with this remake, I hope he’s prepared for the inevitable challenges that will be presented along the way.

Some people will argue that this kind of film will make more people fans of musical theatre. Every time this kind of project is announced, there are propositions like this, but Raymond Williams has made me skeptical of them. As a general statement, it is flawed. There is no way of predicting the reaction of an individual or a group of people to something like this and it seems clear from examples like Wicked or The Phantom of the Opera, both firm bastions of popular culture in musical theatre themselves, that the crossover from the initial production into a wide and/or deep appreciation of musical theatre is rare. Shows like that don’t sustain the industry, they sustain themselves and kids who are going to get interested in musical theatre are going to do so anyway, whether this Annie is there or not.

The more I think about this, the more I don’t think I’m gonna like it here…

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NEWSFLASH: Jason Robert Brown’s 13: the Movie Musical

13

Above: Jason Robert Brown’s 13

Jason Robert Brown announced on his official website that he has completed a screenplay based on his musical, 13, and that it is being ‘shopped to movie studios’.

The musical, which tells the tale of Evan Goldman who has six weeks to get the cool kids at his new school to come to his Bar Mitzvah or else spend the rest of his school years branded a geek, features a book by Dan Elish with music and lyrics by Brown. The show appeared on Broadway in 2008.

I imagine it will work much in the way that High School Musical worked on the big screen and aim at capturing the same target audience as that franchise and the Glee market.

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