5 Great Musicals of the 1990s

This is a list of 5 of my favourite musicals of the 1990s. If you don’t know them – head straight to Amazon and pick up a cast recording! These are definitely shows that should be on your radar.

1. Marie Christine

Marie Christine

Simply put, Michael John LaChiusa is the best of the new generation of serious musical theatre composers and Marie Christine represents one of his lushest and most seductive scores. Loosely based on the Greek play, Medea, the show transposes the action to 1890s New Orleans where Marie finds herself spurned by her love, Dante, and exacts a tragic revenge. Add a touch of voodoo and a dash of history by way of the real-life figure Marie Laveau and you have the makings of a compelling tale of mythic proportions. LaChiusa’s score is filled with ravishing melodies and haunting motifs and the original cast recording preserves a tour de force performance from Audra McDonald in the titular role.

2. Passion

Passion

Passion is a haunting show, a musical of immense emotional depth and intellect. It’s not perhaps the most easily accessible of musical theatre scores: the score is not compartmentalized into extractable, toe-tapping songs, but uses a series of motifs to develop narrative and character in an immensely sophisticated manner. Emotionally we’re looking at some of the things that drive us all: the nature and meaning of love, and the thin line between passion and obsession. It’s disquieting how easily one can see something of oneself in Fosca, as broken in her soul as she is in her body, or in Giorgio, a man whose life is completely transformed by his experiences with this woman. Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine challenge conventional ideas about the relationship between love, passion and obsession from three perspectives: what people expect them to be, what they truly are and what they have the potential to become. It’s dark and brooding and brilliant.

3. Assassins

Assassins

In contrast, Sondheim’s Assassins has a score that is almost immediately accessible, owing to its brilliant use of pastiche and the inclusion of a range of characters that lurk within the boundaries of our public consciousness. Even if one hasn’t heard of the assassins whose perspectives placed at the centre of this muiscal, one has surely heard of the American presidents who were their targets. From the variations on “Hail to the Chief” to the series of ballads that tell the stories of those who would see the chief fall, every number in the show is memorable. The original Off-Broadway cast recording also preserves the chilling climactic scene in full and, if you’re lucky enough to see the show live, there are other treats that await in the book: the monologues of Samuel Byck, would-be Richard Nixon assassin, and the hysterically funny scenes between Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme and Sara Jane Moore, who both attempt to assassinate Gerald Ford. It’s a satirical gem that works best without the latter day addition of “Something Just Broke”, a song that forces us back into our traditional perceptions of the assassins and their deeds and which dilutes the experience we should undergo as we experience this show.

4. Sunset Boulevard

Sunset Boulevard

Some people ask why Andrew Lloyd Webber turned what is considered by many to be an untouchable film into a musical. Well, I prefer my divas singing, so it suits me just fine. Sunset Boulevard is not particularly subtle, but its broadness suits its mileau and characters. There are some haunting pieces of music here: the instrumental use of “The Greatest Star of All”, for instance, or the ghostly introduction to the titular tune, or the two instantly memorable songs given to Norma Desmond, “With One Look” and “As If We Never Said Goodbye”, and even smaller numbers like “The Perfect Year” are melodic little gems that stay with you long after the last time you listened to the score.

5. Titanic

Titanic

In 1997, two different versions of the Titanic story were told in two different styles in two different mediums. The film offered Leonardio DiCaprio and Kate Winslet frolicking in a fictional love story set against the backdrop of the ill-fated ship of dreams, while the musical used the stories of the real life Titanic passengers as a basis for telling its Robert Altman-like version of the tale. These days, I find myself returning to my cast album of the stage score rather than the film. It’s a moving piece of musical theatre, from the opening sequence to the haunting contra-punctual duet “The Proposal/The Night Was Alive”, from the exquisitely structured sequence at the end of the first act (where the ship hits the iceberg) to the chilling lifeboat sequence that climaxes with the stirring anthem, “We’ll Meet Tomorrow”. And any of these is many times better than “My Heart Will Go On”….

Posted in Broadway, Musicals | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

FELA! Production Photographs

Playbill has up a gallery of photos from the show. You can check out the full gallery by clicking the link above, but here’s one shot of this energetic, eclectic show to whet your appetite:

FELA! goes NINE

Posted in Broadway, Musicals | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

“Monetizing” SHREK

In their Third Quarter 2009 Financial Report, DreamWorks Animation has revealed the nature of their plans for Shrek, the musical theatre adaptation of their hit film of the same name. From the desk of Lew Coleman:

We plan to monetize Shrek The Musical in a number of ways going forward.

Monetize? Seriously? If there really are any doubts about whether or not Dreamworks is in this for the profits alone, surely this dispels them. Come on – I mean, sure, theatre is a business, but that’s only a part of the picture. I don’t want to be mean-spirited, but Dreamworks certainly makes it difficult when they release statements like this about their productions. Or maybe we should just call them commodities and be done with it.

Posted in Broadway, Commentary, Musicals | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

PROMISES, PROMISES Revival Confirmed

It’s official! The Broadway revival of Promises, Promises will open in Spring 2010, with Sean Hayes and Kristen Chenoweth in the lead roles.

Now for the real questions – will Rob Ashford keep the original “Turkey Lurkey Time” choreography….?

Posted in Broadway, Musicals | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

NEWSFLASH: LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE – the Musical

LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE

To purchase the DVD of LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE, click on the image above.

Playbill has news of a musical adaptation of the film Little Miss Sunshine. With a book by James Lapine and a score by William Finn, the initial run of the new show started yesterday in Florida with Craig Bierko, Dick Latessa, Sherie Rene Scott, Martin Moran and Andrew Rannells in the cast.

The film, which I loved, tells of the adventures of the Hoovers, a dysfunctional family who travels from Albuquerque to Southern California for a kid’s beauty pageant in a vintage yellow VW bus. Finn seems like a great match for the material and I hope something great comes out of this.

Posted in James Lapine, William Finn | Tagged , , , , , , , | 21 Comments

NEWSFLASH: Ball Change for FOOTLOOSE Remake

FOOTLOOSE

The FOOTLOOSE Playbill Cover

Playbill has reported that Kenny Ortega will not be directing the Footloose movie musical. This follows the news that Chace Crawford will be replacing Zac Efron in the lead frole of Ren in the film.

Variety reports that Ortega and Paramount Pictures could not come to agreement on the tone or budget of the remake. Ortega reportedly sought a $30 million budget for the film that would employ elaborate musical numbers, while Paramount production chief Adam Goodman saw the project as an edgy drama with less emphasis on the songs and coming in at under $25 million… Paramount is currently seeking a replacement to direct “Footloose,” which is still on track to begin filming in March of 2010.

Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Susannah Grant… has penned the latest adaptation of Footloose…. Previous reports stated that new songs are being written for the Footloose remake, which will also include many of the hits from the original, including “Let’s Hear It for the Boy,” “Almost Paradise,” “Holding Out for a Hero” and the title track.

I guess this means that Paramount wants a remake more in the style of Fame, a remake of the original film rather than an adaptation of the stage musical. In that case, why bother?

Posted in Newsflash | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Behind the Scenes of CRAZY FOR YOU

A “new” Gershwin musical comedy, Crazy For You was the quintessential musical – one where everybody sings, everybody dances and where anything on hand is used to make music. The plot was nothing new, having been adapted from the 1930s musical, Girl Crazy, but with an energetic cast, a touch of outrageously funny humor, colorful costumes, great scenery and one of the best musical scores of the century – who could ask for anything more?

George and Ira Gershwin were an incomparable team, responsible for some of the best-known American standards from Tin Pan Alley, stage and screen. Even George’s classical compositions, resonating with jazz and African-American influences, can be hummed whistled or sung by us all. The Gershwins and their compositions are part of the collective American consciousness. Crazy For You uses seven great Gershwin songs from Girl Crazy, including “Bidin’ My Time”, “Embraceable You”, “I Got Rhythm”, and “But Not for Me”. 13 other Gershwin songs are added: from Broadway shows like Treasure Girl, Oh, Kay!, Show Girl and Ladies First, Hollywood films like Shall We Dance and Damsel in Distress, and one addition, “Naughty Baby”, which was not written either for the stage or films.

Though the book for Crazy For You needed work, nothing was done to Ira’s lyrics, other than a little pronoun gender-bending here and there. Those for Girl Crazy are among his best – in fact, they are poetry of an indelible, universal sort. Just think of ‘I’m biding my time, ’cause that’s the kinda gal I’m’, or ‘Embrace me, my sweet embraceable you! Embrace me, you irreplaceable you!’ The creators of the show stated: “We wanted audiences to believe that each song was written especially for Crazy for You – that they couldn’t possibly have come from anywhere else…. [One night] we overheard a couple talking about the show. The woman asked, ‘Are George and Ira Gershwin still alive?’ And her husband said, ‘They must be. They’re still writing musicals.’

Crazy For You was produced in reaction to the conservative backlash that developed because of the extravagant excesses of the 1980s; in a world where change and uncertainty are commonplace, where cultural programs and funding have been cut within school systems and professional theatres, an upbeat, musical to remind us of “the good old days” was extremely welcome. Any similarities to context of the original production of Girl Crazy? Yes! During the Great Depression, the American public craved a different kind of entertainment. This sort of musical comedy alleviated the worries and offered some relief from the seriousness of everyday life. Work on the stage remake began in 1988 with the involvement of multimillionaire Roger Horchow. A lifelong fan of George Gershwin’s music, he remembered meeting the famed composer-pianist at his parents’ home: ‘I don’t remember what he played, of course. I just remember loving it!’ Mr. Horchow sold his mail order business, he earmarked the profit toward the fulfillment of a dream: a production of his favourite show, Girl Crazy, on Broadway. Licensing rights were granted by the Gershwin estate and Horchow hired the director, writers and designers and booked the Shubert Theatre for the show’s opening. Investing more than $5 million of his own money into the $7.5 million project, he adamantly declared to the New York Post that it was his first and last show: ‘This is the only one I wanted to do. We hope to do it in other cities, but not any more shows.’

Despite its fine score, Girl Crazy had a storyline completely inappropriate for today’s society and audiences. In an interview with Kevin Kelly of the Boston Globe, playwright Ken Ludwig (of Lend Me a Tenor fame) said, ‘All those musicals’ books of the ’20s and ’30s were awful, but Girl Crazy seemed to me the awfullest (sic) of all! It was dumb, silly, beyond silly. And full of ethnic humor that wasn’t funny at all. I decided I’d have to rewrite from scratch. And I wondered how this would play with the Gershwin estate, principally the three Gershwin nephews. To be honest, they were more than willing to do anything to get the show back onstage, partly, of course, because of continuing copyrights, but also as ongoing testimony to George and Ira.’ Given access to the entire Gershwin music catalogue, Ludwig (along with director Mike Ockrent) conceptualized a “new” plot, rearranged the score, deleted some songs and borrowed others, including “K-ra-zy For You”, which provided the musical with a new name.

Crazy for You opened at the Shubert Theatre February 19, 1992 to critical acclaim. Frank Rich of the New York Times said, ‘The show is bursting with original talent that takes off on its own cocky path, pointedly mocking recent British musicals even as it sassily rethinks the American musical tradition stretching from the Gershwins to (Michael) Bennett.’ Other critics were equally ecstatic: ‘Bright, recession-proof, stuffed with one-line zingers… We’re back in the lost paradise of the American musical, with glitter and girls, legs and voices, melodies of insouciant mastery… An exuberant evening of amusing sight gags invented by Mr. Ockrent, stunning costumes by William Ivey Long, energetic, clever dances by Susan Stroman and marvelous Gershwin music.’ Four years later, the final Broadway curtain dropped. Crazy for You had won 3 Tonys (Musical, Costume Design, Choreography); 2 Drama Desk Awards (Musical, Choreography) and 5 Outer Critics Circle Awards (Broadway Musical, Choreography, Scenic Design, Costumes, Lighting). Since the Broadway version has closed, any company that can pay the royalties is allowed to stage Crazy for You. Licenses have gone as far as Cape Town, Helsinki, Oslo, Budapest, Australia, Mexico City, London and Indianapolis.

The Crazy for You page at Musical Cyberspace is available here. You’ll find production information, a synopsis with musical numbers, a mini galley and related merchandise links there. Enjoy!

Posted in Broadway, Musicals | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

ASSASSINS on film?

Having been rather ill this week, I’ve had some time to think about the idea of a film version of Stephen Sondheim’s Assassins, which I discussed a lot with my favourite guy, Eric, in the many hours I couldn’t sleep or during which I was drugged up on cortisone and antibiotics. I’m not sure how to put it all into words, but Eric had said something about political cartoons and Assassins the day before and I had kind of thought about it a lot more when I couldn’t sleep during the night.

The gist of it was that the whole thing might become a kind of animated political cartoon with a framework in which the Proprietor was the cartoonist/animator musing over his drawings, which then come to life in animation and enact the material we see in the stage show. So we might get shots where we see the hands sketching the characters, like in “Brazil” from Sauldos Amigos:

Or – and this is definitely more what I had in mind – in this video of Billy Joel singing “When You Wish Upon a Star”, the whole animator:

I kinda like the idea that the Proprietor might appear as a live action figure, as the Geppetto-styled animator in the latter video does. So it would recall, structurally, the 1940s animated Disney compilation features and the animated sections, featuring the assassins, would be styled using the conventions of political cartoons, in the way Sleeping Beauty uses medieval tapestry or Aladdin uses the techniques of Al Hirschfeld in the way it uses line.

And, of course, “Something Just Broke” would be cut immediately. It doesn’t belong in the show on stage, and it doesn’t belong in any decent film adaptation either.

I think it’s a pretty neat idea. I’d go watch it.

Purchases from Amazon.com

FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:

1. Assassins 1964 Original Off-Broadway Cast CD.
2. Assassins 1995 Original Broadway Cast CD.
3. Assassins Script.
4. Assassins Vocal Selections.
5. Assassins Vocal Score.

Posted in Animation, Movies, Musicals | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Liza on AUSTRALIAN IDOL

Here’s a fabulous clip of Liza, dispensing great advice to the contestants of Australian Idol and then delivering a performance of “Cabaret” afterwards.

Gosh, I just love this woman! The years might have taken their toll on her voice, but she’s still got it!

Posted in Performances, Television, YouTube | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

WEST SIDE STORY Interview with Carol Lawrence

There’s an interview with West Side Story‘s original Maria, Carol Lawrence, over at the Examiner. The West Side Story related questions, posed by interviewer Steven Slatten, follow:

How did you end up playing the role of Maria? “I came to New York to see what the audition scene was like. I had a full scholarship to Northwestern. I saw at a News Stand on 42nd Street that there was an open call (for West Side Story) at the Winter Garden Theatre. I thought I could just go and observe a New York Audition process. I had no intention of auditioning. I got there and I was informed that I had to Audit. I didn’t at the time know what that meant. The man said to me “You put on your dance wear and you join the line.” I didn’t know what was happening. At the end of the day I had been cast in the show. My father didn’t want me to do it but he eventually was OK with it. It sounds like some kind of Betty Gable movie right?”

Yes it does, when you were cast in the now iconic role of Maria, did you know that theatre history was being made? “Yes, everyone in the company knew that this was huge. It was going to be a huge hit or a mega-flop. It was the first time in the history of Broadway that it wasn’t a Musical Comedy. Since it was something more we created a new term. We gave birth to the term musical theatre.”

Did you see the current revival on Broadway? “I saw it opening night; I felt it was a wonderful production of the show.”

Do you feel that the new addition of Spanish is beneficial to the show? “I felt that the Spanish got in the way for many of the audience members. They were often lost because of it. I have heard that they have since changed it back to the English version. It’s a happy return to a very good production.”

Apparently, she also has a cookbook coming out!

Posted in Broadway, Interviews, Musicals | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment