DREAMGIRLS National Tour

A new national tour of Dreamgirls will open at Harlem’s historic Apollo Theater in November 2009. The show will be directed by Robert Longbottom and co-choreographed by Longbottom and Shane Sparks. Robin Wagner, who did the set design for the original Broadway production of Dreamgirls, will create new designs for the tour. Here is what producer, John Breglio had to say about the production:

When we started planning this new production, I knew it was time to finally bring Dreamgirls to the Apollo. Throughout its history, the Apollo has been known as a proving ground where new talent has been discovered and nurtured and careers have been launched and that’s what Dreamgirls is all about. The very first scene in Dreamgirls takes place right here at the Apollo’s famous Amateur Night. What better place to launch a new production of this groundbreaking show?”

I wonder what this new staging is going to be like – more like the film in design and style than Michael Bennett’s original staging, perhaps? Personally I’d rather see a reproduction of that iconic staging than a mish-mash that falls somewhere in between and, if Longbottom is going to do a new staging, I hope it’s at the very least original in its vision.

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NEWSFLASH: SISTER ACT for the West End

SISTER ACT

To purchase SISTER ACT and SISTER ACT 2 on DVD, click on the image above.

Playbill is reporting that Whoopi Goldberg is bringing the stage adaptation of Sister Act to the West End in 2009. With a book by Cheri and Bill Steinkellner and an original score by Alan Menken and Glenn Slater, the show will still tell the now familiar tale of Deloris Van Cartier who witnesses a murder and is placed in protective custody in a convent. Disguised as a nun, she soon befriends her fellow sisters and turns her attention to the convent’s off-key choir, helping the nuns to find their true voices and breathing new life into the rundown neighbourhood – using methods that don’t meet the approval of the convent’s strict Mother Superior. The twist? Deloris no longer covers Motown hits in Reno and is a full on disco diva!

So what do you think about Sister Act moving up from the regional productions where its been tested into the West End? Hopefully Menken has provided a hit score that will have us raising our voices for years to come!

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SOMETHING TO DANCE ABOUT: New Jerome Robbins Documentary

SOMETHING TO DANCE ABOUT

SOMETHING TO DANCE ABOUT

A new 2 hour documentary about the life and work of Jerome Robbins, the director-choreographer of seminal Broadway shows like West Side Story, Gypsy and Fiddler on the Roof, will premiere on PBS in February in 2009.

Narrated by Ron Rifkin, the documentary includes excerpts from Robbins’ journals, archival performance footage, never-before-seen rehearsal recordings and interviews with Robbins himself and many of his friends, colleagues and critics, including Mikhail Baryshnikov, Jacques d’Amboise, Suzanne Farrell, Arthur Laurents, Peter Martins, Frank Rich, Chita Rivera, Stephen Sondheim, Jerry Bock, Sheldon Harnick, and Joseph Stein. The documentary was written by Amanda Vaill, a prominent Robbins biographer, and has been directed and produced by Judy Kinberg.

I adore Robbins’ work and cannot wait to see this – particularly the performance footage and the rehearsal recordings. I am certain it will be an amazing programme – definitely one to pick up on DVD too!

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NEWSFLASH: Liza is Back on Broadway!

LIZA

To purchase THE BEST OF LIZA MINNELLI, featuring sheet music for all of Liza's greatest his, click on the image above.

Earlier this month, Playbill announced that Liza Minnelli’s new Broadway concert, Liza’s at the Palace…!, would be seen on the Great White Way from 3-14 December and ticket sales for the run opened yesterday.

The concert, advertised as “an incomparable Minnelli songfest including many of her personal favorites and signature hits, followed by a dance-filled tribute to the groundbreaking late-1940s nightclub act of Minnelli’s godmother, Kay Thompson” is currently in rehearsal. Playbill’s gallery of rehearsal photos reveal that Liza is in such great shape. She looks stunning, so go on and take a peek!

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Casting the GUYS AND DOLLS Revival

The first bit of casting for Des McAnuff’s revival of the classic Broadway musical Guys and Dolls has been announced.

Nathan Detroit will be played by…. Oliver Platt!

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You Can’t Stop the Beat: HAIRSPRAY 2

HAIRSPRAY

HAIRSPRAY

Following the success of the hit movie musical Hairspray, based on the smash stage show of the same name, New Line Cinema has asked John Waters – the man behind the original non-musical film that inspired both of these hits – to pen a sequel. Neil Meron and Craig Zadan would return as producers, as would director-choreographer Adam Shankman and songwriters Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, who would provide a brand new score for the sequel. No casting has been announced, although New Line hopes to gather as many of the original film’s stars together for round 2.

A very wise and handsome man once said: “Every generation needs its Grease 2.” Watch this space for news as it comes, folks…

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Broadway Revival for PAL JOEY

PAL JOEY

PAL JOEY

Word is that the Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart’s 1940 musical comedy, Pal Joey, will be revived on Broadway in a limited engagement in December this year. Christian Hoff will star in the titular role, with Stockard Channing as Vera Simpson and Martha Plimpton as Gladys Bumps.

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SOUTH PACIFIC Review Roundup

Broadway’s revival of South Pacific has opened to a set of excellent reviews. Here’s a roundup of what the critics are saying about the show:

Raves

Ben Brantley at The New York Times: For this South Pacific recreates the unabashed, unquestioning romance that American theatergoers had with the American book musical in the mid-20th century, before the genre got all self-conscious about itself. There’s not an ounce of we-know-better-now irony in Mr. Sher’s staging. Yet the show feels too vital to be a museum piece, too sensually fluid to be square. I could feel the people around me leaning in toward the stage, as if it were a source of warmth on a raw, damp day. And that warmth isn’t the synthetic fire of can-do cheer and wholesomeness…. It’s the fire of daily life, with all its crosscurrents and ambiguities, underscored and clarified by music.

David Rooney at Variety:This is undeniably a period piece but it’s approached here with a serious-minded contemporary sensibility that keeps it relevant. Mixed-race relationships may now be accepted, but as anyone following the presidential contest knows, race itself remains an issue. And questions about the morality of war, the loss of lives and the way America engages with the world inevitably continue to resonate today, perhaps even more than when the show was first seen in the aftermath of WWII…. Possibly the most accomplished young actress in American musical theater today, Kelli O’Hara’s creamy vocals are perfection…. Closer in age to Nellie than past actors in the role, handsome Brazilian operatic baritone Szot is new to musicals and a real find.

Cilve Barnes at The New York Post:Sher has been helped here by Christopher Gatelli’s boisterous but unobtrusive choreography, Michael Yeargan’s beautiful settings (at the start, the thrust stage rolls back to expose the full and eloquent orchestra) and Catherine Zuber’s carefully accurate costumes…. O’Hara delivers Nellie on her own terms and in her own deliquescent persona…. Szot… has a splendid voice, fine presence and acts superbly…. As for the rest, there’s not a single weakness – with Burstein offering a magnificent mix of sleaze and heart as Luther, and the excellent Morrison (whose profile resembles James Dean’s) leaves a poignant impression as the young airman, Cable.

Joe Dziemianowicz at The Daily News: O’Hara is just plain wonderful…. Szot… with a rich baritone ideal for de Becque…. Hawaiian actress Loretta Ables Sayre is the find of the season, completely convincing and hilarious. Danny Burstein brings rowdy good fun to scheming seaman Luther Billis, while Morrison, as always, delivers a strong performance…. Sher has reinstated “My Girl Back Home,” a duet cut from the Broadway original, which neatly ties Joe and Nellie’s stories. It’s a simple and magical number shrewdly staged near dozens of road signs – a neat comment on feeling adrift far, far from home. Such consummate care and eye for detail pervades this production, even the scene changes.

Michael Sommers at The New Jersey Star-Ledger: Some enchanted experience, South Pacific returns to Broadway in as perfect a production as anyone is ever likely to see…. Expect no offbeat concepts from director Bartlett Sher, who focuses intently on the drama in this saga of American military personnel stationed on a Pacific island during the bleakest days of World War II…. Designer Michael Yeargan melds misty tropical views, military equipment like flatbed trucks and a bomber, slatted screens and Donald Holder’s colorful lighting to create a series of handsome vistas.

John Simon at Bloomberg: Director Bartlett Sher’s challenge was reviving without exactly repeating the original staging, and he (with choreographer Christopher Gattelli) has made some fine contributions, while smartly retaining certain Logan masterstrokes. Sher restored material cut from the original script that deals compellingly with racism. He has excelled at getting mute, peripheral characters to scurry about or linger atmospherically to perfection (note two distant, sunbathing nurses), and in making first-rate use of an airplane and all sorts of military equipment…. Most important, Sher has retained the cinematic flow, naturalism and suggestive use of Trude Rittman’s brilliant underscoring.

Elysa Gardner at USA Today: Bartlett Sher and a gifted, great-looking cast fully engage both the challenges faced by these and other characters and the romantic sweep of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s ravishing score. Led by Brazilian baritone Paulo Szot and the increasingly wondrous Kelli O’Hara, the company includes a superb Matthew Morrison as golden-boy lieutenant Joe Cable; a frisky Loretta Ables Sayre as Bloody Mary; and two of the most adorable child actors you’re likely to ever see, Luka Kain and Laurissa Romain as Emile’s little ones. I doubt there has ever been a nobler or sexier Emile than Szot’s.

Michael Kuchwara at Associated Press: Director Bartlett Sher has done a masterful job in balancing story and song. For one thing, his leads are youthful, sexy and can act. Kelli O’Hara… makes an endearing Ensign Nellie Forbush, the self-described “little hick” and “cock-eyed optimist” from Little Rock, Ark. O’Hara finds both parts of this exuberant, insecure woman…. Brazilian opera star Paulo Szot brings a debonair charm to the role of de Becque and manages to turn that old warhorse, “Some Enchanted Evening,” into something that is not only emotional but resonates believability within the context of the story – two people falling in love at first glance.

Positive

Eric Grode at New York Sun: It is the finest Rodgers and Hammerstein revival since Nicholas Hytner’s epochal Carousel of 1994 – which may be the finest musical revival to reach Broadway during that time – and it is a tonic for anyone seeking the glories of modern-day stagecraft employed in the service of musical-theater greatness. Mr. Sher is seemingly incapable of creating a stage picture that is imprecise or unattractive…. Paulo Szot and the wonderful Kelli O’Hara, each show an acute sensitivity to dynamics…. Morrison’s pop-inflected tenor mars Cable’s material, and his military bravado has an unwelcome touch of playacting.

John Lahr at The New Yorker: Under the elegant, astute direction of Bartlett Sher, Lincoln Center’s revival… is a majestic spectacle…. Kelli O’Hara puts a fine shine on the role of Nellie. She has a good voice; she’s charming; she cartwheels and cuts up on cue. But… O’Hara is too classy and too knowing to fit the idiosyncratic comic contours of the role. This doesn’t impede her or the musical from getting over, but it lowers the temperature of the flamboyant end result. As Émile, the Brazilian Paulo Szot is superb, with a resounding creamy bass voice and a warm masculine presence. He plays well opposite the lithe O’Hara.

Mixed

David Finkle at Theatremania: While Bartlett Sher’s current revival of South Pacific… is not a perfect realization… it’s near enough that anyone caviling about its drawbacks for more than 10 seconds is just a spoil-sport…. For the high quality of the production’s many noteworthy facets, Sher can take a bow…. It’s also Sher who must shoulder responsibility for what many will consider a misconstrued interpretation of Nellie, who’s far more restrained in O’Hara’s performance than someone vociferously declaring herself “a cockeyed optimist” would likely be. Sher also might have helped Szot seem less awkward during the book scenes than he does.

Frank Scheck at The Hollywood Reporter: Directed by Bartlett Sher, this lavish production doesn’t always succeed on a purely dramatic level, with the story line involving the major characters never quite connecting the way it should. But it does do full justice to the glorious score, and that’s more than enough…. The main performers simply don’t bring the requisite charm to their roles; O’Hara and Morrison stress the seriousness of their characters’ predicaments at the expense of much of their humor, and Szot… sings gorgeously but delivers a hopelessly stiff performance…. Fortunately, at least two of the supporting players take up the slack, with Danny Burstein’s conniving Luther Billis being a constant source of delight and Loretta Ables Sayre investing Bloody Mary with a galvanizing combination of humor and steeliness.

Matthew Murray at Talkin’ Broadway: Something this transporting, this precise, and this beautiful can only be crafted by the most skilled of hands…. O’Hara is riveting in her dramatic scenes…. But she’s not the irrepressible spirit she describes in “A Cockeyed Optimist” or the defiant feminist of “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair”…. Morrison’s problem is the opposite. Though dynamite in his lighter scenes, he strains as his role’s weightiness increases, connecting with his vital songs on the superficial level of the less-experienced Cable, but not of the more complex, conflicted man he eventually becomes. Everyone else is spectacular.

Jeremy McCarter at New York Magazine: Kelli O’Hara’s pure voice, easy charm, and golden good looks are so rare a combination they’re almost scary…. Paulo Szot doesn’t offer much in the way of swooning charisma, playing stiffly…. Not detecting much chemistry between O’Hara and Szot is, I recognize, a minority view…. There’s a lot to admire in Bartlett Sher’s revival…. It all immerses you in the forties, even though little in Richard Rodgers’s lushly orchestral score admits its origins in the high swing era…. Alas, a pioneer spirit doesn’t make the show complex or challenging enough to keep up with the racial conversation we’re having today. If it’s relevant now, it’s largely through letting us see how far our cultural depictions of American race relations have come.

Adam Feldman at Time Out New York: Bartlett Sher’s revival of South Pacific is faultlessly decorous. The staging is always elegant; the cast… acts with restraint and sings beautifully…. But is South Pacific a masterpiece? The score is a treasure, certainly, but elements of this 1949 show’s depiction of military life now seem corny, as does the pedantic antiracism song “You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught.” And although the strings beneath their dialogue signify romance from the start, there is something creepy about the rushed central relationship between American nurse Nellie Forbush (the lovely O’Hara, totally capable as always but a touch on the chilly side) and the wealthy, older French plantation owner Emile de Becque.

Michael Feingold at Village Voice: South Pacific, directed by Bartlett Sher, plumps for the work’s seriousness, approaching it with quiet realism…. An additional pinch of that showbiz self-mockery wouldn’t have hurt Sher’s production, which at times seems too sedate. Kelli O’Hara’s winsome, beautifully sung Nellie surprisingly lacks vigor; Loretta Ables Sayre makes Bloody Mary more amiable than lewdly ferocious…. Against this, it’s the graver romantics who register most strongly: Li Jun Li makes a fetchingly delicate Liat, Matthew Morrison’s Lieutenant Cable supplies everything the role needs, including a hint of aristocratic hauteur, while handsome, stalwart-voiced Paulo Szot, an unusually young de Becque, will probably soon figure in a lot of romantic playgoers’ dreams.

In the light of this successful critical reaction, the producers have announced that the revival will now play an open-ended run. This is wonderful news – South Pacific is my favourite Rodgers and Hammerstein musical and ultimately the one, in my opinion, that has the potential to outlast any of the others.

Purchases from Amazon.com

FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
1. South Pacific Original Broadway Cast CD.
2. South Pacific Original Film Soundtrack CD.
3. South Pacific Complete Studio Recording CD.
4. South Pacific Broadway Revival Cast CD.

Posted in Broadway, Commentary, Musicals, Review Roundup | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

SOUTH PACIFIC: the Next Generation

Lillian Ross has written a super article in The New Yorker about watching the revival with the daughters of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, Mary Rodgers Guettel and Alice Hammerstein Mathias. Some of the highlights:

About the Orchestra in the Current Production:

Mary gave Alice an affectionate pat on the shoulder. “Did you see the trumpet in the orchestra pit?” she asked. “The player colored it bright orange! Did you ever see an orange trumpet before? And there are thirty live musicians! No fucking electronic stuff!”

About Harold Prince and Stephen Sondheim:

“I went to the opening, in 1949, with Hal Prince as my date,” Mary said. “I’d known him for three years, since I was fifteen. We ran into Steve Sondheim there, and I introduced Hal to him. Hal was worried about being drafted. They’ve been friends, and collaborators, ever since.” She said that Oscar Hammerstein had been a mentor to Sondheim. “I think Steve’s favorite R. and H. show is Carousel.”

About Richard Rogers:

“I don’t believe you can judge a genius by the way he treats the human race. He may be as mean as a snake, and my father often was. But a genius gives back – oh, my, does he ever…. People say that Daddy could compose music fast, five minutes after seeing the lyric, but he spent many weeks thinking about each song.”

Enjoy the rest by following the link above. It’s a great read!

Purchases from Amazon.com

FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
1. South Pacific Original Broadway Cast CD.
2. South Pacific Original Film Soundtrack CD.
3. South Pacific Complete Studio Recording CD.
4. South Pacific Broadway Revival Cast CD.

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NEWSFLASH: BRIGADOON “Revisal” for Broadway!

BRIGADOON Poster

Above: The French poster for the film version of BRIGADOON

Playbill is reporting that a revival of the classic Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe musical, Brigadoon, is headed for Broadway. However, this is a “revisal” rather than a straight revival of the show, which was last seen on Broadway in the 1980/1981 season. From the article:

Bill Haber and Liza Lerner (Alan Jay Lerner’s daughter) are the producers attached to the revival, which has a new book by John Guare, based on lyricist-librettist Alan Jay Lerner’s 1947 original, about two American hunters in Scotland who happen upon a centuries-old Scottish village — which is still stuck in the old days.

The New York Post previously reported that Guare’s new book reinvents Brigadoon as “a pacificist town that ‘disappeared’ in 1939 because its inhabitants didn’t want to live in a world torn apart by war.”

OK. The first thing that strikes me is the idea that Brigadoon disappeared in 1939. In the original version of the show, the town disappeared 200 years ago – in other words, during the 18th century – and appeared for one day every 100 years. Shortening the timespan in which the town appears and disappears starts meddling with things that are fundamental to the concept of the show and which would – I think – be better left alone.

But perhaps the information provided here isn’t comprehensive enough to make such a definitive assumption. Maybe it is only the latest appearance/disappearance of the village that takes place in 1939, which would mean that the village disappeared in 1739 and had returned once before in 1839. If Tommy and Jeff discover Brigadoon in 1939, are the stakes heightened for the characters when it comes to their respective motivations to stay or return to the real world, which is about to be hurled headlong into World War II?

But later in the Playbill article, the writers point up a contradiction between the description quoted above and what appears in the casting notice:

But the casting notice characterizes the production this way: “Vivid re-imagining of the classic 1947 production; new production with a revised book. Story of Tommy and Jeff, two modern-day American travelers, who stumble back in time to a village in 18th-century Scotland.”

“Stumble back in time”? Will this Brigadoon feature actual time-travel?!!

Until things become clearer, its hard to draw any real conclusions about this proposed revival of the show. If the Guare time shift aligns with World War II in the way I think it might rather than being a straight change of the time period, then the revisal might prove to be quite interesting. Time will tell…

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