Showing posts with label A Little Night Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Little Night Music. Show all posts

Friday, September 23, 2011

Musical Words of Wisdom: The Sondheim Musicals

Just over a month ago, I posted a blog of words of wisdom and witty, creatively stated ideas from the musicals of Andrew Lloyd WebberToday, here are just some of the many you have sent in (along with a few of my favorites) from the musicals of Stephen Sondheim.


There were so many, it really was hard to choose, so below are the ones I think are the most clever, most meaningful; but most of all, these are the ones that most of you repeated.  Clearly, some of these quotes mean a lot to many of us.


Here is a quote, sometimes two, from each of his Broadway shows. Some are my contributions, others are singular submissions from one person, and others are quotes sent in from several of you. In the interest of fairness, I will attribute the quotes to no one, except the lyricists themselves. I think they are all kind of catchy and all of them at least clever and thought-provoking.


I have included more than a couple from the most quoted of his shows, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and Into the Woods.  Not surprising, really.  What does surprise me is how many I got from Merrily We Roll Along!


And I am still collecting your quotes from the musicals of Kander and Ebb!




Anyone Can Whistle
  • "Crazy business, this, this life we live in - Can't complain about the time we're given - With so little to be sure of in this world." 




Assassins
  • "Everybody's got the right to their dreams."




Company
  • "Everybody rise!  Rise!  Rise!  Rise!  Rise! Rise!  Rise!"

  • "But alone is alone, not alive."


  • "And that's what it's all about isn't it? Company!  Lots of company!  Life is company!  Love is company!  Company!"




Follies
  • "The things that I want, I don't seem to get, The things that I get...well, you know what I mean?"

  • "Sometimes when all the wrappings fall there's nothing underneath at all."




Gypsy
  • "Some people sit on their butts. Got the dream, yeah, but not the guts!”




Into the Woods

  • "Opportunity is not a lengthy visitor."

  • "I was taught to be charming not sincere."

  • "We disappoint. We Disappear. We die, but we don't."

  • "Isn't it nice to know a lot? And a little bit not."

  • "Someone is on your side, Someone else is not. While we're seeing our side maybe we forgot: they are not alone. No one is alone."

  • "Careful the tale you tell. That is the spell. Children will listen."



A Little Night Music
  • "I frequently laugh myself to sleep contemplating my own future."

  • "Isn't it rich? Are we a pair?"



Merrily We Roll Along
  • "Dreams don't die so keep an eye on your dreams."

  • "And a friendship's like a garden: you have to water it, and tend it, and care for it. And I want it back."

  • "Okay, so now you know, life is crummy."

  • "Some rides are rough and leave you jumpy, why make it tough by getting grumpy?"

  • "Success is like failure - It's how you perceive it, It's what you do with it, Not how you achieve it"

  • "You need a tune you can hum."





Passion
  • "Why is love so easy to give, and so hard to receive?"

  • "They hear drums. We hear music. Be my friend..."

  • "Just another love story, that's what they would claim. Another simple love story. Aren't all of them the same?"





Sunday in the Park with George
  • "The choice may have been mistaken, the choosing was not. You have to move on."


  • "We do not belong together, and we should have belonged together. What made it so right together is what made it all wrong."


  • "There are only two worthwhile things to leave behind when we depart this world of ours: children and art."



Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
  • "Don't you know, silly man, half the fun is to plan the plan?  All good things come to those who can...wait."

  • "We'll not discriminate great from small.  No, we'll serve anyone - meaning anyone - and to anyone at all!"

  • "Eat them slow, 'cos that's the lot and now we've sold it!  Come again tomorrow!  Hold it! ("More hot pies!") Bless my eyes! ("Right this way, Sir!") Fresh supplies!"

  • "Being close and being clever ain't like being true."

  • "No one can help, nothing can hide you -- isn't that Sweeney there beside you?"



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Jeff
3.025

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Goodbye, Old Friends: Part II

By the time Sunday is over, a full dozen (or baker's dozen potentially) Broadway shows will have closed since the ball dropped in Times Square signalling the start of 2011.  Last week it was 8 shows, this week it is 4 (5, sorta), and there are still more to come before February starts.  Here's a look at the shows closing this week on Broadway - a complete stranger to me, a regrettable missed opportunity, and two dear friends (plus a little love/hate).


A Free Man of Color
Opened: November 18, 2010
Previews: 29     Performances: 61
My Review Grade: I didn't see this show.
Closing Thoughts: Man, Lincoln Center Theatre can't seem to catch a break this season.  First there was Verge, and now this ambitious play about a difficult subject, told in an entertaining, if muddled, way.  The critics groused and the non-subscribers stayed away.  At least this one made it through its scheduled run.  I have a feeling the next LCT show, War Horse, will be a hotter ticket.  I hope I'm right.


In the Heights
Opened: February 14, 2008
Previews: 29     Performances: 1184
My Review Grade: Had I had my blog going when I saw the original cast, it would have definitely been A+
Closing Thoughts:  What a pleasant, unexpected treat of a show!  The perfect combination of old-fashioned storytelling, characters you care about, modern points of view and sizzling hot music, this show hit all the right notes.  And with it came an important new voice in American musical theatre in Lin-Manuel Miranda.  I can not wait to see what is next from this amazing young man.  And over the years, we've been re-introduced to a real gem in Priscilla Lopez, careers solidified in Andrea Burns and choreographer Andy Blankenbeuhler, and a host of new favorites: Karen Olivo, Olga Meredez, Robin de Jesus, Mandy Gonzalez, Cristopher Jackson, Michael Balderrama, Janet Dacal, and from the ensemble Krysta Rodriguez and Joshua Henry.  Pretty impressive!  More impressive: and original story, original score, new writer who all take off-Broadway by storm, take over Broadway and take home the top prize, Best Musical.  You will be missed, all of you.


La Bete
Opened: October 14, 2010
Previews: 24     Performances: 101
My Review Grade: Unfortunately, I never got to this one.
Closing Thoughts:  An artful, atypical evening of theatre, this play intrigued me way back when it originally ran.  The revival, boasting some incredible talents, Tony winners David Hyde Pierce and Mark Rylance, and TV star Joanna Lumley, after a smash hit run in London looked a sure thing for Broadway.  The critics here raved, particularly over Mark Rylance's 20 minute monologue.  And still no one showed.  The limited engagement was cut short by several weeks.  Add this one to my list of regrets.


A Little Night Music
Opened: December 13, 2009
Previews: 20     Performances: 425
My Review Grade: Original Revival Cast: A+; Replacement Cast: B
Closing Thoughts:  I am in the minority about two things as far as this revival goes: I love the minimalist approach of the entire production, and I was terribly disappointed and underwhelmed by its stellar replacement leads.  Still, I adored the original company:  one actress I love (Catherine Zeta-Jones), one I worship (Angela Lansbury), a new actor to admire in Alexander Hanson, a great reunion with old favorites Aaron Lazar and Erin Davie, and some new folks to watch for in Leigh Ann Larkin and Hunter Ryan Herdlicka.  I love both Bernadette Peters and Elaine Stritch, but I found the former to be way too affected and the latter's embrace of being ill-prepared to be insulting to her audience and to all actors of age.


Rock of Ages
Opened: March 17, 2009
Previews: 22     Previews: 735
My Review Grade: C+
Closing Thoughts:  Given that I am a child of the 80's, and that I worshipped at the altar of Xanadu, You'd have thought this one would be a favorite of mine.  WRONG!  Bad acting and a stupid, overly-complicated plot ruined a beautifully sung and danced score of 80's rockin' hits.  (I LOVE THE CAST RECORDING!)  A hit off-Broadway and with the drunken sub-culture of Broadway audiences, this show is allegedly going to reopen at the Helen Hayes after a three month break.  The current tenant of that theatre just announced another extension, into March.  Hmmm...  Maybe it'll re-open off-Broadway?  On Broadway in April?  I hope so, because I hate to think of so many folks losing jobs.  But just in case it doesn't, here is its closing tribute.  I wanted my MTV... I didn't get it.


Comments about anything but Rock of Ages - get over it people, I don't like it and calling me names and questioning my bathroom habits won't make me love it - leave them here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.130

Friday, December 3, 2010

And the Grammy Goes to...

The Grammy Award nominations were announced a couple of days ago, and as usual the big pop music nominees grabbed the headlines (you go, Eminem!).  But my favorite category went by without so much as a notice beyond the theatre websites.  No biggie! We all know a good thing when we hear it, right?

 
The good news is (at least in my opinion) that the Best Musical Show Album category has zero filler this year and it represents the fair spectrum of musicals that have played Broadway in the last year.  But I'm not sure who votes for the winners.  Is it people that are part of that category?  Is it the entire voting population? Have the voters seen the productions, too and does that influence the voting?  And do they vote on just the recording -quality of sound, music and lyrics - or the whole package - the CD booklet, the entire production of the album?  (If you know the facts, please feel free to share with me and I'll post it!)

 
In the interest of full disclosure, I own only three of the five cast recordings nominated, and I have actually seen four of the five productions.  So the opinions I offer here are somewhat incomplete, and for that I apologize.

 
Here are the nominees, in alphabetical order, and my thoughts:


 
Green Day's American Idiot

 
The link to my CD review is HERE.

 
My thoughts:
  • The album plays as well, if not better than the actual show.  Free of all the visual clutter, the CD allows you to really listen to the lyrics and the music.  Tom Kitt's orchestrations are superb and really add to the music without making any of them sound like typical show tunes.
  • If it matters, the the CD itself is wonderfully produced with great pictures, and a booklet that includes liner notes and full lyrics.
  • Depending on who votes, the fact that this was once a rock album (or two) could be a plus if everyone votes, or a minus if the stuffy old school theatre folk only vote.  If that is the case, the nomination is the award.
  • Unless musicians who know what they are hearing vote, Kitt's masterful contribution will again go unnoticed, much like his snub at the Tonys.

 
Personally, it is my favorite of the cast recordings nominated this year.

 


Fela!

 
I do not have the CD, nor have I seen the show.  But based upon what I know...

 
My thoughts:
  • The producers of the show, namely Will Smith and "Jay-Z" are popular and well-regarded in the music business, a real plus here.
  • The show itself got nearly unanimous raves.
  • Its political underpinnings could be a plus or a minus, again depending upon who votes.
  • On the down side, the style of music, minus the staging visuals may have very limited appeal.
  • And I certainly hope that when recorded, the cast sounded better than any of the live on TV performances I've seen.

 
Ultimately, the recording may lose out, due to its narrow appeal, despite its acclaim and musical producers.  Or it could win just because of those very things!

 

A Little Night Music -The New Broadway Cast Recording

 
The link to my CD review is HERE.

 
My thoughts:
  • Amongst theatre goers, feelings about this production are sharply divided, which might come into play depending on who votes.
  • A Sondheim score is pretty much a given in terms of quality, so that isn't an issue, especially with a known score like this one.
  • What might play against it is that the score is already beloved in its original cast version with a very full orchestra.  Despite what you think of the smaller orchestration (I like it), and no matter what you thought of it as played live in the theatre, purists and musicians alike may shy away from the less is more approach.
  • What it does have going for it is its completeness, including superbly acted short scenes from Angela Lansbury and company.  It makes the whole thing more understandable, especially if you haven't seen the show.

 
I love the recording.  But I don't think it is "showy" enough.

 

Promises, Promises - The New Broadway Cast Recording

 
The link to my CD review is HERE.

 
My thoughts:
I personally love this recording, but I see more "against" it than "for" it.
"For" it: 
  • The performances are uniformly good, and fairly jump out of the speakers.
  • The orchestrations and pit voices are crystal clear and sound great.
  • Kristin Chenoweth is in terrific voice here, and Lord knows the girl is popular in any medium.  And Sean Hayes also sounds great, which might surprise people who know him only from Will and Grace.
  • The production values of the CD and booklet are top rate, if that counts at all.
"Against" it:
  • The original cast recording is a classic, and that production is still remembered fondly.
  • This version suffers in comparison because, while it replicates (very well) the distinctive "Bacharach-David" sound, the fact that it is so crystal clear might actually work against it.
  • If the voters follow theater, they might be influenced by the controversy surrounding Ms. Chenoweth's performance, though the recording by itself offers a wonderful characterization and superb readings of the songs, including "I Say a Little Prayer" and "A House is Not a Home."  Their addition to the score could be a plus or minus.

 
I have never taken this out of my CD player since I got it - that is how much I love it.  But I'm thinking its chances are 50-50.

 

Sondheim on Sondheim

 
I saw this production, but I do not have the CD yet.  I can, however, offer this:

 
My thoughts:
  • As always, depending upon who votes, the styling of the songs, most of which veer far from their original interpretations, may be a plus for musicians who can appreciate the styling, the re-arrangements and out-of-context nature of the selections.  For purists who like their Sondheim shot straight, this could be a turn-off.
  • If seeing the show plays into it at all, this show had the shortest run.
  • The singers - particularly Vanessa Williams and Barbara Cook are well-known and loved by the music community, Broadway and otherwise, which is a definite plus.
  • Not having heard it, but knowing that some of the Sondheim narration is included.  How it plays on the CD, I can't say, but if they've worked it into the CD as well as they did the show, it is a definite plus.
  • And whether this should influence votes or not, Sondheim is a master, and he has been the focus of dozens of tributes, etc., to the extent that the public at large knows who he is and that he has hit an age milestone.
  • Will the fact that two of the five recordings have all to do with Stephen help or hurt?  Will it split the vote and open the door for one of the other three nominees.

 
I have no idea how this will play out.  But I can say that -even without hearing two of them - the quality of the selections this year is very high.  It may be cliche, but cliches all have a grain of truth to them:  all of these choices are winners!  And think about the shows with CDs that did NOT get nominated...

 
Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.94

Sunday, October 10, 2010

TheatreScene: October 4 - 10

WHAT YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED!
Poll Results: When September Ends
LOGOS: Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
LONDON THEATRE: Lend Me a Tenor: The Musical?
LOGOS: The Scottsboro Boys
Broadway Crossword by Blog #3, Part IV
Blogjack: The Theatre Community Rallies Against Gay Suicide

 
DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THIS MONTH'S FIRST POLL!

 
OCTOBER 4:
HISTORY:
  • 2009: Hard to believe it has been a whole year already, but Carrie Fischer's one-woman show, Wishful Drinking opened on this date a year ago!

 

 
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Liev Schreiber, Actor (A View from the Bridge)

 
OCTOBER 5:
HISTORY:

 
  • 1789: The Oldest Opening of the Week: (Yes, you read that right!) Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor (and still a revival) opened 221 years ago at the John Street Theatre.  This theatre was built before this was even a country!  Built in 1767, and demolished in 1797, the theatre almost exclusively did Shakespeare's plays.  The one play not by the Bard was called The Critic, but that didn't kill the theatre, the resident company moved and the feed store next door needed the space.
  • 1955: The Diary of Anne Frank opened at the Cort Theatre.  It went on to win the Tony and Pulitzer.
  • 1960: Becket opened, starring none other than Laurence Olivier and Anthony Quinn.
  • 1977, 1995, 2005: Revivals of Hair (flop), Company (limited run), and A Chorus Line (hit) all opened on this date.
  • 2008: 13 opened two years ago.  I guess Kendra is 15 now?
NEWS:
  • You'd think that the item below this one would be the biggest news of the day, but I think musical theatre fans might just be more excited about this gem:  Carrie: The Musical will be getting a New York revival, courtesy of MCC Theatre, during the 2011 - 2012 season, at off-Broadway's Lucille Lortel Theatre.  Reserve early, folks!  I guess we are all going to see just how weak Eve was... again...
  • I am surprised that some of my blogging friends were surprised at the news that A Little Night Music was closing January 9.  Considering it was announced last week that the revival of House of Blue Leaves was taking the Kerr in the early spring, I'm not surprised at all.  The good news, fans, is that both La Peters and La Stritch will play through to the bitter end.
  • Another mystery solved: Sister Act: The Musical will begin previews on March 24, opening April 20, 2011 at the Broadway Theatre.  Man, they are lining up!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Glynis Johns, Actor (Original Cast - A Little Night Music)

 
OCTOBER 6:
HISTORY:
  • 1919:  Was there a sequel?  The most curious title of the week: Hitchy-Koo [1919] opened on this date in 1919 at the Liberty Theatre for 56 performances, and featured Chief Eagle Horse.

 

 
  • 1974: Mack and Mabel opened at the Majestic Theatre, starring Bernadette Peters and Robert Preston.  This Jerry Herman tuner has been revised and announced for revival so many times...will it ever work?
  • 2009: Just a year ago, melancholy Jude Law opened as the melancholy Dane, Hamlet.
NEWS:
  • Mayor Bloomberg announced that $100M was marked for a performing arts center at the World Trade Center site.  I hope, sincerely, that this, like everything else associated with the site just happens, without argument or fanfare.

 

 
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Michael Arden, Actor (The Times They Are A-Changin', bare, Aspects of Love)

 
OCTOBER 7:
HISTORY:

 

 
  • 1982:  "Now and Forever" read the ads, and they were close to right.  On this date, Cats opened at the Winter Garden Theatre, where it would stay for 7,485 performances.  The show earned 11 Tony nominations, winning 7, including Best Musical, and one for Betty Buckley's Grizabella turn.  More interesting is the fact that its two biggest attributes - the set and the dancing - went Tony-less!
NEWS:
  • The Public Theater is on a roll.  Its production of Gatz, where the cast reads the entire novel The Great Gatsby, word for word is completely sold out.  Who says literature isn't entertaining?

 

 
  • Time Stand Still re-opens at the Cort Theatre, with Christina Ricci taking over for Alicia Silverstone.
BEGINNINGS:
  • The Scottsboro Boys and Driving Miss Daisy begin previews today on Broadway.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Toni Braxton, Singer, Actress (Disney's Beauty and the Beast)

 
OCTOBER 8:
HISTORY:
  • 1979: Sugar Babies opened at the Mark Hellinger Theatre, starring Mickey Rooney, Ann Miller and Ann Jillian.  It ran for 1,208 performances, earning 8 Tony nominations, including Best Musical, and nods for Rooney and Miller.  The show also toured with Rooney and Miller for several years, making it one of the biggest hits of the season.

 

 
  • 1998: Swan Lake opened on Broadway.  It was the talk of the town as the ballet was modernized and the swans were gender-bent.  But the real news, ultimately, was that for the first time, a non-musical won Tonys for Best Direction of a Musical and Best Choreography, both by Matthew Bourne.  Tongues wagged, and the start of the campaign for Special Event Tonys began.  The same production is still touring, and was recently in the NYC area!
  • 2009: This time last year, Rosemary Harris, Tony Roberts and Jan Maxwell opened the revival of The Royal Family.
NEWS:
  • The off-Broadway smash hit, Our Town, directed by and originally starring David Cromer, announces that the show recouped its investment.  This version of the play also marked its longest professional run ever.
BEGINNINGS:

 
 
  • Actress Leigh Zimmerman begins performances as Velma Kelly in Chicago.  Zimmerman also appeared in The Will Rogers Follies and the original revival cast of Chicago, as Go-to-Hell Kitty.  Welcome back, Leigh!
  • FINALLY!  Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown begins previews at the Belasco Theatre.  No word on whether Patti LuPone has scared David Belasco's ghost out of the place yet!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sigourney Weaver, Actress (Sex and Longing, original cast, Hurlyburly)

 
OCTOBER 9:
HISTORY:
  • 1946: The Iceman Cometh a now classic and many times revived play by Eugene O'Neill, opened at the Martin Beck Theatre and ran for a mere 136 performances.


  • 1972: The follow up from the team that brought us Hair opened on this date at the Broadway Theatre.  Dude: The Highway Life was a dud, running only 16 performances.  But it did give us the late, great Nell Carter.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Marin Mazzie, Actor (Ragtime, next to normal)

OCTOBER 10:
HISTORY:
  • 1961: The very first book musical from Jerry Herman, Milk and Honey, opened at the Martin Beck Theatre, earned 5 Tony nominations, including Best Musical and Best Composer.  It ran a very healthy 545 performances.

One Cat, Two Cast Recordings

  • 1965: A mere 4 years later and at the same theatre, one of Broadway's most beloved flops/cult musicals - what other show that ran for 16 weeks has 2 cast recordings? - opened.  Drat!  The Cat! starring Lesley Ann Warren, Elliott Gould, Charles Durning and a guy named Leo Bloom was a musical about a cat burglar.  The book was by Deathtrap playwright, Ira Levin.
ENDINGS:
  • Good luck with your new family, and come back soon!  Two time Tony winner Katie Finneran plays her final drunken performance in Promises, Promises today.
  • From giant star to giant Elf, Sebastian Arcelus plays his final performance in Jersey Boys today.  He, of course, is leaving that show to be the title star of Elf: The Musical.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Ben Vereen, Actor (original cast - Jesus Christ Superstar, Pippin, Fosse)
 
Comments?  Leave one here or email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.40

Sunday, October 3, 2010

TheatreScene: September 27 - October 3

DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THIS MONTH'S NEW POLL!

 
WHAT YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED THIS WEEK:
LOGOS: Brief Encounter
REVIEW: Wicked (Fall 2010 Cast)
From Ireland to Broadway and Back Again: 1916: The Musical
Guest Blogger: St. Jimmy, St. Jimmy, St. Jimmy
Mr. Broadway October 2010: Benjamin Walker
Broadway Crossword by Blog: The New Season, Part III

 
SEPTEMBER 27:
HISTORY: 
  • The Oldest Opening of the Week:  On this date in 1847 (163 years ago), Used Up opened at the Broadway Theatre (not the same theatre as today's Broadway Theatre).  The play starred John Lester, but little else is known aside from that and the opening date.
NEWS:

 
Billie Joe Armstrong
  • File this one under "appropriate stunt casting."  More in the league of the master of casting, Chicago, and less in the desperate guest star vein of REO Speedwagon doing a few songs after Rock of Ages or Lesley no-show Gore at Million Dollar Quartet, American Idiot throws its hat in the casting ring by having Green Day's own Billie Joe Armstrong jumping into the role of St. Jimmy (usually played by the superb Tony Vincent or his equally awesome understudy, Andrew Call) for this week only, September 28 - October 3.  I hope this gives the show a bump at the BO...it needs it.  But it sure isn't for a lack of trying.  I can't remember a show that continues to contribute to the publicity mill like American Idiot.  Whoever does their publicity is not getting paid what they are worth.  It's a shame that producers can't seem to get that they need to DRASTICALLY cut prices in order for their target audience to afford seeing a Broadway show...

 
James Stovall
  • Actor James Stovall, an actor who made his Broadway debut in Bob Fosse's Big Deal, and went on to appear in the 1986 revival of Sweet Charity, passed away on September 26.  His age and cause of death were not known at the time of the press release.  He also took over the role of  Coalhouse Walker, Jr. in the original Ragtime, a part he also played on the national tour.  Other Broadway appearances included The Life and Once on This Island.  His last Broadway role was as a preacher and "Begat" singer in the 2009 revival of Finian's Rainbow.  Rest in peace, Mr. Stovall.
WELCOME TO BROADWAY:
  • REO Speedwagon will perform at the end of Rock of Ages today!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Shaun Cassidy, Actor (Blood Brothers)

 
SEPTEMBER 28:
HISTORY:
  • This week the play's the thing!  The play version of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes opened in 1926, playing 199 performances at the Times Square Theatre.
NEWS:

 

 
  • BC/EFA announces that The 24th Annual Broadway Flea Market and Grand Auction raised $476,917 this year.  I did my part - I left with 8 windowcards (including a collectible Lend Me a Tenor Opening Night poster), 2 calendars (the Yank! one is HOT...PLEASE theatre gods make that show happen on Broadway...), and the bargain of the day, courtesy of the American Idiot table... I got the Spring Awakening: In the Flesh coffee table book for a mere $10.00!

 
  • The New Broadway Cast Recording of La Cage aux Folles is released today, promising a more complete representation of the score and a lavish booklet including full lyrics.
BEGINNINGS:
  • Brief Encounter  opens today for a limited run through December 5 at Roundabout Theatre Company's Studio 54 space.
  • Stephen R. Buntrock begins performances as Fredrik in A Little Night Music, with the departure of Tony nominee Alexander Hanson.
  • Billie Joe Armstrong begins a one-week stint as St. Jimmy in American Idiot, taking over the role from Tony Vincent.  (See above.)
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Gregory Jbara, Actor (Billy Elliot)

 
SEPTEMBER 29:
HISTORY:
  • 1934: Like I said, the play's the thing this week!  The play version of Merrily We Roll Along by Kaufman and Hart opened at the Music Box Theatre.  It was a much bigger success as a play, even though, like the musical, the story moved backwards through time, running 155 performances.
  • 2009: A Steady Rain, with Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig, opened at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre.
NEWS:

 
Aaron Tveit, center, from the pre-Broadway
production of Catch Me If You Can
  • As I guessed/hoped last week, Catch Me If You Can  has announced that it will, indeed, be taking the Neil Simon Theatre.  Previews are scheduled to begin March 7, with an opening of April 10, 2011.  A 2009 production of the show had Norbert Leo Butz and Aaron Tveit starring, though a current cast has not been announced.  The Marc Shaiman/Scott Wittman show will play the same stage as their last smash hit, Hairspray.  Though previously announced for the space and now homeless, Love Never Dies  has not officially cancelled, as of today.
  • For me, Women on the Verge are close to giving ME a nervous breakdown.  Today, they announced another postponement for the start of previews - to October 8.  I will now be seeing the 2nd preview... ugh.

 
Arthur Penn
  • For the second time this week, Broadway mourns the loss of another family member.  Director Arthur Penn passed away September 28, one day after his 88th birthday.  He has been ill for some time.  He is the rare director to find success on both coasts.  On Broadway, his career in the 50's and 60's included Two for the Seesaw, the star-making show An Evening with Mike Nichols and Elaine May, and arguably, his most important work, the original production of The Miracle Worker.  That last title also brought him much success in Hollywood, as helmed the Oscar winning film version.  His most iconic film, though, has to be Bonnie and Clyde.  Late in his career, he returned to Broadway in 2002 with Fortune's Fool, which won Frank Langella a Tony award.  In 2004, he directed his final production, a revival of Sly Fox, where he famously encouraged the cast to go off book to explore whatever they found funny at the moment before returning to the printed text.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Roger Bart, Actor (The Producers, Young Frankenstein)

 
SEPTEMBER 30:
HISTORY:
  • 1938:  The Most Apt Title of the Year: 30 Days Hath September opened at the Hudson Theatre.  Alas, it did not last 30 days, running a mere 16 performances.
NEWS:
  • The New York Times is reporting that Dee Snider, of 80's hairband Twisted Sister fame, will be joining the cast of Rock of Ages for an 11-week run, beginning later this month.  He will be playing night club owner Dennis and hosting a series of talk backs during his run.  I guess we have Chicago  to thank for all of this stunt casting - Patti LaBelle in Fela!, Billie Joe Armstrong in American Idiot, and recent "guest appearances" by Jerry Lee Lewis (Million Dollar Quartet) and REO Speedwagon (Rock of Ages).  Just as with Chicago, I can only assume it will increase ticket sales, and that the quality of the set of performances will be uneven at best.

 
 
  • A more sure thing is the casting of theatre legend Joel Grey (Cabaret, George M!, Chicago, Wicked) in the 2011 revival of Anything Goes.  He plays Moonface Martin opposite Sutton Foster as Reno Sweeney.  No word on the rest of the cast, but I'm keeping my fingers crossed for a hot, um,  a talented Billy Crocker.  Last time around, a pre-Phantom Howard McGillin played that role opposite the Reno Sweeney of Patti LuPone.  (I have to mention her at least once a week, right?)
  • A new revival of House of Blue Leaves looks to be Broadway-bound with Edie Falco and Ben Stiller heading the cast.  Once again, it looks like a limited engagement.  At least Ms. Falco is a stage regular.  Still this won't quiet the growing outcry against movie/TV star casting and limited runs with huge ticket prices...
  • And congratulations, Bernadette Peters!  Everyone's favorite diva has been named the 2011 recipient of the Stephen Sondheim Award given annually by the Tony winning regional theater, Signature Theatre in Arlington, VA.  The 2010 honoree was Angela Lansbury.
BEGINNINGS:

 

 
  • The Pitmen Painters opens for a limited subscription run at the Manhattan Theatre Club's Samuel Friedman Theatre today.
  • The National Tour of West Side Story begins its run starting to day in Detroit.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Eric Stoltz, Actor (Our Town, Sly Fox)

 
OCTOBER 1:
HISTORY:
  • 1995: Ken Ludwig's Moon Over Buffalo starring Carol Burnett and Phillip Bosco opened at the Martin Beck Theatre.  The comedy ran 309 performances, and ended its run with the late Lynn Redgrave and Robert Goulet in the lead roles.
  • 2009:  Tracy Lett's follow up to August: Osage County, Superior Donuts opened at the Music Box Theatre.
NEWS:
  • Speaking of Tracy Letts, news broke today of the negotiations going on to get Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts (Oscar winners, both) to star in a film version of August: Osage County.  Sounds great to me!  Don't know about sitting for three and a half hours with no intermissions, though.  I bet the movie will be shorter...

 
 
  • Shall we file this under "no duh"?  Love Never Dies will not be opening at the Neil Simon Theatre or any other Broadway theatre this spring.  No worries, the Phantom may never die at the Majestic Theatre, either.
BEGINNINGS:
  • That one singular sensation, A Chorus Line, is gearing up for another national tour, directed by the original Connie Wong, Baayork Lee.  Good for her (and great for us) that she is keeping the Michael Bennet flame burning!  The National Tour starts today in New Haven, CT.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Julie Andrews, Actor (Camelot, My Fair Lady, Victor/Victoria)

 
OCTOBER 2:
HISTORY:
  • 1893: The farce, Charley's Aunt opened at the Standard Theatre.  This comedy, which years later was the basis for the musical version, Where's Charley?, is still a widely produced play throughout the United States.
  • 1958:  Eugene O'Neill's play A Touch of the Poet opened at the old Helen Hayes Theatre.  The play actually starred Helen Hayes and Kim Stanley.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sting, Writer/Composer (Rock 'N Roll!  The First 5,000 Years), Actor (3Penny Opera)

 
OCTOBER 3:
HISTORY:

 

 
  • 1968: The Great White Hope opened at the Alvin (now Neil Simon) Theatre, where it ran a remarkable 546 performances.  Equally remarkable was the 60+ member cast, led by James Earl Jones, Jane Alexander and a young Hector Elizondo.
BEGINNINGS:
  • The Roundabout Theatre Company's revival of Mrs. Warren's Profession, starring Cherry Jones opens for a limited engagement today.
  • The pre-Broadway try-out of Leap of Faith starring Raul Esparza and Brooke Shields opens today in Los Angeles.
ENDINGS:
  • The much ballyhooed regional production of Chess closes today at the Signature Theatre in Arlington, Virginia.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Gore Vidal, Writer (The Best Man, A Visit to a Small Planet)

 

 
Comments?  Leave one here or Tweet me or email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com.
Jeff
2.33

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

REVIEW: A Little Night Music (Peters & Stritch)

Review of the August 21 matinee performance at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York City. Starring Bernadette Peters, Elaine Stritch and Alexander Hanson. Direction by Trevor Nunn. Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by Hugh Wheeler. 3 hours, 10 minutes, including 20 minute intermission.


When I heard the re-casting news for A Little Night Music, I was ecstatic. I mean two Broadway legends on one stage was almost impossible to believe! Add to that that I have always been a huge fan of Bernadette Peters, particularly after Into the Woods and The Goodbye Girl (she was fantastic, all reports to the contrary), and who couldn’t help but love the First Broad of Broadway, Elaine Stritch. Her salty, bristly delivery and her croak-singing of the “Ladies Who Lunch” are the stuff of legend. I already loved the production, and now had a reason to return, as excited as I was when their predecessors opened the show.

I am, therefore, very sad to report that while the show as a whole is still in great shape - and in some cases, better shape - the two legends do not bring anything extraordinary to the show. In fact, I have to admit that I didn’t like it nearly as much. Perhaps part of my disappointment comes from unrealistically high expectations and/or from what I know now are reviews that are the very definition of “hyperbole.”

The biggest problem with the show itself persists. Act one goes on forever, with so much set-up ,it goes from interesting to boring about half way through. But now, it is even longer, by a full ten minutes by my watch, added to, no doubt by the one act play that interrupts the act, “Liasons,” which is easily 2 or 3 minutes longer under the care of Ms. Stritch. Here is also the quandary, yes the number plods along at a pace that surely tests the baton arm of the conductor. But it is also the 10 best minutes of her entire performance. She nails the song, even with pregnant pauses that test the credibility limits of the “where was I?” lines in the song. Stritch talk-sings her way through the song as if she is thoroughly disgusted and ready to throw in the towel with the world as classless as it is. But one has to wonder how heads of state were seduced but such a tart mouthed, bitchy courtesan. The paradox here is that while this Madame Armfeldt decries the modern lack of style, breeding and class, one can’t picture her as demure or even close to subtle. Perhaps she met all of her Dukes and Princes at some bar, where she was knocking back a stein or two of the local brew. This woman has had a hard, grounded life, but is hardly believable as some sort of society standards setter. Still, the number works because Ms. Stritch has impeccable comedic timing, a flare for the slow burn and can be forgiven mainly because it is the only time she’s onstage when you aren’t worrying if she’s going to get her lines said, let alone right. You never for one minute forget you are watching Elaine Stritch, though you occasionally do remember she is playing Madame Armfeldt. She is a legend, and I respect her for that if nothing else.


The young lady who gets my star of the year award, simply for holding her own on stage with such a potential train wreck is Keaton Whittaker, who played Fredrika at the performance I attended. The vast majority of her scenes are alone and with Ms. Stritch. Were it me, I’d be so tempted to help with lines or try to cover up the exhausting pauses between words and phrases. Instead, Miss Whittaker is the very embodiment of professionalism and adoration. (It is very clear that Ms. Stritch’s immediate co-stars are as smitten with her as the rest of us.) Still, it can’t be easy.

What makes perfect sense about this new pairing is that Ms. Peters and Ms. Stritch have the same sense of humor and down to earth style. And in that sense they complement each other wonderfully, just as Ms. Zeta-Jones and Ms. Lansbury did previously. Where the original pair matched each other grace for grace, regal gesture for regal gesture, these two Armfeldt gals complement each other in toughness and the ability to laugh off most every difficulty they face. The former pair hid behind an aloof veneer of detached snobbery and entitlement; the current pair hide behind a more aggressive veneer of detached dismissal and self-deprecating humor. They laugh at themselves before anyone can laugh at them. In that sense, both pairs work. But they sure do change the tenor and tone of much of the show as it is now.

Much has been made of Charles Isherwood’s “moment in musical theatre history” quote from his New York Times review of Ms. Peters. And in a very real sense it is musical theatre history, as this diva makes fewer and fewer Broadway appearances. The truth is that any time spent watching her work is time well-spent. There is no doubt that she belongs in that small pantheon of Broadway leading ladies that will stand the test of time. She looks fabulous, bounds around the stage with an energy that starlets half her age don’t seem to muster and more. Most importantly, she is so present in her performance, so “of the moment” everything she does seems spontaneous, even as you watch her Desiree make each calculated move she is forced to make. A true comedienne, Peters matches wits perfectly with her co-star, and has even managed to bring some more warmth and humor out of her Fredrick, the even better than before Alexander Hanson. Peters has warmth and grace to spare, and you can’t help but feel that it is a way her Desiree outwardly distances herself from her mother, rather than as a tribute to her upbringing (which it could not plausibly be).


Further, she has not lost her voice at all, and one wishes the character had more to sing. And the signature song of the show, “Send in the Clowns” is in excellent hands, even as she sobs, sniffles and wipes away a fountain of tears throughout. It is a lovely, somewhat moving image that she creates. But there is also that nagging feeling that at least some of it is an act, mostly because in giving the role a more comedic turn, some of the preceding glimpses of pathos are now non-existent. The result is a teary deluge that matches the tone and epic quality of the moment, but in retrospect seems just a tad “plugged in.” Hanson remains the perfect scene partner, and having seen this valid, if less revelatory performance of the number, I can now see that Trevor Nunn had more than a little to do with capturing the most perfect moment currently on a Broadway stage. Let there be no doubt, you are in for a treat and getting your money’s worth when La Peters takes the stage. But don’t expect the life-changing experience the ads now promise you.

The rest of the supporting cast has improved, even as they’ve had to forcibly slow down during full cast scenes. Aaron Lazar has really found the perfect pitch that keeps his ego-driven pomposity and supercilious ways from being too much a caricature. Similarly, Hunter Ryan Herdlicka has really added much needed nuance to the melancholy of his character - his subsequent giddiness at the end is now much more believable. Most improved, however, is Ramona Mallory who has toned down her silly-girl giggles, using them to advantage now rather than as a constant, and has smartly infused her performance with glimpses of the woman Anne will become.

For me the best two performances of the day were Leigh Ann Larkin’s superbly earthy, sweet, funny and honest Petra, a mass of sexual energy. Her “The Miller’s Son” remains a highlight of the entire production. The other belonged to Betsy Morgan, who was on as Charlotte (normally played by Erin Davie). Ms. Morgan gave the role a nice approachability. Upper-class with just the right snootiness when called for, but also the “everywoman” sensibility that makes you feel for her situation, revel in her mischievousness, and cheer when she finally wins. Her “Everyday a Little Death” was terrific, as was her chemistry with both Anne and Carl Magnus. And she was great in the supper-picnic scene, making a fool of herself in the name of friendship and love.

Isn’t that just what A Little Night Music is really about?

Grade: B



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Jeff