Showing posts with label Drood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drood. Show all posts

Thursday, December 2, 2010

25 Years Ago: The Mystery of Edwin Drood

Long time followers of my blog will know this already, but The Mystery of Edwin Drood (later, just Drood) is one of my all-time all-time favorite musicals.  Top three easily.  In fact, it was the subject of a series of blogs that I did earlier this year and last.  (Links below.)

It was 25 years ago today that the show opened at the Imperial Theatre on Broadway.  It starred George Rose, Cleo Laine, Patti Cohenour, Howard McGillin and Betty Buckley in the title role.  Though it ran over a year and won 5 Tony Awards, including Best Musical, it was not really considered a hit, as it was soon dwarfed by the next wave of British mega-musicals, namely Les Miserables and The Phantom of the Opera.  Song and dance comedies were out, sweeping and epically produced operas were the new vogue for Broadway.



My blog series, "Back in Time: 1985-1986: The Mystery of Edwin Drood"

Part I: The Show
Part II: The Creative Team
Part III: The Supporting Cast
Part IV: The Principal Cast


Betty Buckley as Edwin Drood, top, and the Suspects

I suggest, now, though, that maybe audiences weren't ready for a show like Drood.  Afterall, you had to watch an unfamiliar mystery to look for clues, keep track of actors playing actors playing characters, AND then decide who you think killed Edwin Drood, who the mystery detective, Dick Datchery, was, and then find out that Drood lives after all!  Today's audiences, who crave the minutia of complex stories like Lost and 24, and love to follow complete strangers and pick apart the details of their lives (The Real Housewives..., etc.), are really ready for the whole vote for your favorite ending (Dancing with the Stars, American Idol).  Yes, 25 years later, maybe Drood's time has come!  Let's hear it for a revival!  (I vote Angela Lansbury for Princess Puffer!)

But, until that time has come, and eventually it will... here are some video clips to remember the original by:

The TV Commercial



The 1986 Tony Awards - "There You Are" and "Don't Quit While You're Ahead"



The Music Video - A Pop version of "Don't Quit While You're Ahead"




And footage from the actual production - including the most incredible held notes in any show ever - "The Writing on the Wall" (For my buddy, T.)




Comments?  Leave one here, email me or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.93

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Public Theater: Off-Broadway to Broadway, Again and Again

With the announcement yesterday that the Al Pacino-led production of The Merchant of Venice would have a limited run this fall/winter at the Broadhurst Theatre, and the announcement last week confirming that Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson would be transferring to the Jacobs Theatre for a commercial run, The Public Theater continues a long tradition of bringing its off-Broadway shows to Broadway.  From its downtown theater space to its outdoor Delacorte Theatre in Central Park, a wide variety of plays, musicals, one-man shows and important revivals have made the transfer to the Great White Way.

Top: The Public Theater
Bottom: The Delacorte Theatre
Legendary producer Joseph Papp began what is now known as the Public Theater back in 1955, when he began the New York Shakespeare Festival in Central Park, offering free Shakespeare to New Yorkers for the first time.  Later, he created New York's first travelling theater.  Among the Public Theatre's many achievements, it was also among the very first professional theatres to employ "color blind casting," with no less than James Earl Jones appearing in The Cherry Orchard.  What today is common practice and rarely even noticed, was quite avante garde and controversial.  The Public Theater still operates the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park, along with it's flagship space, the former Astor Public Library.


Coming This Season: The Merchant of Venice and
Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson
Some facts:
  • The Public Theater has been awarded 42 Tonys, 40 Drama Desks and 4 Pulitzer Prizes among many awards.
  • It won the Special Tony Award 3 times: 1958, 1970 and 1984, when A Chorus Line became the longest-running show in Broadway history.
  • The Drama Desk Awards presented the company a special achievement award in 2005, in honor of its 50th anniversary.

A book about the man who started it all:
Joseph Papp

23 of its plays, musicals, revivals and one-person shows were either nominated and/or won the Tony for Best in the Category.  The winners were:
  • 1972: Best Play, Sticks and Bones
  • 1972: Best Musical: Two Gentlemen of Verona
  • 1973: Best Play, That Championship Season
  • 1976: Best Musical, A Chorus Line
1976 
  • 1981: Best Reproduction of a Musical: The Pirates of Penzance
  • 1986: Best Musical: The Mystery of Edwin Drood
  • 1993: Best Play: Angels in America: Millennium Approaches
  • 1994: Best Play: Angels in America: Perestroika
  • 2002: Best Theatrical Event: Elaine Stritch: At Liberty!
  • 2003: Best Play: Take Me Out
  • 2009: Best Revival: Hair
1986
Some of its most notable productions also include: The Normal Heart, The Threepenny Opera (Raul Julia), The Colored Museum, Hamlet (Kevin Kline), For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf, Bring on 'Da Noise/Bring on 'Da Funk, The Wild Party, Runaways, Topdog/Underdog, and Caroline, or Change.

With these two new critically acclaimed shows, that award-winning tradition is bound to continue!


Comments: Leave one here or email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com.
Questions: Ask me anything at http://www.formspring.me/. Look under "jkstheatrescene" or "Jeff Kyler."
Jeff