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Popular Broadway Songs [Youtbe Clips]

topdog

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RIP - Barbara Cook

Barbara Cook

If you were to ask me what my favorite voice in musical theater is there would be no contest - it is Barbara Cook. No one else has an operatic soprano that is so infinitely versatile and expressive. She never sounded stilted or high-brow. Whether she was singing about finding love in The Music Man or ice cream in She Loves Me, the voice was a perfect fit.

So today is a very sad day. Her health had been declining, but she was still singing last year, though in a wheel chair. For those that have never heard her, and those that treasure her, here are a few samples of what this woman could do.

When You Wish Upon a Star by Leigh Harline and Ned Washington from Walt Disney's Pinocchio.


A simple, familiar song shows off maybe her most distinctive feature - she makes everything sound effortless, as if she is doing nothing more than reciting the lyrics for you.




Till There Was You be Meredith Wilson from The Music Man


Perhaps her most indelible role on Broadway was as the original Marian the Librarian in The Music Man opposite Robert Preston. In 1987 she performed a signature song from that show on the Tony Awards.


Losing My Mind by Stephen Sondheim from Follies.


Barbara became known as one of the best known interpreters of Stephen Sondheim's music. In 1985 she performed in a concert version of the musical Follies gave the definitive version of this iconic song.

For more information

  • New York Times Obituary
  • Glitter and Be Gay from Candide - Generations of sopranos have cursed Ms. Cook for executing this Leonard Bernstein aria so precisely that few are able to follow in her footsteps.
  • Seth Rudetsky - Deconstructs "Glitter And Be Gay" from Candide - Seth musically shows you how Bernstein and Cook created the famous light aria.
  • Ice Cream by Sheldon Harnick and Jerry Bock from She Loves Me - Barbara's last big Broadway show in 1964 (which was successfully revived last year).
 
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Closing Notice

Comet-gate

In a turn of events that no one predicted (at least before 10 days ago) Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812 posted their closing notice yesterday - they will play their last show on September 3. Bandstand, Groundhog Day, Anastasia, and A Bronx Tale are still running, but The Great Comet is fizzling out.

UPDATE - Bandstand just announced a closing date - September 17.


But that's the simple part - it's the horror show that led up to the well-liked show closing that is stunning. The last two weeks have been a roller-coaster and will probably be taught as a case study in public relations disasters in business schools for years.

A Change of Cast

Last month, you may recall, Josh Groban finished his run as Pierre. Obviously his massive fan base helped sell the show, so people wondered how the show would do without him. In the spring the producers announced that Okieriete "Oak" Onaodowan from Hamilton would take over for Groban and do three months in the role. (I know, not exactly a household name.)

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Okieriete "Oak" Onaodowan as Pierre

Oak had a delay coming in to the show so he had only been in about two weeks before the producers made a blockbuster announcement: Mandy Patinkin would take over the part in mid-August through October. They would cut Oak's run short, put in Mandy, and then still have to find another Pierre in October.

Day One - The Reaction

But the fan reaction wasn't the unreserved praise the producers were expecting. Most people were excited about Mandy but were somewhat upset that Oak had been so quickly kicked to the curb.

That was bad PR, but fixable.

The body blow came that afternoon (things happen so fast in social media) when Twitter erupted with complaints that the producers were firing a black actor and replacing him with a white one. This was tied to overall complaints that too many shows had no minority representation.

While that may be true of some shows, it was definitely not true of The Great Comet where more than half the cast, including the leads, were people of color.

The producers said nothing, as the negative tweets multiplied, now picked up by a Black theater web site and black actors like The Color Purple's Cynthia Erivo who were outraged by Oak's treatment. The tweets from stars sent the story out from the theater chat boards and into the public arena.

Day Three - The Collapse

Two days later composer Dave Malloy tried to calm things down saying that everything had been worked out with Oak and that he would be welcome back in the future. He also explained that the ticket sales were falling so they needed to book a star just to keep the show running.

Oak then made his only public statement during the entire affair to say simply that he would not be returning after his scheduled exit date.

Later that day Mandy Patinkin announced that had withdrawn from the show. He did not want to upset or displace a fellow actor.

We have come to the end of the facts. Things now get worse.

Producers Scramble / Fans Find a Scapegoat

Now the backlash to the backlash begins. Hordes of Great Comet fans blame Oak for not speaking out to defend the show and for not extending his departure date to cover for Patinkin's absence. Rumors of poor behavior and lack of preparation on Oak's part leak allegedly from cast and crew at the Imperial theater. Theater boards light up with vows that Oak will "never eat lunch in this town again", or some such rancour.

Behind the scenes the producers are scrambling. First of all, they need a star. Mandy was perfect - though very short term because of his TV schedule. What they need is a Patinkin/Groban sized star to keep the show running. But no one wants to touch this toxic situation - they can't even get star's agents to return their calls.

Aside from a star, they at least need a warm body to put on stage to play Pierre. Fortunately, they have two on hand - composer Dave Malloy played Pierre off-Broadway and substituted for Josh Groban when he was on vacation. And regular standby Scott Stangland who is actually the original Pierre when the show premiered in Boston and also played the part for the two weeks between Groban leaving and Oak coming in.

90

Writer/Composer Dave Malloy as Pierre

A week went by - no word from the producers. Would the show close? When? Should anyone bother buying tickets? Who would be playing Pierre? And on what dates?

Do The Math

Ticket sales had to be in a death spiral. The producers started this episode with only a few options for success, and now they seemed to have none. The show had taken in well over $1 million a week with Josh Groban, and was still doing $800 - 900 thousand with Oak. That was respectable. But Broadway costs are steep. They were paying back their investors slowly because the costs of a large cast, star, and union production are high. (For comparison purposes, Dear Evan Hansen didn't make much more per week than Comet, but they have a cast of eight and a minimalist set. They recouped all their investment cost last month.)

Broadway shows run for different reasons, but they all close for the same one: when costs exceed revenue you have to pull the plug. Yesterday the inevitable happened; they posted their closing notice.

Poison Oak

Before we wrap this up, I think it is only fair to consider the person some people see as the central character in this drama: Okieriete Onaodowan.

Oak was lauded for his role as James Madison/ Hercules Mulligan in Hamilton. That was a dream cast and a dream show. Comet on the other hand had to be a nightmare. Pierre is a plum role, but very different from Oak's work in Hamilton. In that show the character was created around Oak's abilities and strengths. Pierre was first a role for composer Malloy, then adapted for Groban. But Oak was coming in as a replacement. He had to mold himself to the role, not the other way around.

So my first point about Oak is that I think he was miscast. Okieriete is not a conservatory-trained actor, he is a rapper and performer. He did not spend his early twenties trying out Shakespeare and Chekhov. He made a name for himself doing his own thing. I can only assume he thought he would be free to do that in Comet.

Instead he was expected to execute the track set down by Groban. My guess is that is what accounted for the delay in getting him in the show. Typically, a replacement actor is rehearsed in a studio by the stage manager (and if it is a musical by the dance captain as well). Then, before they make their debut, there is one "put in" rehearsal in costume on stage with the whole company. That's it - then they are on. Oak, reportedly needed a lot more rehearsal than that. To be fair, Pierre has to play piano and accordion during the show - so there is more involved here than just learning lines.

So, Oak had a rocky start, and apparently if backstage gossip is to be believed, has not become the beloved figure Mr. Groban had been.

The story reported by Michael Reidel in the NY Post, and in an article in Forbes magazine, is that before announcing Patinkin, the producers negotiated Oak out of his contract, presumably by buying him out (i.e. agreeing to pay him for all of his weeks, even though he would no longer be in the show). In return, Oak agreed to make the publicity rounds with Mandy during the transition.

The problem is that once the race card was put in play (and note - not by him), Oak was painted in to a corner. If he came out and told the world that he was just fine being fired by his white producers, he would look like an Uncle Tom. An Uncle Tom is an expression that to black people means someone who goes along with white oppression in order to keep their job, or just keep from rocking the boat. Essentially it is a cultural traitor. That's what Oak would have been stepping in if he spoke up and tried to make things easy for the Comet producers. (Who, by the way, had just fired him.)

Oak did pretty much what any PR person would tell their client to do in that situation: keep your head down and stay out of it.

And that is why just when the Comet producers desperately needed Oak to speak out and defend them from both the unfair firing and racism charges, he was silent. He was the only person who could turn the story around - but ironically it was the story itself that forced him to be silent. Plus, maybe he wasn't feeling particularly generous to the The Great Comet production at that time.

The Buck Stops Here

Which made the outcome inevitable. The bottom line was they needed a star, but the controversy closed any doors that might have been open. After that, it was just math.

So, we salute Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812 - an invigorating and unique show that garnered many fans.

The producer's mentioned a tour - in 2019. It's possible that may never happen. Comet is a tough show to tour with it's environmental staging. Plus that fact that it didn't pay back it's investors means that it would start a tour in debt, another strike against it.

We'll see. It could set up shop in Chicago, London or Los Angeles with a fresh start and star. Actually only London would really be a fresh start, because the debt and union contracts would follow any US legitimate production.

As the Comet fades the fans are still ranging. If I were Oak I would take a body guard with me every time I go out the stage door.
 
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Groundhog Day

In cheerier news, Bill Murray turned up to see the musical Groundhog Day Tuesday night. Wait - it gets better.

In cheerier news, Bill Murray turned up to see the musical Groundhog Day again Wednesday night.

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Bill Murray visits Andy Karl back stage at the August Wilson Theater.

From the NY Times:
Throughout the evening, Murray was gracious with awestruck attendees, posing for selfies, leaving the bartending staff generous tips and even offering two young kids some of his Junior Mints.

Following the performance, Murray was asked why the musical, and the film, resonated so much. "The idea that we just have to try again. We just have to try again," Murray said. "It's such a beautiful, powerful idea."

Murray, who attended the show with his brother and Groundhog Day co-star Brian Doyle-Murray and the film's co-screenwriter Danny Rubin, was also "visibly sobbing" at the end of the performance.

"As actors, I can't respect enough how disciplined you are and how serving you are of the process," Murray told the cast backstage. "There's nothing worse than seeing someone that's out for themselves. And you are all in it for each other."

This week Groundhog Day also released a fun video that shows some of the fast costume changes behind the scenes.

 
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RIP Barbara Cook. What a great talent.
 

topdog

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Barbara Cook

RIP Barbara Cook. What a great talent.

More remembrances are pouring in for Barbara Cook.

CUNY-TV's Theater Talk program re-ran an interview they did with Cook about The Music Man in 2010.



Also Boston Public Television reran the The Boston Pops episode with Mandy Patinkin and Barbara.


BC_CJ.jpg


BC_LB.jpg


BC_BP.jpg


BC_KC.jpg
 
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Favorite Dances

I've posted some of my favorite songs from Broadway shows. Here is one of my favorite dances: "Steam Heat" from the 1955 musical The Pajama Game.


This is from the movie which used two of the performers from Broadway: Carol Haney (center) and Buzz Miller (left). (Buzz was Jerome Robbins's lover.) They were joined by Hollywood dancer Ken LeRoy (right) who would later play Bernado in the movie West Side Story.

This is the moment the Bob Fosse style was born. This was the first musical Fosse choreographed - though he had done single numbers for MGM films. There was a throw-away number in the second act - some amateur entertainment for a union rally. Without really being encumbered by character or storytelling, Fosse simply produced a number in the style he would use when dancing at parties or for friends.

Here he used what would later be recognized as his trademarks: turned in feet, slumped posture, hats, and isolated slinky movements. The Fosse Style was born fully formed.

This number was recreated in the 1999 Broadway show Fosse. It is still studied and learned step for step by young dancers today - and now they perform it at parties and for their friends.
 

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Favorite Dances

"Turkey Lurkey Time" from Promises, Promises (1969) choreographed by Michael Bennett


Let's be clear - this is one of the worst songs ever written for the American musical theatre. Hal David's lyric is muddled faux sentimental generic holiday nonsense that I am sure he thought would be a Christmas radio hit. But let's leave that behind.

Because that's what Michael Bennett did. He ignored the song itself, and went with "secretaries do a dance at an office party" - and being the very young genius he was, he turned it in to a show stopping production number.

He and lead dancer Donna McKechnie (in the red dress) were both dancers on the TV show Shindig in the mid-1960s and you can see that influence here. As a matter of fact, that combination of Bennett as choreographer and McKechnie as his muse would bring down the house in two more shows after Promises: Company and of course A Chorus Line. (The short Asian girl on the left is Baayork Lee, the original Connie in A Chorus Line and later choreographer of many ACL revivals as well as other shows.)

Like "Steam Heat", this dance is Broadway canon. Every generation learns and performs it. It was even featured in the movie Camp. And of course, the gay boys can't get enough of it. Here a few Newsies entertain friends at 54 Below.
 
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topdog

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Closing Notices

Just as I am writing up a preview of the coming season, we have embers of the previous season burning out.

  • Groundhog Day announced their closing date. September 17 will be their final performance at the August Wilson Theater.
  • Ben Platt will give his final performance in Dear Evan Hansen on November 19. The show will continue to run and a replacement will be announced later.
  • On Your Feet closes this Sunday, August 20. It then begins work on a tour to launch this fall.
  • Add this to the previously announced Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 which goes dark after September 3 and Bandstand packs it in after September 17.

As I have said before, this is part of the Broadway Circle of Life: old shows have to close for new ones to come in.

So, let's shake off those blues! And especially for maythebestmancum here is Bernadette Peters full 1998 concert Live From Royal Festival Hall London.

 
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Season Preview 2017 - 2018

It's mid-August and time for a look at the upcoming 2017 - 2018 Broadway season. The two biggies won't arrive until the spring - Frozen and Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. But the marquees are up and the fall shows are already in production. The first is already in previews. We have a revue, a revival, two new musicals and a special event. So here's what's coming.


Prince of Broadway

Marquee_PrinceBway-SJF_425.jpg

In the tradition of Fosse and Jerome Robbins Broadway, this revue looks at the highlights of the shows of producer/director Hal Prince. It includes hits from such celebrated musicals as West Side Story, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Fiddler on the Roof, Cabaret, Evita, Company, Follies, A Little Night Music, Sweeney Todd, The Phantom of the Opera and more. The show was produced in Japan last year to good notices. Directed by Susan Strohman and Hal Prince. Featuring Michael Xavier (from last season's Sunset Boulevard), Karen Ziemba (Curtains, Steel Pier, Chicago), Tony Yazbeck (On the Town), Brandon Uranowitz (Falsettos), Emily Skinner (Side Show). Previews begin August 3; opens August 24


Springsteen On Broadway

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The Boss comes to Broadway for an intimate evening with just him, his stories, songs, and guitar. Tickets will go on sale through Ticketmaster's Verified Fan program, and you have to register by August 27 at BruceSpringsteen.net. Performances begin October 3 and will run through November 26. Opening night for Springsteen on Broadway is set for October 12.


The Band's Visit

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This David Yazbek musical is the one to watch, taking a similar path as Hamilton and Dear Evan Hansen. It started off-Broadway and won nearly every award for which it was eligible this year. This fall it comes to Broadway as the favorite for this year's Tony award. It tells the story of an Egyptian police band that arrives in Israel to play a concert. When a mix-up at the border leaves them stranded with no bus or hotel in sight, these unlikely travelers must seek the help of the locals. Directed by David Cromer and starring Tony Shaloub, it's first Preview is October 7 and opening night is November 9.


Once on This Island

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A revival of the 1990 musical about a a peasant girl and her star-crossed romance with a young man from the wealthy side of her Caribbean island, which is ruled by four island gods. It's directed by Michael Arden (Tony nominated for Deaf West's Spring Awakening). Previews begin November 9 and the revival opens on December 3.

SpongeBob SquarePants
The songs are by a roster of Grammy Award winners (Steven Tyler, Cyndi Lauper, They Might Be Giants, Sara Bareilles, John Legend, Lady Antebellum, Panic! At the Disco, and David Bowie) telling the story of one of TV's most beloved characters. Acclaimed Steppenwolf director Tina Landau and the groundbreaking designers behind Fun Home and Hedwig have created a theatrical undersea world. Stakes are higher than ever before as SpongeBob and all of Bikini Bottom face the total annihilation. Chaos erupts. Lives hang in the balance. And just when all hope seems lost, a most unexpected hero rises up and takes center stage. The show had a successful Chicago tryout last summer and starts previews November 6 and opens December 4.

That takes us to the holidays.

In the spring several shows already have a theater and opening dates.

  • Escape to Margaritaville at the Marquis Theatre opens March 15.
  • Carousel opens March 23.
  • Frozen opens sometime in March
  • My Fair Lady at Lincoln Center has an opening date (April 19) but no cast yet.

Yes, the spring seems a little lean, especially for new musicals, but there are a lot of shows that have opened in other theaters across the country that could come in, especially since more shows will post closing notices by the end of the year. Some possible candidates are:
  • Mean Girls - set to open in Washington DC this fall.
  • The Bodyguard - currently touring the US.
  • Dreamgirls - Transfer of the London revival with Amber Riley
  • Best Little Whorehouse in Texas - a new revival directed by Rob Ashford.
  • Chasing Rainbows - bio of young Judy Garland; played last summer at the Godspeed Opera House
  • The Honeymooners - Michael McGrath, Hank Azaria, Leslie Kritzer and Megan Hilty are doing a production at the Papermill Playhouse this fall.
  • Damn Yankees - Kathleen Marhsall directs Bryan Cranston as Mr. Applegate.
  • Cher - Musical based on the music of Cher. Staged readings were done in January.
  • Diner - Sheryl Crowe music & lyrics based on Barry Levinson film. Productions have been done in Washington DC and Delaware.

Note - none of the above have announced any intention of coming to Broadway, but these are shows that have already done a workshop or out-of-town production. We'll see what happens. Something may appear unexpectedly out of the blue.
 
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Crosswalk Musicals

James Corden did another of his "crosswalk" musicals - this one is Hair with guest star Lin-Manuel Miranda.

If you have never encountered this feature before, it is simply James putting together abbreviated versions of popular Broadway shows that he and his staff perform in the the crosswalk across the street from CBS Television City in Los Angeles while traffic is stopped for a red light. Must be seen to be believed.


See some of his previous outings.
 
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Anastasia

Anastasia released some new clips from the show this past week. It's a beautiful show with a ground-breaking mix of lighting, choreography and projections to add the fantasy element.

 

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Favorite Songs

Falling Slowly from Once sung by Steve Kazee and Cristin Milioti for the original cast album.


Steve Kazee just did a reading for a new musical based on the film The Sting. Sounds interesting! Here is Steve's emotional Tony Award acceptance speech when he won for Once in 2012.
 
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Prince of Broadway

playbill_PrinceBroadway.jpg


"Prince of Broadway, the lavish, unwieldy, mostly enjoyable revue celebrating Prince's long and unparalleled career of presenting daring new musicals (usually based on difficult subject matter and incorporating strong visual concepts), has finally opened on Broadway after many stops and starts, and I'm "sorry-grateful" to see it there." - Matt Windman, amNY

And we're back! Last night the first new musical of the 2017-2018 season opened. Prince of Broadway is a musical revue that combines "greatest hits" from the career of producer-director Harold Prince with insight into the man and his creative process.


The revue format is as old as Broadway, and I have seen some good ones, particularly 1999's Fosse which packed in an evening of the work of director-choreographer Bob Fosse.

But the critics seem to be perplexed about Prince. Great performers, memorable musical moments - but the media seem to wonder why this was being presented and if they really learned anything about Prince, Hal.

POB_Prince-Strohma425n.jpg

Prince of Broadway is co-directed by the man himself - Hal Prince, along with director-choreographer Susan Strohman (The Producers)

The clunky segues between numbers aside, "Prince of Broadway" most resembles a Met Opera gala, where one singer after another comes out in full costume to deliver a big aria. - Robert Hofler. The Wrap

Several of the performers got great notices. Ramin Karimloo plays the Phantom of the Opera - as well he should since he was the original Phantom from Love Never Dies and then played the role in London. Tony Yazbeck (On The Town, A Chorus Line) was singled out for his Tony in West Side Story, and Buddy in Follies. Emily Skinner (Side Show, Billy Elliot) takes on Joanne in Company and reinterprets "The Ladies Who Lunch".

POB_Company425.jpg

Ramin Karimloo (down center) and Emily Skinner (top center) and cast do songs from Company with an abbreviated reinterpretation of Boris Aronson's original set.

But it looks like we are off to a shaky start.

For more information

 
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Favorite Songs

Everyone's A Little Bit Racist from Avenue Q


Avenue Q imagines Sesame Street type puppets dealing with twentysomething problems. In one of their more insightful moments, they admit that prejudice is only human and maybe it's more important that we recognize it in ourselves rather than point it out in others.
 

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Your Weekend Musical

CFA_Sign_525_02.jpg

Come From Away is certainly the surprise hit from last year. Nobody was really sure how sophisticated New York theatergoers would respond to a show that was about Canadians being generous and kind. But maybe because it was the opposite of what we see on the news every night, it seemed like a revelation.

This is a bootleg (in HD) of the whole show. So... it may not be up for a long time. Watch it while it's available.

Update: Video has been deleted. I'll update if I find a new link.
 
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Favorite Dances

One from A Chorus Line

I thought I was so cool back around 1977 and I was in college I met someone who knew a guy who knew a guy and could teach me Michael Bennett's choreography to the finale from A Chorus Line. I'd seen the show twice by then and learning the steps was like being inducted into an elite society.


"One" is simply the master (Michael Bennett) at work. Michael needed an ending for his show and it had to be the chorus line to end all chorus lines. By this point in the show we know each of the dancers individually, but here they all merge back in to that anonymous display of white and gold sequins in shifting shapes and patterns. Here the whole is much more than the sum of the parts and we are forced to acknowledge that their ambition to be part of this creative wonder is honorable.

This, like the other dances I have mentioned ("Turkey Lurkey" and "Steam Heat") are all dances that are passed down from one generation to another. They don't just exist in history but are taught in schools and workshops so each new generation gets to be part of an unbroken line that started in the imagination of Michael Bennett and continues to this day.
 

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Favorite Dances

Not exactly a Broadway song - but this edit of dancers from the heyday of Hollywood film musicals always puts a smile on my face.

 
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Your Weekend Musical

OklahomaATL-Banner550.jpg

The 1943 Richard Rodgers & Oscar Hammerstein musical Oklahoma! changed the concept of American musical theater in a way that lasts all the way up to today.

  • It completely integrated story, song, dance and character - no tap dancing chorus girls in revealing costumes or comics doing vaudeville shtick. Set in Oklahoma Territory outside the town of Claremore in 1906, it tells the story of cowboy Curly McLain and his romance with farm girl Laurey Williams.
  • It was the first long-running hit - 2212 performances - a record that stood strong until My Fair Lady surpassed it.
  • It produced the first Original Broadway Cast Album - in a box set of 78 RPM discs that were the biggest selling record set of the time.
  • Maybe most importantly it initiated the partnership of Rodgers & Hammerstein which went on to produce Carousel, The King & I, and The Sound of Music.

I have not one, but two full productions of Oklahoma! for you to choose from - one from the stage and the other from the screen.

The 1998 National Theater London Production


This is an incredible revival directed by Trevor Nunn (Les Miserables) and choreographed by Susan Stroman (The Producers, Prince of Broadway) that really digs in to the seriousness of the drama. The production came to Broadway two years later with two of it's stars - Josefina Gabrielle as Laurey, Shuler Hensley as Jud Fry (both nominated for Tony Awards, and both won Oliver awards for the London version). But one cast member couldn't make the transfer because Actors Equity in the US insisted that an American actor be cast - which was good news for Patrick Wilson (Angels in America, Phantom of the Opera on film and Fargo on TV) and started his career.

Whatever happened to that other guy that played Curly in London - Hugh somebody? Well, he probably did OK in the long run as well.


The 1955 Film Version


It may be hard to appreciate today what an eye-opening milestone the film version of Oklahoma! was in 1955. First of all, it wasn't a studio film - it was an independent production produced by Mike Todd and his partners along with Rodgers & Hammerstein (who after Oklahoma!, Carousel, and South Pacific had more than enough money in the bank to finance their first film adaption themselves).

It was the first movie filmed in TODD-AO 70mm widescreen. That means in original engagements it was shown on a screen the size of the side of a large building in a sumptuous movie palace with reserve seats and an intermission. However, because there was no way at the time to convert TODD-AO to regular 35mm prints for regular movie theaters, they had to shoot everything twice - which means that there are two versions of the film each with different takes of the scenes. Which version you saw depended on if you saw it in a first run movie palace in a big city, or at a neighborhood cinema.

Much of the film - especially the beginning - is shot outside which is very rare for the period. This gives Oklahoma! an authentic look that is closer to that of Giant than Singin' in the Rain. However the interiors were shot at MGM studios in Culver City - maybe on some of the same soundstages as Singin' in the Rain.

Gordon MacRea and Shirley Jones made their film debuts in Oklahoma! with Rod Steiger as Jud. It was directed by Fred Zinnemann (High Noon, From Here to Eternity, A Man for All Seasons) and choreographed by original Broadway choreographer Agnes DeMille.
 

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Glee

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On this day in 2009 the Fox TV series Glee began its regular run. It's hard to believe that there was a time before we knew Rachel, Finn, Kurt, Mr. Shue, Coach Sylvester.

And Blaine. :big hug:

Glee put Broadway regularly into its song mix and brought Andrew Lloyd Webber, Stephen Sondheim, and Jule Styne to a new generation. Here is one of its more romantic show tune moments - Kurt and Blaine sing "Come What May" from the movie Moulin Rouge.

 
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