Showing posts with label Adam Guettel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adam Guettel. Show all posts

Monday, February 3, 2025

Broadway Who's Who: Mary Rodgers

It seems that Mary Rodgers was famous for many things. She's part of a Broadway family - she was the daughter of Richard Rodgers, and she's Adam Guettel's mother. She was an acclaimed and popular children's author, writing such works as A Billion for Boris, Summer Switch and her most popular novel, Freaky Friday. That book has taken on a life of its own as two motion pictures (and an upcoming sequel), a TV movie and even as a musical! But theater fans know her best as the composer of such shows as Working, The Madwoman of Central Park West, The Hot Spot, The Mad Show and her most famous musical, Once Upon a Mattress, which made Carol Burnett a Broadway sensation, and was televised in two different versions, and most recently as an acclaimed Encores! presentation and Broadway revival.

Even after her death in 2014, her legacy continues, with the publication of her autobiography, Shy, and the continued popularity of Mattress, which has remained a staple of high school, college and community theater seasons more than 60 years after its premiere!

Broadway Who's Who:
Mary Rodgers


DID YOU KNOW?
BIRTH: January 11, 1931
DEATH: June 26, 2014
BROADWAY LIGHTS DIMMED: June 28, 2014
BIRTHPLACE: New York City, NY
EDUCATION: Wellesley College
HONORS: 2 Tony Award nominations: Best Musical 1960 (Once Upon a Mattress) and Best Score 1978 (Working)


with dad, Richard Rodgers (left) and son, Adam Guettel (right)

THEATER CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

THE MAD WOMAN OF CENTRAL PARK WEST, THE HOT SPOT


THE MAD SHOW - Off-Broadway, starring Linda Lavin and JoAnn Worley



WORKING - 1978 Tony Award nomination, Best Score

   

ONCE UPON A MATTRESS - 1960 Tony Award nomination, Best Musical





AUTHOR HIGHLIGHTS



Monday, January 29, 2024

Review: Days of Wine and Roses

Review of the Sunday evening preview performance on January 7, 2024 at Studio 54 in New York City. Starring Kelli O'Hara, Brian d'Arcy James, Byron Jennings, David Jennings, and Tabitha Lawing. Music, lyrics and orchestrations by Adam Guettel. Book by Craig Lucas. Based on the play by JP Miller and the Warner Brothers film. Scenic design by Lizzie Clachan. Costume design by Dede Ayite. Lighting design by Ben Stanton. Sound design by Kai Harada. Musical direction by Kimberly Grigsby. Choreography by Sergio Trujillo and Karla Puno Garcia. Direction by Michael Greif. 1 hour 50 minutes with no intermission.

The air of Studio 54 was filled with excited anticipation for the second preview of the new musical Days of Wine and Roses. It really felt like an event. Would the latest from Adam Guettel (music and lyrics) and Craig Lucas (book) work as well on a larger Broadway stage as it did at the Atlantic off-Broadway? I didn't see the earlier production, so I can't compare, but I can say that it was Opening Night ready from where I sat. 

On a sleek, yet somehow foreboding unit set (design by Lizzie Clachan), we are transported to late 50s/early 60s New York. The environs, enhanced by Ben Stanton's by the mood-of-the-scene lighting and Dede Ayite's spot on, character-driven costumes, tell us as much about the central characters' descent into alcohol addiction as the music and script do. 

Based on a previous play and a famous film, the musical delves deep into the crushing weight of being dependent on booze to feel connected to life and your loved ones. Essentially a two character show, with a handful of important supporting roles, Wine and Roses is both an intimate examination of the relationship between Joe and Kirsten, and a broader cautionary tale. Under Michael Greif's tight direction, each moment builds on the last, and he has carefully steered the piece away from what could have easily become a histrionic soap opera. He deftly tells us where to look and what to see, but without judgement, leaving us to ponder and deal with our own feelings about what we are witnessing. I myself can attest to a wide range of often conflicting emotions. It is quite a ride, one that left me spent and in awe. In many ways, it reminded me of his work on Next to Normal.


The uniformly superb company of actors drive this piece to dizzying heights and terrifying lows. There is a small, hard-working ensemble called upon to fill in the gaps, acting purposefully like background players do in film. They definitely contribute to the brilliant whole of the show. David Jennings offers a tower-of-strength support system as the AA sponsor for Joe. What makes this role interesting is that back in the day, AA wasn't as widely known or accepted, so what we today are familiar with as far as warning signs and steps, could easily have come across as cliche or empty platitudes, but instead come off as fresh and sincere. Mr. Jennings' delivery never comes across as preachy. As Kirsten's father, Byron Jennings gives a brilliant multi-layered performance as a man fighting his own demons while helplessly struggling to save his daughter. There were times when he stood silently off to the side, almost in the shadows, and you could feel every emotion he was feeling. Making her Broadway debut as the couple's young daughter, Tabitha Lawing joins a growing list of strong child actors who give sincere, deep portrayals. Not since Sydney Lucas in Fun Home have I seen such an absolutely real performance from someone so young. Brava!

When you have two actors as beloved as Kelli O'Hara and Brian d'Arcy James, it can be a dicey thing. Will they meet our impossibly high standards for their work, or will they disappoint? Here, they have made our standards even higher. Both are giving career-defining performances that will be remembered for seasons to come. Their chemistry is palpable - even (or especially) when they are careening away from each other in a downward spiral. 


 

Mr. James is amazing as he navigates the tricky journey from marginally sleazy businessman with all the right words to violent alcoholic to teetering-on-the-edge sober caretaker. At times, he charms. Other times, he is cruel and manipulative - you hate him. But a lot of the time you pity him. (To say more could give away how things play out here.) There is one scene in particular where I felt like I was seeing him in previously uncharted waters. During what amounts to an aria, he desperately, destructively searches for a hidden bottle of booze. He was chilling and brilliant. Ms. O'Hara also navigates a terrifying journey from smart as a whip, totally in control teetotaler to fun party girl to tragic alcoholic. At times, she charms. Other times, she is easily manipulated - you want to shake her awake. And, yes, a lot of the time, you pity her. She makes some very poor decisions regarding her family, lying and wallowing in self-pity. The contrast between her happy confidence in the opening scenes and one particular scene later in a hotel room is shocking. Her transformation both emotionally and physically is as brilliant as it is troubling. The bottom line is that both of these actors are at the peak of their careers, giving tour-de-force performances.

This is not a show for the casual, let's-see-a-musical crowd. If you only like brassy, dance-y spectaculars, this won't be for you. But if you like dramatic, thought-provoking theater that expects you to engage, get a ticket and buckle up. Guettel's jazzy, complex score and Lucas' tension filled book, along with brilliant, once-in-a-lifetime performances will remind you that musicals are, indeed, art.

📸: A. Foster, J. Marcus

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

ReDISCoveries: Myths and Hymns (1999 Off-Broadway Recording)

 ReDISCoveries: Myths and Hymns
(1999 Off-Broadway Recording)

Jeff has kindly invited me to revisit and review some of the older cast recordings in my collection. Every other week or so, I’ll write about a new CD, offering some general impressions followed by my thoughts about each individual song. I continue this week with the 1999 off-Broadway cast recording of Adam Guettel’s Myths and Hymns.


This recording of Adam Guettel’s modern song cycle is perhaps the least familiar one on my CD shelf. I’ve never seen a performance of the work (rather few have had that opportunity!), and before this week I had only given the CD one casual listening since buying a used copy about ten years ago. It’s interesting to approach a score like this with an almost total veil of ignorance about its music and lyrics. This approach is greatly facilitated by the non-narrative nature of the work, since one can appreciate each individual song without trying to figure out a story that connects them.


 

Myths and Hymns had a very brief run at the Public Theater in 1997 under a title shared by one of its songs, Saturn Returns. This recording features the full cast from that production, along with some performers who had participated in the show’s development. The list includes several Broadway icons (Audra McDonald, Mandy Patinkin, Billy Porter), a couple of fan favorites (Jose Llana, Annie Golden), and the composer/lyricist himself.


The 13-player orchestra is in a sense the complement of the Light in the Piazza ensemble: this one is relatively heavy on winds and percussion and light on string instruments. (Both use a harp, which seems central to the dense musical textures Guettel tends to create.) Playing orchestrations by the late Don Sebesky and Jamie Lawrence, this small group manages to evoke several different musical styles and create a variety of unusual effects.


Although the songs in Myths and Hymns are not connected by an overarching storyline, they form a cohesive unit on the basis of a shared theme, suggested by the name of the work. In a note included in the libretto for the recording, Guettel writes that he was inspired by books on mythology as well as a hymnal he found in a used book shop. He discovered that “they have a lot in common - a desire to transcend earthly bounds, to bond with something or someone greater.” While I can’t say that these songs affected me quite as deeply as this lofty description might suggest, I did find listening to this score to be an intense and unusual experience, often quite beautiful, constantly changing, and never dull.


THE SONGS


I use a star (*) to mark the songs I particularly like, and my overall favorite gets two stars (**). The main performer(s) for each song are indicated in parentheses.


*Children of the Heavenly King (Theresa McCarthy): We’re thrown immediately into the depths of post-Sondheim modernism with this gentle but highly dissonant introduction to the themes of the song cycle. The singing here is beautiful and ethereal, comfortingly grounded in musical theater rather than opera. The first verse of this is accompanied by bare piano chords, while the second verse has a more piquant woodwind arrangement.


At the Sounding (Vivian Cherry, Darius de Haas, Llana, McCarthy): This strident fanfare of a song features some glorious vocal arrangements for the quartet of singers, who call us together to hear the stories that form the remainder of the work. It’s pretty amazing that this orchestra can produce such brash and brassy sounds (the only actual brass instrument is a single trumpet). 


Saturn Returns (Guettel): The jarring piano chords are back, as the soloist sings at first of vague memories and longings. Pretty soon this develops into a full-fledged cry for something transcendent, as he is joined by the full orchestra and vocal ensemble, pleading: “Oh, get me up like Icarus/And give me wings like Pegasus/Just get me out and get me high!”


Icarus (Guettel, Lawrence Clayton): We’re on more solid Broadway-like ground with this song, a very funky take on the famous mythological episode. Guettel serves as narrator, with Clayton interjecting his paternal warnings to Icarus. Eventually the rest of the ensemble joins in as the song reaches its rather psychedelic climax.


Migratory V (McCarthy): After a long and plaintive oboe solo, the singer embarks on a tranquil meditation on human achievement, concluding that only by striving together can we reach our potential: “A migratory V/How wonderful if that’s what God could see.” 


Pegasus (Porter, Lynette DuPre, McDonald): This guitar-driven folk-like song is a three-way dialogue among Pegasus (DuPre), her rider (Porter), and the gadfly that bit her, causing her to throw him off (McDonald). The focus here is on the clever, fast-past lyrics, as when the gadfly observes: “They seize upon the incident/Look for implications/When it was only Zeus again/Venting his frustrations.”


Link (Cherry, de Haas, Annie Golden, Llana, McCarthy, Bob Stillman): This brief track serves its literal purpose, consisting of some vocal murmuring to transition into the next song.



Hero and Leander (Guettel): In this comparatively conventional love song, the narrator compares his own new-found love to that of the legendary couple. In the tradition of similar romantic pop ballads, the accompaniment builds from a solo piano to full orchestral climax, before receding again for the final few measures.


*Sisyphus (Patinkin): This song, with a delivery reminiscent of Patinkin’s vocal antics in “The Day Off” from Sunday in the Park With George, is about as close as the score gets to genuine musical comedy. The title character vents his famous frustrations with increasing ferocity as the vocal ensemble interrupts with unhelpful comments, punctuated by loud jabs from the orchestra. While this song isn’t as musically interesting as others in the score, it’s pretty fun, and an effective way to tell this story.


**Come to Jesus (McCarthy, Guettel): In this six-minute song - somehow both the longest and most concise in the show - a young couple, Matthew and Emily, exchange letters, the orchestra recapitulating the music from the very beginning of the score. She, writing from a doctor’s office, wonders if the couple has made the right decision about ending her pregnancy, and implores him not to let the experience tear them apart. He, writing from an airport, replies that they are each alone now, and prays for forgiveness. Much of the song is taken up by a jagged and expansive setting of a traditional religious text, allowing each of them to express their hopes and their despairs without having to come up with words to pin them down. The overall effect is of a complete mini-drama unfolding over the course of a simple exchange of letters.


How Can I Lose You? (Golden): This song, a fast but amiable waltz, drips pleasantly of Sondheim pastiche, evoking especially the melody and rhythm of “Agony” from Into the Woods, combined with the tone and theme of “Losing My Mind” from Follies. I know I’ve invoked Sondheim several times in this write-up, but it’s hard to avoid hearing his influence in this score - and particularly in this song, which seems like a deliberate homage to his style.


There’s a Shout (Cherry): This song is a straightforward, full-throated Gospel pastiche, in both music and lyrics. It’s not a song I’d probably listen to on its own, but it does make for a pleasant detour in the context of this generally heavy score.


*Awaiting You (Porter): This song, featuring the score’s most enigmatic lyrics, seems to be a meditation on the contradictions of life on earth, simultaneously a great gift and a series of losses and frustrated hopes. Regardless of its meaning, it features a young Porter already exhibiting his unique and very theatrical vocal talents. Although I think Guettel might go to the well a bit too often in this score with songs that follow the quiet-loud-suddenly-quiet-again format, this is probably the best example of that type.


The Great Highway (McCarthy, de Haas): This is another transitional passage, consisting of a rather desperate flow of “oohs” and “aahs” from the singers (wordless vocal lines seem to be a Guettel trademark), with a slightly nightmarish orchestral accompaniment.


There’s a Land (Guettel): The mood is more celebratory in this jaunty song, with the singers imagining a land “of pure delight,” perhaps invisible but not too far off or difficult to get to. The texture of this song is striking, with sudden shifts in tempo, but a little disorienting.


Saturn Returns (reprise) (Guettel): This is not a recapitulation but an “update” to the earlier version of the song. Where the singer previously focused on the pain of longing for something beyond the ordinary, here, in the work’s finale, the singer acknowledges that it is precisely this emptiness that can be our best guide to pursuing the things that we really need.


Next time I’ll return to more familiar territory: the 2006 Original Broadway Cast Recording of Spring Awakening


Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Musical of the Month: Floyd Collins: The Score


This week, we end our Musical of the Month series on the off-Broadway show Floyd Collins. Specifically, I'll be sharing a few thoughts on the score (music and lyrics) by Adam Guettel.

I'll begin where I probably should end, with an admission: the complexities and richness of the piece is such that one could write a book about it. So to try and even explain a little of it can't possibly do it justice. I'll just suffice it to say that this score is a pinnacle of the new modern musical era, so advanced is its sound. Like all of the new scores (and composers) of this turn of the century, post-Sondheim generation, Collins pushes boundaries, demands much of its audience, and propels the innately American art form, the musical, once again to the forefront of music that deserves - begs - to be studied.

Not unlike his equally wondrous Light in the Piazza, it forces you to pay attention, and in doing so, makes you get lost in the world it creates. Appropriately, Floyd Collins has a hillbilly/bluegrass sound, rich with fiddling, banjo playing and harmonicas. But all of those sounds also come through in an almost symphonic way, too. The result is a tightly woven score that is simultaneously evocative of its rural Kentucky setting  and character-specific. The lyrics are drawn from simplistic vocabulary that is so carefully chosen, you get both authenticity and a scholarly vividness all at once.


The company of actors executes the vocal arrangements with such dexterity, you don't notice it until it hits you aren't actually in a cave with Floyd, or waiting anxiously outside with friends,  family, and a growing crowd of thrill-seeking strangers.

The entire cast recording is amazing, and I highly recommend you listen to it all the way through. Several times. But in the interest of, well, generating interest, I offer you six of my favorite numbers, in the order they appear in the show:

"The Call" - Floyd Collins (Christopher Innvar)
Listen to this "I want" song for its yearning and its yodeling. 


"It Moves" - Floyd Collins (Christopher Innvar)
Close your eyes and you'll see the Great Sand Cave appear in your mind.


"The Riddle" - Homer Collins (Jason Danieley) & Floyd Collins (Christopher Innvar)
The brotherly love and heartbreaking hope is palpable. Danieley is perfection.



"Is That Remarkable?" - The Reporters & Company
You'll laugh at this toe-tapper. Then you'll give some serious thought to journalism and sensationalism versus the truth.


"Carnival" - Floyd Collins (Christopher Innvar) & Company
What is going on in the cave versus outside, and a stunning orchestral interlude.


"The Dream" - Floyd Collins (Christopher Innvar), Homer Collins (Jason Danieley), Nellie Collins (Theresa McCarthy) & Company
I dare you not to cry.



#2394

Wednesday, August 19, 2020

Musical of the Month: Floyd Collins: The Creative Team

As with most shows, Floyd Collins was brought to the stage by a team with varying levels of experience. Whether it was their first show or one of many, all of them have continued to have successful careers in the theater, on and off-Broadway, and all over the world. Here's a brief look at what they've been up to since the story of a world-famous spelunker premiered.

Musical of the Month:
Floyd Collins
The Creative Team


Writing and Direction


Tina Landau
(Director/Book/Co-Lyricist)
Landau's premiere production won the 1996 Lucille Lortel Award for Best Musical. She's gone on to direct shows at several of off-Broadway's most reputable companies, including Vineyard Theatre (Miracle Brothers, etc.), Public Theater (Space, The Brother/Sister Plays, etc.), Pershing Square Signature Theatre (Big Love, etc.), New York Theatre Workshop (A Civil War Christmas), and Playwrights Horizons (Floyd Collins, Cloud Tectonics). On Broadway, she's directed Bells Are Ringing, Superior Donuts and SpongeBob SquarePants (Drama Desk Award winner, Tony Award nominee).


Adam Guettel
(Composer/Co-Lyricist)
Guettel's heritage brought him to the art form, and Floyd Collins brought him his first success, winning the 1996 Lucille Lortel Award for Best Musical, and the 1996 Obie Award for Best Music. At the Public Theater, he provided the book, lyrics and score for Saturn Returns: A Concert. At NYTW, he provided the scores for the plays Love's Fire and Lydie Breeze, Parts I and II. On Broadway, he wrote the score and orchestrations for The Light in the Piazza (Tony Awards and Drama Desk Awards), and was most recently Tony nominated for his score for To Kill a Mockingbird.


Design


James Schuette
(Set Design)
Among his dozens of design credits are such off-Broadway productions as Saturn Returns: A Concert, Space, The Brother/Sister Plays, and A Civil War Christmas. His Broadway credits include The Goodbye Girl, Barrymore and Superior Donuts.





Melina Root
(Costume Design)
Ms. Root's other off-Broadway credits include The Destiny of Me and Space. She was a 1993 Drama Desk nominee for a production of As You Like It. She's also designed costumes for many television series, including Superstore and Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.




Scott Zielinski
(Lighting Design)
Among his nearly 30 off-Broadway credits are A Civil War Christmas, Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train, An Iliad, Miracle Brothers, Topdog/Underdog and Big Love. On Broadway, he designed Topdog/Underdog and the recent revival of Oklahoma! (Drama Desk nominee).




Dan Moses Schreier
(Sound Design)
With 4 decades and nearly 70 off-Broadway credits to his career Mr. Schreier has designed sound for some of theater's most acclaimed productions including Topdog/Underdog, Homebody/Kabul, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Allegro, Pacific Overtures, Yiddish Fiddler on the Roof, Alice By Heart, White Noise and The Secret Life of Bees. On Broadway, he is just as prolific, with 5 Tony Award nominations (Gypsy, Sondheim on Sondheim, A Little Night Music, Act One and The Iceman Cometh). Other Broadway productions include Sweeney Todd (Cerveris and LuPone), A Gentleman's Guide..., American Psycho, The Visit, Falsettos (2016) and the upcoming Flying Over Sunset.

#2389

Saturday, January 22, 2011

BLOGJACK: The Dramatists Guild Fund's Legacy Project

Yesterday, during my ritual of hitting all the major theatre websites and blogs, I came across an entry from Playbill.com's "Play Blog" about a fascinating new interview series.  It is called The Legacy Project and it is produced by the Dramatists Guild Fund.  In the series of 10 interviews, modern masters like David Zippel, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Brian Yorkey interview true legends of theatre - playwrights like Edward Albee, and composer/lyricists like Stephen Sondheim, Bock and Harnick, and John Kander.  Underscoring the importance of such a series is the noticeable absence of Fred Ebb, and the presence of recently deceased Joesph Stein, among others.  Apparently more are planned as everything about the current set indicates that it Volume 1.

Unfortunately, upon further investigation at http://www.dramatistsguildfund.org/, I found that the entire series is only available at colleges and universities with performing arts majors.  Understandable, of course - and I hope you college kids get to use this invaluable resource - but disappointing for theatre enthusiasts beyond their college years!

Still, even the 2 or 3 minute samples of each are interesting and insightful.  Notice the gleam in the eyes of the younger set as they prepare to meet their lifetime idols!  That even comes across in this introduction to the series:



To whet your appetite, I also thought I'd post this most interesting snippet of the Arthur Laurents interview.  The notoriously crabby genius shows a surprising side to himself and a pretty nice self-deprecating wit.



To see all of these gems, The Dramatists Guild Fund has their own channel on YouTube.


Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.144

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

One That Got Away: Floyd Collins

Every season, there are those shows I really want to see, but for a variety of reasons, I somehow miss them.  Most of them slip from memory soon enough, but a few nag at me because they have gone on to become well-regarded pieces of theatre.  This season, I know I really missed the boat by not ever getting around to God of Carnage and Red.  I suspect both will have long regional lives, and I'll probably get to them in one form or another.


Another that I really wanted to see, but won't get to before it closes is The Burnt Part Boys, though I have a feeling this one will go into the "slip from memory" category.  But it did return to my memory one show that I continually kick myself for not seeing, Floyd Collins, which shares with Boys a cave/mining accident as a major part of the plot.


The 1996 Production Photos

With a book and direction by Tina Landau (she has had something to do with most of the major productions of the show, too) and a score and lyrics by Tony winner (for Light in the Piazza) Adam Guettel, Floyd Collins came to be as a musical just before the turn of this century, at a music theater festival, followed by a full-scale production in 1996 at Playwright's Horizons with a cast which included: Christopher Innvar, Stephen Lee Anderson, Cass Morgan, Jason Danieley, Martin Moran, Brian d'Arcy James and Don Chastain.


The 1999 National Tour

A few years later (1999), after some revision was done, Ms. Landau directed a mini-national tour of the show starring: Romain Fruge, Guy Adkins, Kim Huber and Clarke Thorell.

The 2003 Actors' Playhouse of Miami Production

A major, award-winning production in 2003 was at the Actors' Playhouse in Miami featuring Tally Sessions and Brian Charles Rooney.

The 2005 Los Angeles Company

Hair tribe members Bryce Ryness and Jay Armstrong Johnson played Floyd in critically acclaimed productions in Los Angeles and NYU, respectively.

The NYU Production

I love the score, the unique sound and the acting that comes through on the cast recording.  And never having seen it anywhere, I can still let my imagination do the directing: I close my eyes and I am in the cave Floyd.

The "Real" Floyd Collins

Do any of you have shows that you love but have never seen a full production of it?  Share with us!


Comments?  Leave on here or email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com.
Jeff
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