Monday, May 22, 2006

The First Wives Club will be a musical!

FIRST WIVES CLUB TO BECOME BROADWAY MUSICAL
Movie & Entertainment News provided by World Entertainment News Network (www.wenn.com)
2006-05-22


THE FIRST WIVES CLUB is being adapted as a musical for the Broadway, New York stage. The 1996 film, which starred GOLDIE HAWN, BETTE MIDLER and DIANE KEATON, will be turned into a musical by legendary songwriters and producers, EDDIE and BRIAN HOLLAND and LAMONT DOZIER. The trio is responsible for such classic hits as STOP! IN THE NAME OF LOVE, HEAT WAVE, AIN'T TOO PROUD TO BEG and YOU KEEP ME HANGIN' ON. The project marks the first time the group has worked together in over a decade. Eddie Holland explains, "It's amazing...almost like we never left each other. The chemistry is unbelievable." According to Brian Holland, "We're going to be doing all new material. "The plan is to have all songs completed by December (06), then put it up at the beginning of next year to work out the kinks before we get to Broadway."

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Tonys Contest & Online Party



MusicalTheatreAudition.com is hosting a Tonys contest once nominees are announced (starting May 16) and an online party the night the Tonys are televised (June 11). There will be games and prizes in addition to the contest grand prize.

Click here for more info and to sign up (you must become a forum member - but its free!)
http://www.musicaltheatreaudition.com/cgi-bin/forum/Blah.pl?

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Phil Collins has 'Tarzan' singing


By P ETER D. KRAMER
THE JOURNAL NEWS

What: "Tarzan the Broadway Musical"

Where: Richard Rodgers Theatre, 226 W. 46th St., Manhattan.

When: Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m.; Wednesdays and Saturdays at 2 p.m.; Sundays at 3 p.m.

Tickets: $51.25 to $111.25

Call: 212-307-4747

Web site: disney.go.com/ disneytheatrical/ tarzan/
(Original publication: May 7, 2006)

In "Tarzan, the Broadway Musical," opening Wednesday, the title character searches for a place to belong — either in the world of apes or the world of humans.

In Lionel Bart's musical "Oliver!," the title character faces a similar choice — either a life with Fagin and Sykes or in the rarefied world of Mr. Brownlow.

For Phil Collins, the comparison resonates.

The seven-time Grammy winner started his career at 14 in the original production of "Oliver!" in London. Now, Disney's "Tarzan," Collins — longtime drummer and lead singer of the band Genesis and an Oscar-winning songwriter — adds Broadway composer to his credits.

He considers himself at home.

"Whenever you do anything out of your world, in a new world, you can be made to feel uncomfortable or you can be made to feel welcome," Collins says. "And these guys have been fantastic."

The night before, he had taken "the band" out to dinner after the show — hoping to instill some of his rock 'n' roll work ethic in the 14-member orchestra.

"What we've done here is formed a band. The usual thing (on Broadway) is that people come in and they'll say 'Well, I'm doing something else tonight and they'll send in a sub.'

"I'm trying to tell them that it's their presence, they way we've rehearsed it, the way we've got to that makes it what it is. It's not just a job, it's a labor of love," he says.

Collins has labored for years to turn the 1999 animated feature film into a full-blown Broadway spectacular. The film had five Collins songs; the musical has 14.

"Tarzan" has kept him in New York for months at a time — away from his home in Switzerland — at every audition, at most rehearsals, writing, rewriting and taking suggestions.

"I'm usually first in, last out with anything I do, but these things — this show, the movie of 'Tarzan,' the movie of 'Brother Bear' — is a long-term commitment, and to drop the ball at the last minute and not being there when actually so much happens just seems to be the wrong way to do it."

That first-in-last-out approach was learned early, before rock 'n' roll, when theater was his first love.

Phil Collins started in show business on the legit stage, playing the Artful Dodger in the original production of "Oliver!" in London and, years later, returning to play Noah Claypoole, an older boy in the production.

(Theater fans note: His stand-by as Claypoole was a young assistant stage manager named Cameron Mackintosh, who would become a Broadway lion, producing "Les Miserables," "Cats" and "Phantom of the Opera," among others.)

That brush with theater, which really ended before he was 20 and rock took over his life, whet his appetite for all kinds of music.

"That early experience kept me open and interested in listening to the scores of 'My Fair Lady,' the scores of 'West Side Story,' the scores of movie soundtracks, as well — 'Romeo and Juliet' and 'To Kill a Mockingbird' — and all kinds of things beyond pop music.

"It's always been running parallel, but I never dreamt that this would be given me."

Collins has always had a connection to Disney, beyond taking his kids to the movies.

"My sister was an ice-skater and she skated with Disney on Ice — 'Aladdin,' 'Snow White,' 'Sleeping Beauty,' 'Cinderella' — in London and on tour and we used to go see it at Christmas and we'd go on tour to see her when I was a kid so the songs are in my head.

"And my brother's a cartoonist, so the animators were his heroes. So really, Disney's been in my house all my life. To be asked to do the movie was like being asked to join a club you never thought you'd be a member of."

"Because of its size in my history, I was nervous about taking it on, because you know the musical heritage."

Knowing that heritage made him eager to learn.

"When I started acting I learned all the lines ahead of time. People said, 'What a waste of time, there'll be changes.'

"I guess if I did another dozen movies, that'd be my attitude," he says, "but at the moment I just feel like the process is something that I'm learning from so I immerse myself in it."

Part of the process of becoming a Broadway composer was meeting "Tarzan" director Bob Crowley, a longtime theatrical set designer.

Collins flew to London to meet him and they talked a bit of shop over lunch, about Crowley's concept, about Collins' work. Eventually, he and Crowley got to talking about how they got started in the business.

"I told him I was in 'Oliver!' and he said, 'My God! When I saw Sean Kenny's set design for 'Oliver!,' that's what made me want to be a set designer.' In a way, we bonded from that point on," he says.

Crowley's concept puts the focus on Tarzan finding himself. Set in a green box strung with vines, the actors take on the look of rock-climbers or bungee-jumpers, leaping from vine-covered nooks, sometimes flying over the audience and finding the nook again.

True to the Disney model perfected in Julie Taymor's "The Lion King," there are dazzling effects — the shipwreck that starts the show and the family's arrival in Africa is jaw-droppingly beautiful and effective.

A Broadway musical requires more music than a film — and not just catchy songs. Collins has also written the underscoring, the music that moves the action from scene to scene.

The drum-heavy "Jungle Funk" instrumental, where young Tarzan is watching and learning the apes, sounds a lot like "something you'd find on a Phil Collins record," the composer says.

He says the process of taking "Tarzan" to the stage was a matter of working within the film's sonic outline while filling in the gaps between the established songs. It meant expanding themes and finding more music, either at the piano at home in Switzerland or, interestingly, on the cutting-room floor.

"For the film and animation full-stop, everything has to shrink because of the attention span and also how long they can make it interesting to look at. With the show, everything went back in that was cut out and then expanded upon."

The impact on the audience is clear. When the familiar songs from the film begin — particularly the second-act curtain-riser "Trashin' the Camp" — the audience claps along.

It's gratifying, Collins says. "As soon as it starts, when they start clapping along, you've got Act Two, as opposed to it just sitting there. I sit here every night and I love it.

"The audience makes this thing come alive. You can rehearse and rehearse it and you know what is supposed to be funny. There are still a couple of things I laugh at every night that I'm the only one — nevertheless, I'm sure they'll catch up."

Now that he's a Broadway composer, Phil Collins wants to stay.

"I want to do this again. I've bought an apartment here so that I can be in this environment, so that I can capitalize on the friends I've met and find something more to do in the theater."

Thursday, May 04, 2006

"The Drowsy Chaperone"

May 03, 2006

It's a new Broadway musical that actually started out as a little show performed for the show's star at a party celebrating his upcoming wedding. NY1's Roma Torre filed the following review of "The Drowsy Chaperone."

The Drowsy Chaperone is a valentine to theatre fans– a lovely confection that has audiences swooning in sweet rapture. This unlikely little musical plays on a number of levels and succeeds beautifully on each of them.

To insiders it's a validation of theatrical tradition. To general enthusiasts it's solidly entertaining; and even to the very young like my 10-year-old daughter, it's a discovery of how magical legitimate theatre can be.

At show's open we meet a retiring theatre buff who has an affinity for old musicals. Along with his yearning to hear Cole Porter and the Berlins, he tells us his favorite show is a 1928 ditty called the "Drowsy Chaperone" by Gable and Stein.

It's all fictitious but that's where the magic comes in. When the man in chair, as he's called, starts to play his vintage recording of the show, it springs to life around him.

The creators ingeniously crafted a show that in every way seems authentic, and yet they've injected just enough silly antic humor to appeal to modern audiences. The Man in Chair serves as a framing device interrupting the show from time to time to supply hilarious little asides.

It couldn't be more charming thanks in large part to its inspired cast of characters: Among them - Sutton Foster plays Janet Van De Graaf, a star of the stage who's quitting Broadway to marry the wealthy Robert Martin. Keeping her chaste before the big day is her chaperone who's not only drowsy but tipsy from too much champagne.

The show piles on the comic relief with a pair of gangsters posing as punning pastry chefs; and Danny Burstein as the absurdly big-headed, ham boned Latin lover, Adolpho is classic

Bob Martin as the man in chair and the show's co-book writer along with Don McKellar delivers divinely on both fronts. And composers Lisa Lambert and Greg Morrison create some truly exquisite gems that are as melodious as they are clever.

The criminally gifted Beth Leaval sets the house on fire. And just when you thought you knew the extent of Sutton Foster's talents she dazzles us with stunning versatility.

Director Casey Nicholaw who choreographed "Spamalot" maintains a marvelously unified vision. The beauty of this show is that it's universally appealing in spite of its seeming limitations– a hokey, phony old musical with no big stars or familiar tunes.

Sounds doomed, almost as bad as its lackluster title, but then what's in a name. With The "Drowsy Chaperone," Broadway is waking up to a bona fide original.

- Roma Torre

Monday, May 01, 2006

Introducing the new line for a landmark Broadway musical


Sunday, April 30, 2006

By MICHAEL KUCHWARA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

They entered, one by one, to stand on the bare stage of the Hudson Theatre -- the new line in "A Chorus Line," the 19 performers who will appear in the first Broadway revival of the landmark Michael Bennett musical.

The production will open Oct. 5 at Broadway's Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre with preview performances beginning Sept. 18. Before New York, "A Chorus Line" will play the Curran Theatre in San Francisco, July 23 through Sept. 2.


"I love the idea that a whole new cast of characters, a whole new audience is going to see what we think is a very important and wonderful show," Marvin Hamlisch, the show's composer, said Wednesday before the cast came out onstage.

The musical, created and choreographed by Bennett from the real-life stories of chorus dancers, opened at the Public Theater on May 21, 1975, before moving to Broadway later that year. It ran for nearly 15 years, closing in 1990 after a run of 6,137 performances.

The new production will be directed by Bob Avian, the show's original co-choreographer with Bennett, and produced by John Breglio, Bennett's lawyer, business adviser and the executor of his estate. Bennett died in 1987.

"We knew that the critical issue here was to find an extraordinary cast, a cast that would reflect the message of 'A Chorus Line,' which, I believe, is of its time and timeless," Breglio said.

Among the performers chosen were Charlotte d'Amboise, who will portray Cassie, the former featured dancer now attempting a comeback in the chorus, and Michael Berresse as the director, Zach.

A whole generation of dancers has grown up since "A Chorus Line" first played Broadway, including many in this new version.

"I've never seen it, but I know it," said Natalie Cortez, talking about the original production. She will play Diana in the revival and will sing one of the show's best-known songs, "What I Did for Love."

Heather Parcells, who plays Judy in the 2006 version, also didn't see the original but may go to the performing arts library at Lincoln Center to watch a tape of that production. And she might contact Patricia Garland, who portrayed Judy in the original.

"I hear she now owns a Pilates studio in Los Angeles," Parcells said. "I really want to get in touch with her. I am sure I will pick her brain at some point."