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Aaron Tveit, Sutton Foster will next star in ‘Sweeney Todd’

Feb 11, 2024 — 1:33:38 AM

I haven't posted here in years, but I just wanted to jump in to mention that Sondheim was by no means wedded to the keys in which his songs were sung by the original casts of the original productions. They were rarely the keys in which he'd originally written the songs, and he fully expected that his original keys would often — probably more often than not — be changed to work well for the voices of those who were cast.Back in January 2004, around the time the Royal Opera did Sweeney, on the ...

Understudies/Standbys in City Center Encores productions?

Apr 1, 2020 — 2:39:09 AM

I've been going to Encores! since the first season, although I haven't seen all of them. I have many of the playbills, including for some I didn't see, and I don't think understudies are listed in any of them.

Phylicia Rashad Into the Woods question

Feb 1, 2020 — 2:01:32 AM

IronMan said: "I don't know about Rashad's stint, but in the original cast it was Maureen Davis, the actresswho played Sleeping Beauty (only appears once at the end with Snow White, and also Bernadette's u/s) that doubled her for the change. Her face was covered by a mask and hood so it wasn't really seen;I can't imagine why they would have had to make any changes for Phylicia."I've never come across Maureen Davis listed as a Witch understudy. When the show opened, the Witch understudies were...

!

Feb 11, 2019 — 9:38:40 PM

GavestonPS said: "Of course I don't mind, not at all. On the contrary, I appreciate the correction."Thanks, GavestonPS. I thought you'd be OK with it. You're very easy-going. Not everyone is. But after not having posted here for some time, I felt a bit odd about coming back with something like that.

!

Jan 13, 2019 — 4:50:48 AM

GavestonPS said: Ethel Merman, Benay Venuta (Merman'sperennial understudy), Elaine Stritch (Merman's standby two decades before smoking and drinking destroyed her voice (granted, in an interesting, "character" way)), Tyne Daly (no Merman vocally, but she sings in the same style), Karen Morrow (the last Sally Adams I saw). These are the sort of "beltingbroads" who have played the role and are right for it."Hey, GavestonPS, I hope you don't mind me questioning one thing you wrote. This is fairl...

Talkin' Broadway All That Chat

Nov 19, 2016 — 10:22:08 PM

Thank you for the kind words, newintown and MarkBearSF. You know, I've gone through periods of posting here, but I haven't in a long time. Even though I've always used a different name here, I assumed that anyone who knew me from ATC would quickly know it was me (although it seemed that not everyone did).nobodyhome aka AlanScott

Barrett Wilbert Weed and Wes Taylor in Cabaret in DC

May 21, 2015 — 4:35:06 PM

Thanks, Alix and BroadwayStud. What you describe, BroadwayStud, is the original version. Lines of dialogue from earlier in the show are repeated by Fr. Schneider, Herr Schultz and Sally, we hear Kost laughing, and Sally singing a brief reprise of the title song, and the Emcee closing it off with "Auf wiedersehen . . . A bientot." Alix, the published script of the 1966 version has Schultz saying "Jewish" there. And it's what Werner Klemperer said in the 1987 revival. But, yeah, at least in the...

Barrett Wilbert Weed and Wes Taylor in Cabaret in DC

May 19, 2015 — 3:17:24 PM

Thanks for all the info on the production. I have a question about a slight discrepancy in the accounts of the final sequence. GetUp&LiveIt wrote, "At the end of the play as the principals repeated their lines referencing their blindness to the outside world the audience was flooded by several men in Nazi uniform." Alix wrote, "Then, the end of the show: Music-wise, they used the original version of the finale, with the main characters each reprising a bit of their songs." Are they using the ...

Dorothy Collins

Sep 21, 2014 — 3:23:46 AM

"According to EVERYTHING WAS POSSIBLE, that was one of the things that got them interested in her for Sally." Yes, that seems to have been why Sondheim was interested. Prince had come close to casting her as Amalia in She Loves Me (another role she seems to have eventually done in stock). It came down to choosing between her and Barbara Cook. So they both already had strongly positive feelings about her. "I think I read that as well as DO I HEAR A WALTZ, she was up for the Lincoln Center SOUT...

Elaine Stritch:

Sep 21, 2014 — 3:14:20 AM

"I hope I didn't give you the impression I minded the correction. I very much appreciated it." No, I didn't get that impression at all.

Elaine Stritch:

Sep 18, 2014 — 7:51:41 PM

Oh, we all forget stuff or get a little confused from time to time. No one is perfect.

Elaine Stritch:

Sep 18, 2014 — 7:40:34 PM

There was an earlier discussion of this here, which can be found at http://www.broadwayworld.com/long-island/board/readmessage.php?thread=1069563&page=1 In that thread, I suggested that Stritch was perhaps getting Mrs. Lovett mixed up with Miss Hannigan. She was offered Miss Hannigan in London, but they supposedly couldn't come to terms on money, and the role ended up going to Sheila Hancock. Hancock also later played Mrs. Lovett in the first London production of Sweeney, after Patricia Routl...

The Miller's Son on Tonight Show - Question

Mar 18, 2014 — 5:15:00 PM

As I said, I saw it three times and I don't recall noise. But I also tend to trust the person who told me this. I wasn't there when he saw the show. It does seem possible that there might have been an occasional problem later, especially given that a new set was built for the move. I think there are times when we can definitively say something didn't happen. Ever. But things do go wrong sometimes. IIRC, a couple of the critics complained about light shining off the panels.. I'd need to double...

The Miller's Son on Tonight Show - Question

Mar 18, 2014 — 7:42:27 AM

And I'm sure nothing ever, ever went wrong that might have caused them to be a little noisy at some performances, not even after the move to the Majestic, for which a new set was built (the original set went on the road). And, of course, Frank Rich was at every performance so he must know.

The Miller's Son on Tonight Show - Question

Mar 17, 2014 — 6:23:40 PM

I know people who saw the show on Broadway, and they found the set's movements noisy. I saw it three times and I don't remember finding it at all noisy so I've always been mystified. But some people evidently did, even on Broadway. I don't know.

The Miller's Son on Tonight Show - Question

Mar 16, 2014 — 7:42:47 PM

There was an article on D'Jamin Bartlett in an early issue of The Sondheim Review. She talked about playing Desiree, and said that she didn't fully appreciate Glynis Johns's performance until she played the role. She realized that Desiree is not necessarily a terribly likable character. She's a woman having an affair with another woman's husband while trying to steal the husband of yet another woman. So it's important for the actress to make the audience like a character who might be consider...

The Miller's Son on Tonight Show - Question

Mar 15, 2014 — 1:00:37 AM

After Eight wrote, "Uh, what idolaters like you don't seem to understand is, a) not many people think like you -- maybe about twenty people in the unverse, actually --- and b) the producers of the Tony Awards actually wanted people to WATCH the show, not turn off their television sets in droves." Yes, that must have been why in 1972, rather than having Dorothy Collins sing "Losing My Mind," or Alexis Smith sing "Could I Leave You" or Ethel Shutta doing "Broadway Baby" or something like that, ...

The Miller's Son on Tonight Show - Question

Mar 12, 2014 — 5:00:40 PM

This was from May 10, 1973, both clips. At least in the early Burbank years, I believe the show would come back to New York for a week or two each year. I'd be pretty sure this was during one of those times, although I can't find definite confirmation. EDIT: Given how few understudies Prince had on this show, it would have been a disaster to fly both Johns and Bartlett out to California in mid-week.

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