#1
Posted: 3/9/05 at 4:40pm
Stephen Sondheim turns 75 on March 22nd and to commemorate that, there are SEVERAL events occurring:
* Good Thing Going: Celebrating Sondheim at 75
Museum of Television & Radio, 25 W. 52nd Street (between 5th & 6th Avenues)
March 18 to July 3, 2005
NY: Tuesdays to Sundays at 2:00 p.m., Thursdays at 5:00 p.m.
LA: Wednesdays to Sundays at 2:00 p.m.
To honor Stephen Sondheim on the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday (March 22, 2005), the Museum presents a comprehensive series of Sondheim's work in another medium—television. The retrospective, originally shown at the Museum to honor the composer's seventieth birthday, features some newly acquired segments with Yvonne DeCarlo, Eileen Farrell, Marilyn Horne, Carol Burnett, Barbara Cook, and others, and illuminates his surprisingly long and remarkably rich relationship with the medium. Over the years, Sondheim has returned to television often and in various guises—as a writer, composer, interview or documentary subject, and even once as an actor.
http://mtr.org/
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* Wall to Wall Sondheim at Symphony Space (95th & Broadway) -- an all day (11am to 11pm) FREE Sondheim celebration on Saturday, March 19th featuring veritable Who's Who of participants:
http://www.symphonyspace.org/genres/eventPage.php?genreId=1&eventId=1005
________________________________________________________________
* For those of you who can afford it (tix are $500 to $5000, though some balcony seats are available for $150 and $250) there's:
“CHILDREN AND ART,” a spectacular musical gala evening in celebration of Stephen Sondheim’s 75th birthday, for one performance only at Broadway’s New Amsterdam Theatre (214 West 42nd Street) on Monday, March 21, 2005 (7:30 p.m. curtain), the eve of Sondheim’s birthday.
All proceeds from “CHILDREN AND ART” will benefit Young Playwrights Inc., an organization founded by Stephen Sondheim in 1981.
Directed by Tony Award winner Richard Maltby, Jr. with music direction by Kevin Stites, “CHILDREN AND ART” features performances of Sondheim works by an all-star cast including* Matthew Broderick, Michael Cerveris, Barbara Cook, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Jason Danieley, John Dossett, Harvey Evans, Dame Edna Everage, Harvey Fierstein, Whoopi Goldberg, George Hearn, Judy Kuhn, Nathan Lane, Rebecca Luker, Patti LuPone, Marin Mazzie, Audra McDonald, Debra Monk, Mandy Patinkin, Michele Pawk, Bernadette Peters, Kurt Peterson, David Hyde Pierce, Tonya Pinkins, Lonny Price, Alice Ripley, Chita Rivera, Marti Rolph, Virginia Sandifur, Jim Walton and B.D. Wong.
_________________________________________________________________
* Then, the following night, on the actual March 22 natal day of Sondheim, Turner Classic Movies, will be devoting its primetime hours to films personally picked by Sondheim for the occasion, and it includes an interesting smorgasbord, with nary a musical in the lot.
They include a little-known 1930s Warner Bros. melodrama called "The Mind Reader," which was co-written by Wilson Meisner, the subject of Sondheim's most recent musical, "Bounce"; also Judy Garland's "The Clock," which Stephen S. once wanted to turn into a musical (he went so far as to write an opening number for it); the Swedish "Smiles of a Summer Night," on which Sondheim based his "A Little Night Music"; and an Ida Lupino-John Garfield drama, "Out of the Fog," which was based on a play (Irwin Shaw's "The Gentle People") in which a young Sondheim had acted during his Williams College days. It helped him decide that writing music suited him better than performing.
http://www.turnerclassicmovies.com/ThisMonth/Article/0,,90464|||,00.html
* Good Thing Going: Celebrating Sondheim at 75
Museum of Television & Radio, 25 W. 52nd Street (between 5th & 6th Avenues)
March 18 to July 3, 2005
NY: Tuesdays to Sundays at 2:00 p.m., Thursdays at 5:00 p.m.
LA: Wednesdays to Sundays at 2:00 p.m.
To honor Stephen Sondheim on the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday (March 22, 2005), the Museum presents a comprehensive series of Sondheim's work in another medium—television. The retrospective, originally shown at the Museum to honor the composer's seventieth birthday, features some newly acquired segments with Yvonne DeCarlo, Eileen Farrell, Marilyn Horne, Carol Burnett, Barbara Cook, and others, and illuminates his surprisingly long and remarkably rich relationship with the medium. Over the years, Sondheim has returned to television often and in various guises—as a writer, composer, interview or documentary subject, and even once as an actor.
http://mtr.org/
________________________________________________________________
* Wall to Wall Sondheim at Symphony Space (95th & Broadway) -- an all day (11am to 11pm) FREE Sondheim celebration on Saturday, March 19th featuring veritable Who's Who of participants:
http://www.symphonyspace.org/genres/eventPage.php?genreId=1&eventId=1005
________________________________________________________________
* For those of you who can afford it (tix are $500 to $5000, though some balcony seats are available for $150 and $250) there's:
“CHILDREN AND ART,” a spectacular musical gala evening in celebration of Stephen Sondheim’s 75th birthday, for one performance only at Broadway’s New Amsterdam Theatre (214 West 42nd Street) on Monday, March 21, 2005 (7:30 p.m. curtain), the eve of Sondheim’s birthday.
All proceeds from “CHILDREN AND ART” will benefit Young Playwrights Inc., an organization founded by Stephen Sondheim in 1981.
Directed by Tony Award winner Richard Maltby, Jr. with music direction by Kevin Stites, “CHILDREN AND ART” features performances of Sondheim works by an all-star cast including* Matthew Broderick, Michael Cerveris, Barbara Cook, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Jason Danieley, John Dossett, Harvey Evans, Dame Edna Everage, Harvey Fierstein, Whoopi Goldberg, George Hearn, Judy Kuhn, Nathan Lane, Rebecca Luker, Patti LuPone, Marin Mazzie, Audra McDonald, Debra Monk, Mandy Patinkin, Michele Pawk, Bernadette Peters, Kurt Peterson, David Hyde Pierce, Tonya Pinkins, Lonny Price, Alice Ripley, Chita Rivera, Marti Rolph, Virginia Sandifur, Jim Walton and B.D. Wong.
_________________________________________________________________
* Then, the following night, on the actual March 22 natal day of Sondheim, Turner Classic Movies, will be devoting its primetime hours to films personally picked by Sondheim for the occasion, and it includes an interesting smorgasbord, with nary a musical in the lot.
They include a little-known 1930s Warner Bros. melodrama called "The Mind Reader," which was co-written by Wilson Meisner, the subject of Sondheim's most recent musical, "Bounce"; also Judy Garland's "The Clock," which Stephen S. once wanted to turn into a musical (he went so far as to write an opening number for it); the Swedish "Smiles of a Summer Night," on which Sondheim based his "A Little Night Music"; and an Ida Lupino-John Garfield drama, "Out of the Fog," which was based on a play (Irwin Shaw's "The Gentle People") in which a young Sondheim had acted during his Williams College days. It helped him decide that writing music suited him better than performing.
http://www.turnerclassicmovies.com/ThisMonth/Article/0,,90464|||,00.html
"What a story........ everything but the bloodhounds snappin' at her rear end." -- Birdie
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