by Webmaster | Mar 15, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
Ever since it opened on Broadway last winter, To Kill a Mockingbird has been making history at the Shubert Theatre, where it has already become the highest-grossing American play ever. The history-making continued on February 26…this time at Madison Square Garden.
by Webmaster | Mar 14, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
Playbills have become a beloved keepsake when attending a Broadway show. They’ve been displayed on coffee tables, preserved in Playbill binders, and framed and mounted on the wall. But there are hundreds of ways theatregoers can show off their collections, so we asked our social media followers to share how they display their Playbill collections. See the gallery below, and follow @playbill on Instagram to see featured Playbill collections on #FanFriday.
by Webmaster | Mar 13, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
Ray Hair, president of the American Federation of Musicians, has issued a statement calling forgovernmentaid for the thousands ofmusicians and otherunemployed entertainment industry workers who have been displaced by the Covid-19 outbreak.
by Webmaster | Mar 12, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
All across the country theatres are temporarily shutting their doors to prevent the spread of the Coronavirus. Regional theatres hosting everything from major titles like HAMILTON both in Los Angeles and San Francisco and CURSED CHILD to smaller non-profits like the Bay Area’s Theatreworks are feeling the pressure. TheatreWorks cancelled their current production and their upcoming production of RAGTIME set to open next month.
by Webmaster | Mar 12, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
As restrictions on large gatherings across the country begin to take effect in the wake of the spread of COVID-19, Boston-area regional theatres are canceling performances. The city’s theatre scene is not alone, with arts companies in New York City—including all Broadway productions—Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, and more making similar efforts as the situation evolves.
See below for updates.
- Huntington Theatre Company will cancel all public performances and events at both the Huntington Avenue Theatre and the Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts until further notice. Affected productions include the company’s upcoming world premiere of Our Daughters, Like Pillars, scheduled for March 20–April 19.
- SpeakEasy Stage Company’s production of The Children, which began February 28 and was slated to run through March 28 in the Roberts Theatre at the Calderwood Pavilion, has therefore canceled its remaining performances as well.
- The American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has canceled or postponed several events slated to play its Oberon space over the next few weeks, including Dreamgirls, Penny Arcade, and Beloved King. For the full list, click here. The A.R.T.’s pre-Broadway engagement of 1776 is still expected to begin May 17 at the Loeb Drama Center.
READ: Broadway Goes Dark Amid Coronavirus Concerns
by Webmaster | Mar 11, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
The marquee is up on the legendary Apollo Theater for the upcoming Broadway Uptown production of Blue starring Leslie Uggams and Lynn Whitfield and directed by Phylicia Rashad.
by Webmaster | Mar 11, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
Composer-lyricist Drew Gasparini will release an album of his new song cycle We Aren’t Kids Anymore digitally April 10, featuring performances from Nicholas Christopher (Hamilton), Lilli Cooper (Tootsie), Raymond J. Lee (Soft Power), Bonnie Milligan (Head Over Heels), and Colton Ryan (Girl From the North Country). Two digital singles will be released before the full album: “When I Go” March 27, and “On the Edge” April 10.
We Aren’t Kids Anymore, which explores the realities of growing up, will be available to license for amateur and professional theatres via Concord Theatricals.
The work will also be presented as a staged concert at SubCulture April 13, with performances set for 7 and 9:30 PM. Casting for these concerts will be announced at a later date.
“The process of writing, developing, and recording this song cycle has been one of those special, collaborative artistic experiences: meaningful, fun, cathartic, and personal to all involved,” says Gasparini. “Our hope is that it will likewise become a meaningful, personal experience for anyone who listens to the album or sees the show. I’m so grateful to the Concord team for helping us to tell these stories and connect with other storytellers on a much larger platform.”
The work features orchestrations and arrangements by Justin Goldner and Gasparini. The album will feature instrumental performances from Natalie Tenenbaum, Jake Goldbas, Gasparini, Geoff Countryman, and Goldner. Goldner produces for Funky Butter Productions, along with Gasparini and Erica Rotstein. Bobbie Theodore and Jana Shea serve as executive producers.
READ: A Musical Adaptation of The Karate Kid Is in the Works
Gasparini is currently working on stage musical adaptations of the films The Karate Kid and Night Shift, and is co-writing It’s Kind of a Funny Story with Beetlejuice star Alex Brightman. In 2019, Gasparini wrote the score for Skittles Commercial: The Musical, a live publicity stunt starring Michael C. Hall presented in lieu of a Super Bowl commercial.
Production Photos: Michael C. Hall in Skittles Commercial: The Musical
by Webmaster | Mar 9, 2020 | New Musical News Feed
1925 Ernest Truex is The Fall Guy for a group of dope dealers. The James Gleason–George Abbott comedy runs at the Eltinge Theatre for almost three months.
1926 East Lynne, based on the popular novel of the same title, opens at the Greenwich Village Theatre. It runs only 35 performances, but a 1930s film adaptation receives an Oscar nomination for Best Picture.
1933 Sophie Treadwell‘s unlikely story of a prostitute who inherits a ranch lasts just three performances. It’s a very Lone Valley at the Plymouth Theatre in New York.
1940 Birthday of playwright David Rabe, who chronicles Vietnam-era angst in Streamers and The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel, and comes back in the 1980s with a searing vision of Hollywood’s periphery in Hurlyburly.
1953 A revival of the Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess opens a 305-performance run at the Ziegfeld Theatre that outlasts the 1935 original. The revival stars Leontyne Price, Irving Barnes, Urylee Leonardos, and Cab Calloway.
1954 A posthumous revival of Kurt Weill‘s The Threepenny Opera proves to be his biggest hit. The Theatre de Lys revival, translated by Marc Blitzstein and directed by Carmen Capalbo, initially runs for 96 performances. Due to popular demand, the production returns to the same theatre the following year, and runs for seven years, becoming Off-Broadway’s longest running show (a record eventually surpassed by The Fantasticks). Stars of the production include Bea Arthur, Lotte Lenya, Scott Merrill, Jo Sullivan, John Astin, and Charlotte Rae.
1959 Sweet Bird of Youth plays at the Martin Beck Theatre in New York. Geraldine Page stars as an aging actor with Paul Newman as her paid escort. Rip Torn, Diana Hyland, and Sidney Blackmer are also in the cast. The Tennessee Williams drama plays for 375 performances. Elia Kazan stages.
1965 Neil Simon‘s The Odd Couple opens on Broadway at the Plymouth Theatre. Art Carney and Walter Matthau star as mismatched roommates Felix and Oscar. It runs for 966 performances, and is later turned into a successful film and television series.
1975 Critics and audiences don’t know what to make of Richard O’Brien‘s London import, a bizarre science-fiction musical called The Rocky Horror Show. It runs just 45 performances at the Belasco Theatre. Stars Tim Curry, Meat Loaf, and O’Brien also star in the film version, which becomes one of the all-time successful cult classics.
1999 Richard Chamberlain and Laura Benanti join the cast of The Sound of Music revival to become the new Captain Von Trapp and Maria Rainer, following Michael Siberry and Rebecca Luker. They close out the production as it ends June 20 after 533 performances.
2000 Performances begin for Michael John LaChiusa‘s Broadway musical The Wild Party, starring Toni Collette, Mandy Patinkin, and Eartha Kitt. Coincidentally, it is the second New York musical of this season to be based on that 1928 poem by Joseph Moncure March. Off-Broadway’s Manhattan Theatre Club staged composer-lyricist-librettist Andrew Lippa‘s version with the same title.
2002 Edward Albee‘s controversial drama The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? opens on Broadway. The story of a man who destroys his marriage and life when he falls in love with a goat goes on to win the 2003 Tony Award as Best Play.
2002 Irene Worth, the Nebraska-born actor who played legendary roles in London, Broadway, and the Stratford Festival in Ontario, Canada, dies at age 85.
2003 In an attempt to settle a three-day-old strike by musicians that has shut down Broadway musicals, Mayor Michael Bloomberg hosts Jed Bernstein of the League of American Theatres and Producers and Bill Moriarity of Local 802 of the American Federation of Musicians in an evening bargaining session that continues through the night.
2014 Robert Askins‘ irreverent comedy Hand to God opens Off-Broadway at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. Steven Boyer stars as soft-spoken Christian Puppet Ministry student Jason, who becomes possessed by his foul-mouthed sock puppet. The production transfers to Broadway the following year.
2016 Jeff Daniels and Michelle Williams star in the Broadway debut of David Harrower‘s Blackbird, opening at the Belasco Theatre. Joe Mantello directs the play about a 27-year-old woman who finds and confronts the man who sexually abused her when she was 12. The play was previously seen in New York in a 2007 Off-Broadway production, also directed by Mantello, that starred Daniels opposite Alison Pill.
2019 Joe Iconis and Joe Tracz‘s musical Be More Chill opens on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre. The show arrives on Broadway with a cult following, thanks to the popularity of the cast recording from its 2015 world premiere at New Jersey’s Two River Theater. Will Roland stars as Jeremy, an average teenager who takes a pill purported to make people more—you guessed it—chill.
More of Today’s birthdays: Barry Fitzgerald 1888. Sam Jaffe 1891. Heywood Hale Broun 1918. Mark Lamos 1946. Jasmine Guy 1962.
Watch highlights from the 2019 Broadway production of Be More Chill: