by Webmaster | Sep 17, 2021 | New Musical News Feed
The Link Theatre Company in collaboration with the Delta Symphony Orchestra will present a concert version of the acclaimed Broadway musical, Ragtime, written by the award-winning composerlyricist team of Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens, and Tony Award-winning playwright, Terrence McNally.
by Webmaster | Sep 16, 2021 | New Musical News Feed
Jaap van Zweden, who has led the New York Philharmonic as music director since 2018, will step down from the podium at the end of the 2023–2024 season. The announcement of his resignation arrives the same week as the cultural organization launches its 2021–2022 season, which will take up various venues throughout the city as its usual home (Lincoln Center’s David Geffen Hall) undergoes renovations.
“It is not out of frustration, it’s not out of anger, it’s not out of a difficult situation,” van Zweden told The New York Times. “It’s just out of freedom.” The conductor spent a majority of his time during the pandemic in his native Netherlands with family, which contributed to the shift in his personal and professional outlook.
The Philharmonic season begins September 17 with a program titled From Silence to Celebration, featuring works by Anna Clyne, George Walker, Beethoven, and more. Van Zweden will conduct.
Van Zweden also serves as music director with Hong Kong Philharmonic; he has said he will also step down from that position when his contract expires in 2024.
by Webmaster | Sep 15, 2021 | New Musical News Feed
Interview with Tom MacRae the writer of EVERYBODYS TALKING ABOUT JAMIE for stage and screen which premieres on Friday, September 17th on Amazon Prime Video. Writer Tom MacRae talks about what it was like to cr
by Webmaster | Sep 14, 2021 | New Musical News Feed
1889 Robert Benchley, the acclaimed actor, critic, and humorist of the early twentieth century, is born. An example of his wit can be seen in his 1926 review of Jean Bart’s The Squall, which is about a gypsy woman who leaves her people to satisfy her lusts with an outsider. Included in the dialogue is: “Me Nubi. Nubi good girl. Nubi stay.” Responding in his review, Benchley states, “Me Benchley. Benchley bad boy. Benchley go.” Tallulah Bankhead, who was a friend of his, called him “as gay and thirsty a gentleman as I ever encountered.”
1925 Michael Arlen‘s romantic drama The Green Hat opens at the Broadhurst Theatre. Katharine Cornell stars as Iris March, a character who is described by Alexander Woollcott as a “shameful, shameless lady.” Leslie Howard co-stars.
1938 Thornton Wilder performs as the Stage Manager in Our Town on Broadway. Although he is the author, he is filling in for the vacationing Frank Craven. Since the playwright is performing, he takes the liberty of putting back in some of his own words that producer Jed Harris had cut. During the run, Wilder’s acting is reported by John Mason Brown, a critic of the time, as better than Sinclair Lewis‘ performance in the dramatization of his own novel, It Can’t Happen Here.
1972 After 1,847 performances Off-Broadway, the hit revue Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris transfers to Broadway’s Royale Theatre—and closes after just 51 more performances, despite the presence of Joe Masiell and George Ball in the cast.
1976 Ntozake Shange‘s For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf opens on Broadway at the Booth Theatre following a run at The Public Theater. The drama, featuring seven female characters represented by colors of the rainbow, combines poetry and dance to explore the plight of women. Shange herself is in the cast of the production, which runs 742 performances.
2000 The Denver Center Theatre Company, in association with the Royal Shakespeare Company, unleashes Peter Hall‘s staging of Tantalus at the Stage Theater in Colorado. The large-scale, 10 play production is performed in three parts and runs for approximately 10 hours. The cast of 29—made up of U.S., British, European, and Asian-born performers—includes principals Alyssa Bresnahan, Alan Dobie, Greg Hicks, Annalee Jeffries, Ann Mitchell, Robert Petkoff, David Ryall, and Mia Yoo.
2004 Three notable musicals begin their journeys: Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s The Woman in White opens in London; Dirty Rotten Scoundrels begins its pre-Broadway tryout in San Diego; and the stage adaptation of the Disney film musical Mary Poppins has its world premiere in Bristol, England.
2010 As the man once wrote, “Light the lights!” Composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim, a writer who changed the face of musical theatre, sees the first official lighting of the marquee of the newly named Stephen Sondheim Theatre (formerly the Henry Miller’s Theatre) at a special ceremony.
2019 Derren Brown: Secret, the acclaimed stage production from the two-time Olivier Award-winning illusionist and mentalist, opens on Broadway at the Cort Theatre. The production returns to New York after premiering in a sold-out run at the Atlantic Theater Company Off-Broadway in 2017. Brown collaborated on the show with co-writers Andy Nyman and Andrew O’Connor, who also co-directed.
More of Today’s Birthdays: Agatha Christie (1890–1976). Fay Wray (1907–2004). Penny Singleton (1908–2003). Jackie Cooper (1921–2011). Dick Latessa (1929–2016). Tommy Lee Jones (b. 1946). Carole Shorenstein Hays (b. 1948). Deidre Goodwin (b. 1969).
by Webmaster | Sep 13, 2021 | New Musical News Feed
The 2021 Expand the Canon list has been announced, featuring nine plays by women that deserve a spotlight as theatres consider what works to present to its audiences. The project is run by Hedgepig Ensemble Theatre, in partnership with Ma-Yi Theater Company, The Sol Project, and The Classical Theatre of Harlem.
The plays selected for 2021 are: The Frolicks by Elizabeth Polwhele; Amor, Agavio y Mujer by Ana Caro; The Beau Defeated by Mary Pix; Fatal Falsehood by Hannah More; Françoise by George Sand, Forging the Truth by Yang Jiang; Foriwa by Efua Sutherland; A Happy Country by Maruxa Vilalta; and Les Blancs by Lorraine Hansberry. The 2021 list includes 3 translations that, if produced, would be national premieres.
READ: Expand The Canon Reveals Inaugural History-Spanning List of Plays by Women to Consider Producing
“After reading nearly 400 plays by women, our team chose nine that span history, geography, and subject matter, from writers around the world,” says Mary Candler, artistic director of Hedgepig Ensemble Theatre. “With a mix of light comedies and deeply resonant pieces that speak to this revolutionary moment, there is a play on this list for anyone programming their 2022 season.”
Four readings will be presented as part of the Do This Play: The Expand the Canon Reading Series. The lineup features A Happy Country (September 19, 4 PM ET), Forging the Truth (September 20, 7 PM), Foriwa (September 26 at 4 PM), and Mercy Otis Warren’s 1770’s verse play The Ladies of Castile (September 27 at 7 PM). Each reading will be available to stream on demand for two days after its premiere.
For more information about the plays, visit ExpandtheCanon.com. The list has all related producing information, creating easy access for theatre companies to present these plays.