Musical Theatre

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For lovers, performers and creators of musical theatre (or theater). Broadway, off-Broadway, the West End, other parts of the US and UK, and musicals around the world and on film/TV. Discussion encouraged. Welcome post: https://tinyurl.com/kbinMusicals See all/older posts here: https://kbin.social/m/Musicals

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Jennifer Lopez is attached to star in a feature adaptation of the 1993 Broadway musical “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” written and directed by “Dreamgirls” filmmaker Bill Condon, Variety has confirmed with a source close to the production. The music is by legends John Kander and Fred Ebb, based on the novel by Manuel Puig and the book of the musical by Terrence McNally.

The musical is set in an Argentinian prison in 1981. Lopez would play the titular role, a fantasy woman named Aurora created by Luis Molina, a gay hairdresser serving an eight-year sentence for allegedly corrupting a minor. To escape the horrors of his imprisonment, Molina imagines movies starring Aurora as a classic silver screen diva, including a role of the spider woman, who kills her prey with a kiss. Molina’s life is upended when a Marxist, Valentin Arregui Paz, is brought into his cell, and the two form an unlikely bond.

The new movie, which is independently financed, is currently searching for an unknown to play Molina. According to a casting breakdown obtained by Variety, the role “presents as an openly queer and effeminate gay man, but may be on the non-binary/trans femme spectrum.” Rehearsals would start in February with a plan to begin filming in April in New Jersey.

The two previous adaptations of “Kiss of the Spider Woman” — the 1993 musical, and a 1985 feature film adaptation of Puig’s novel from director Héctor Babenco — both won wide critical acclaim and major awards attention. William Hurt won the Oscar for best actor for playing Molina. And the musical won seven Tony Awards, including for best musical and for all three performers: Chita Rivera, Brent Carver and Anthony Crivello.

Condon has become one of the preeminent filmmakers of the movie musical: He wrote the screenplay for 2002’s “Chicago,” wrote and directed 2006’s “Dreamgirls,” directed 2017’s “Beauty and the Beast,” and co-wrote the screenplay for 2017’s “The Greatest Showman.” He also directed both parts of “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn,” and most recently directed regular collaborator Ian McKellen in the 2019 thriller “The Good Liar.” He won an Oscar for his screenplay for his 1998 film with McKellen, “Gods and Monsters.”

Lopez — whose ninth studio album, “This Is Me… Now,” is set to debut early next year — is one of the most successful multi-hyphenates in the industry, launching her film career by playing the late Tejano star Selena in 1997’s “Selena.” Incredibly, however, this would be her first role in a full-fledged musical.

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Stephen Schwartz reveals that two new songs written exclusively for the upcoming Wicked films, starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, will be in the second movie, set for a Nov. 26, 2025, release.

However, he adds, "There are some expansions of stuff in the first movie. The point being, the new songs were written because of the demand of the story, not, 'Oh, let's write a new song and stick it in just because…' The storytelling required it, and therefore they were created — the intention was that they were organic and not imposed on the movie."

Them movie adaptation of Wicked will be split into two parts, directed by Jon Chu, with the first half of the film debuting Nov. 27, 2024.

"It's been very important to us to make sure that it is the show, that it is the story that the fans love and that they're coming to expect and not disappoint them," Schwartz tells The Messenger.

"And at the same time, [it was also important to] be able to expand the story to make use of what the language of film and the technology of film allows you to do," he continues. "As we talked about the story we wanted to tell, it was impossible really to get into one movie unless the movie were four hours long. And so the decision was made to make two movies. And consequently, there's new stuff that I think the fans will enjoy. But our hope and intention is that the people to whom the story and the show are important will not in any way be disappointed, but will be thrilled by what they will see and the new stuff that's been added and the way film is used."

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Merrily We Roll Along, the hit Broadway revival of the Stephen Sondheim-George Furth musical starring Daniel Radcliffe, Jonathan Groff and Lindsay Mendez, is extending performances through Sunday, July 7, 2024, giving ticket-buyers an additional three months to grab seats.

The musical, which began previews Sept. 19 and opened Oct. 10 at the Hudson Theatre, was initially set to end its limited engagement on Jan. 21, then received its first extension through March 24. The new closing date will give the production an opportunity to crow over any accolades received at the June 16 Tony Awards.

The musical, one of the hottest – and highest priced – tickets in town, routinely hits the very upper reaches of the Broadway weekly grosses chart, repeatedly breaking its own house records at the Hudson. Most recently Merrily grossed $2,046,288 for the week ending November 26, 2023.

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Alicia Keys' musical 'Hell's Kitchen' is heading to Broadway in the spring.

The musical, which features music and lyrics by Keys and a book by Kristoffer Diaz, made its world premiere at the Public Theater on Oct. 24 and is currently running there through Jan. 14. “Hell’s Kitchen” will transfer to the Shubert Theatre on Broadway, with previews starting March 28 and opening night on April 20.

“Good things take time and for 13 years, I’ve been dreaming, developing and finding inspiration for a musical based on my experience growing up in Hell’s Kitchen, NYC. ‘Hell’s Kitchen’ is inspired by my life, but it’s not a biographical story. It’s a story about family relationships and identity: Who are we? Who do we want to be? Who are we becoming?” Keys said in a statement. “The score features new songs that I’m really excited to get out into the world alongside many of my album releases that you know but you’ve never heard like this – rearranged and reinterpreted.”

The Broadway cast has yet to be announced. The Off-Broadway production at the Public Theater includes Shoshana Bean, Maleah Joi Moon, Brandon Victor Dixon, Kecia Lewis, Chris Lee and Vanessa Ferguson.

“Hell’s Kitchen” features music consulting by Tom Kitt, music supervision by Adam Blackstone, choreography by Camille A. Brown and direction by Michael Greif. The creative team also includes scenic designer Robert Brill, costume designer Dede Ayite, lighting designer Natasha Katz, sound designer Gareth Owen, projection designer Peter Nigrini, and hair and wig designer Mia Neal.

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Theatregoers can expect to be leafletted by union delegates outside Australian performance venues in the new year, in a campaign to lift the pay of about 6,000 actors and dancers.

Major productions such as Beauty and the Beast and Wicked in Sydney, and Moulin Rouge and Grease in Melbourne could be targeted, along with a slew of Adelaide and Sydney festival performances and productions by the country’s flagship theatre companies.

Yearlong negotiations for a new performers collective agreement – between the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) and the peak body representing commercial and independent promoters and producers, Live Performance Australia (LPA) – have broken down in recent weeks.

Unlike the recent actors’ strike in the US, under Australia’s Fair Work Act industry-wide strike action is not permitted. Only the employees of individual production and theatre companies would be able to take protected action, so it is unlikely any shows will be disrupted or cancelled during the campaign.

Instead, the MEAA’s director of equity, Michelle Rae, is calling on theatre-lovers to pressure the LPA and the producers it represents to agree to an across-the-board pay rise of $34, representing a 3% annual increase, on the $1,100.96 weekly salary an ensemble cast member of a major touring show typically earns.

[...]

The MEAA has been negotiating performers collective agreements (PCA) with the LPA since the mid-1990s, enabling the union to collectively represent performer members across multiple employers.

A statement on the LPA website said employers in the industry had continued to increase wages over this period and many employers paid well in excess of PCA minimum rates.

The sticking point in current negotiations, which began in September 2022, is the union’s demand the pay rise is applied across the board, meaning those performers who have negotiated margins – individual agreements with their employers that pay higher than the PCA base rate – would also receive a salary increase.

“The difference between base rates and margins can vary from a few hundred dollars a week to several thousand dollars a week, depending on the performer’s experience and reputation and their ability to negotiate higher rates of pay (usually through their agent),” the LPA statement said.

“LPA does not agree that the proposed increases should be applied to margins. They should apply to the minimum rates specified in the PCA which mean all performers would receive an equitable increase in pay rates, regardless of their individual margin protections against workplace fatigue and stability of employment.”

The LPA offer stands at a 15.6% pay increase over three years and an increase to Sunday penalty rates, but only for performers on the base PCA rate.

In addition to the wage rise, the union is also asking for a limit on the number of times performers work back-to-back nine show working weeks, and improved continuity of employment and job security while touring.

Under the current contract system, if there is a layover period between a show moving from Melbourne to Sydney, for example, the cast does not get paid, yet they are prevented from taking on other performing work.

The cast members are still required to maintain their show-ready performance levels, choreography and scripts on their own, while waiting for the show to open in another city.

Rae said the contract system used in Australian live theatre is unfair and significantly punitive towards the employee, compared with most other industries.

“Unlike any other employee, a performer doesn’t have the right to resign,” she said.

“Once they’ve signed their contract, they can’t finish on that job until the contract is done. So if they got offered a better position, they can’t accept it or go for another role. They’re locked in.”

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Apple TV+ has canceled its animated comedy series Central Park after three seasons, according to star Josh Gad.

The show’s co-creator and lead voice cast star made the announcement on social media that the series will not return for a fourth season when he responded to a fan’s inquiry with “Sadly, it’s done” on social media. Apple confirmed that the series is not returning.

Central Park featured a voice cast that included Gad, Leslie Odom Jr., Emmy Raver-Lampman, Kathryn Hahn, Tituss Burgess and Stanley Tucci. The series recast Kristen Bell’s biracial character with Emmy Raver-Lampman after a backlash.

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What happened when four young theater actors performed for an older generation? “I was expecting to have the best show ever and that happened.”

Feel-good story about four child musical theatre performers holding a concert at an aged care home. Though I chuckled when I read one of them performed "Dead Mom" from Beetlejuice.

Archive link: https://archive.md/QdCpF

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Wicked movie trailer needs to break the trend of downplaying its musical nature to avoid hurting its hype and disappointing fans.

Marketing departments' nervousness about the musical genre is evident in recent movie musical trailers.

The trailer for Wicked is crucial for fans to see if the movie gets the songs right and it should offer glimpses of new numbers and fresh renditions of classic songs to generate excitement.

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Andy Karl will lead the Melbourne, Australia cast of Groundhog Day the Musical as Phil Connors – the cynical TV weatherman who finds himself caught in a time loop when sent to cover the annual Groundhog Day event in the small town of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania.

Andy Karl originated the role of Phil at London’s Old Vic Theatre before also going on to perform the role on Broadway and in its return season at The Old Vic earlier this year. He won an Olivier Award and was nominated for a Tony for the role.

Appearing alongside Andy Karl will be Helpmann award-winning performer Elise McCann as Rita Hanson. Completing the cast will be Afua Adjei, Grant Almirall, Kaya Byrne, Kate Cole, Rachel Cole, Benjamin Colley, Andrew Coshan, Andrew Dunne, Madison Green, Matthew Hamilton, Matt Hourigan, Michael Lindner, Etuate Lutui, Conor Neylon, Ashleigh Rubenach, Jacob Steen, Connor Sweeney, Alison Whyte, Tim Wright and Kate Yaxley.

Groundhog Day will play Melbourne's Princess Theatre from January 24, 2024.

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On 8 December 4pm US Eastern Time there will be a Submission Information Session for the 2024 National Alliance for Musical Theatre (NAMT) Festival of New Musicals.

NAMT New Works Director Frankie Dailey will walk you through the application process for this year’s Festival of New Musicals in this free webinar. Registration is required.

The National Alliance for Musical Theatre is now accepting submissions for our 36th Annual Festival of New Musicals, which will take place on Thursday, October 24 and Friday, October 25, 2024 in New York City. The first deadline, which allows writers to submit their musical for free, is Tuesday, December 19th (11:59pm EST).

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Andrew Lloyd Webber has called on investors to “think of Britain first” when putting money into theatre, claiming Broadway is a “vanity project”

He was speaking at the Global Investment Summit at Hampton Court Palace, attended by a number of investors and chief executives, at which prime minister Rishi Sunak delivered a speech.

Lloyd Webber noted the success of The Lion King film, stating that its worldwide current gross is $970 million – but that the theatre show had generated $10.2 billion.

“A statistic I got last week for London is that for every pound that it generates in the theatre, it generates £1.40 in the local economy,” he said. “Theatre is, in my view, in the UK, an incredibly exciting and good investment.

“Broadway is now almost a vanity project and the only shows that can survive on Broadway are shows like The Lion King or Hamilton, which are so huge that they can more than break even.

“To put a musical on Broadway now would cost roughly $20 million.”

The composer explained the story behind The Little Big Things, a show currently running in the West End, adding: “You’re not going to find work like that in any other place than London or the West End.”

Lloyd Webber continued: “I passionately ask for two things: that theatre is supported by government a little more than perhaps it is at the moment, and I passionately ask you, if you are thinking of investing, to think of Britain first and think of our theatre.”

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Speaking at the Piccadilly Theatre in London, Baz Luhrmann revealed he had “absolutely” considered re-adapting Moulin Rouge! into a film.

The hit show is based on the much-loved turn-of-the-century film about a Parisian courtesan who falls in love with a writer. It starred Ewan McGregor and Nicole Kidman. At the 74th Academy Awards it was nominated for eight Oscars, winning two.

Said Luhrman:

Do a film version of this stage evolution of Moulin Rouge!? The thought has crossed my mind. Yeah, I think we’ll see that. And the preposterous conceit about Moulin Rouge! is that the poet opens his mouth, and contemporary music that we all love comes out of it. So I can see in 20 years you recalibrating it again with new music.

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A list of musical theatre proshots and film adaptations available on Disney+, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Max, Apple TV+, Hulu and BroadwayHD.

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With Merrily We Roll Along back on Broadway as a hit, how many musicals are flops in their original Broadway production and then return as smashes?

The article goes into the history of Merrily We Roll Along in some detail, with the original production flopping badly and the current revival being a smash hit. It also talks about Parade, She Loves Me, Candide, Cabaret, Chicago, The Rocky Horror Show and Oh! Calcutta!

It's an interesting article though the headline is a bit of a misnomer, as some of these shows were actually hits in their original runs (ie shows which recouped their investments), which went on to become bigger hits when revived, or flops (ie shows which lost money for their investors) which went on to become smaller flops.

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The Gilded Age (or Downton Abbey: New York as I call it) is a fun show, partly on its own merits (it's a high-class "old money versus new money" soap opera set in the 1880s), and partly because it features a long, long list of musical theatre (and straight theatre) performers in its sizeable ensemble, as this BroadwayWorld article goes on to list. Among the well known (and lesser known) actors in the series are Christine Baranski, Audra McDonald, Denee Benton, Laura Benanti, Donna Murphy, Kelli O'Hara, Patrick Page, Nathan Lane, Celia Keenan-Bolger, Michael Cerveris, Douglas Sills, Claybourne Elder, Robert Sean Leonard, Debra Monk, Taylor Richardson, Ashlie Atkinson, Kristine Nielsen, William Ryall, John Douglas Thompson, Jeremy Shamos, Tony Carlin, John Behlmann, Dakin Matthews, Michael Halling, Fergie L Philippe, Darren Goldstein, Josh Davis, Todd A Horman, Samantha Sturm, Brittany Bradford, Audra Bennett, Michael Di Liberto, Fred Inkley and Adam Monley.

Julian Fellowes, creator and writer of The Gilded Age (and Downton Abbey) has also dabbled in musical theatre, with the book for the stage adaptation of Mary Poppins to his credit (which, you know, you can see how that might happen), as well as - more improbably - the book for the School of Rock musical, adapted from the Jack Black film (which, how the hell?).

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It was on a late summer’s night in 2022, about eight months after his death, that I confirmed that Stephen Sondheim had turned into a holy ghost.

The setting was the St. James Theater on Broadway, where I had wearily gone to yet another revival of “Into the Woods.” I had seen the show many times before but was told I had to experience the pop star Sara Bareilles’s breakout take on the role of the Baker’s Wife — and though Ms. Bareilles was indeed very good, it wasn’t her performance that was that night’s great revelation. What truly stirred and shook me was how the audience, including me, was responding to the show. In some unexpected way, we had been transformed into trembling pilgrims gathered at a sacred meeting spot — sighing, gasping, sobbing.

As the show respun the Grimm Brothers’ bedtime stories of wishes granted and lives transformed, people seemed to be registering the songs’ familiar lyrics as if they were newly writ gospel, heaven-sent to counsel and console. Often the words felt especially pertinent to a world emerging from the isolation of a long pandemic: “And you’re back again, only different than before,” or the repeated, “No one is alone.” Or, to quote a passage that showed up frequently on social media in the days after Mr. Sondheim died two years ago, on Nov. 26, 2021: “Sometimes people leave you halfway through the wood. Do not let it grieve you. No one leaves for good.”

Stephen Sondheim would seem not to have left us at all. There have been four recent revivals of his musicals on Broadway: a gender-reversed version of “Company,” his 1970 breakthrough about marriage Manhattan-style; the latest “Into the Woods”; and two other current hits, “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” and “Merrily We Roll Along.” There’s also a new Sondheim musical Off Broadway: “Here We Are,” a contemporary riff on two Luis Buñuel films on which the composer had been working with the playwright David Ives.

Then there are the books — the new biographies and deconstructions and collected interviews. He permeates our cultural oxygen like a latter-day Shakespeare. As with Shakespeare, his words are often applied in ways that their creator most likely never intended. To borrow from W.H. Auden’s “In Memory of W.B. Yeats”: “The words of a dead man/Are modified in the guts of the living.”

Mr. Sondheim, who specialized in portraits of yearning outsiders, would probably regard his canonization on Broadway with the deeply mixed feelings in which he specialized. (Surely, he would have cocked an eyebrow at his apotheosis as the warm and comforting spirit guide that seemed to materialize at that recent performance of “Into the Woods.”) While he seemed to reinvent himself with each new show, his works have always centered on a sense of human isolation, and those who perceived the composer in his early years as too clever by half failed to notice the attendant pain that underlay so much of what he wrote.

It is the empathic awareness of that pain, I think, that has kept us hooked on his work — not any omniscient wisdom but his ability to summon so clearly our confused, contradictory humanity. Ravishing individual songs may reassure us that no one is alone but, in the five decades since “Company” made his reputation, Mr. Sondheim had been creating group portraits of a crowded world where loneliness was an existential fact. When he writes, “No one is alone,” it hurts so much precisely because we sense that it is ultimately a falsehood.

It should be noted that, when he was alive, Mr. Sondheim was aware of and amused by rampant tendencies to deify him. Consider this sardonic ditty from a show called “Sondheim on Sondheim,” a 2010 Broadway revue commemorating his 80th birthday. He wrote the song in response to a 1994 headline in New York magazine that asked, “Is Stephen Sondheim God?” His musical answer: “You have to have something to believe in. Something to appropriate, emulate, overrate. Might as well be Stephen, or to use his nickname: God!”

That the works of this god have continued to be fruitful and multiply (barely a week goes by when I don’t receive notice of a new Sondheim revival or revue) partly stems from our deep reluctance to ever let him go. There’s a half-voiced fear among musical acolytes, understandable in a time in which theater itself is newly under siege, that on some level Stephen Sondheim represents the end of the line for a once-flourishing art form.

Contemporary composers like Lin-Manuel Miranda, Michael John LaChiusa, Adam Guettel, Michael R. Jackson and Jeanine Tesori have all been producing work of high caliber and originality. Yet none, with the qualified exception of Mr. Miranda, seem likely to engender the kind of enduring, passionate cult that Mr. Sondheim has inspired. Nor is it easy to imagine any of them ascending to the unapproachable dominance of their profession that was Mr. Sondheim’s for roughly half a century. His combination of sense (such ingenious rhymes, such intricate melodies) and sensibility (the aching ambivalence that always throbs beneath) remains ineluctably singular.

Of the three Sondheim shows playing in New York right now, only “Merrily We Roll Along,” as directed by Maria Friedman, fully plumbs those emotional depths, with their swirls of darkness and light. The recent “Sweeney Todd” was fun to look at and wonderful to listen to but it never grabbed me viscerally. “Here We Are” — on which Mr. Sondheim was still working just before he died — unsettled me but perhaps not in the ways it was meant to. Fittingly, this posthumous show was the last of the three productions that I attended.

A loose adaptation of the Buñuel films “The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie” and “The Exterminating Angel,” the musical follows a group of narcissistic, superrich Manhattanites in their futile search for nothing more nor less than a proper meal. As a work of satire, with its arch dropping of fashionable names and pursuits, it sometimes felt like a thinned-out throwback to “Company,” and the songs emerged in spasmodic spurts of music, which to me suggested death throes.

Then, near the top of the second act, a bishop (played by David Hyde Pierce) sits down at a piano to play. No sound emerges.

The music, it would appear, has ceased to be.

The audience, appropriately dressed in discreetly bourgeois style, seemed to enjoy the antic cleverness of the show but its eulogistic quality left me chilled and sad. If Mr. Sondheim were indeed God, then the evidence of this show — appropriate to a Buñuel adaptation — was that God had died before our eyes.

Afterward, though, I felt newly grateful for the saturation of all things Sondheim this season. After all, it offers vast and diverse evidence that his music hasn’t died. His songs will never stop being revisited and revived for as long as people remain confused and isolated and hopeful against the odds, in divided times, for some kind of human connection.

That’s what being alive (to use another Sondheim lyric) means. That’s why his music keeps being reborn, again and again, all over this lonely city — sometimes in ways that might have surprised, and pleased, even him.

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A new musical about Tammy Faye Bakker, the singing televangelist whose colorful life and collapsed ministry have repeatedly been dramatized for stage and screen, is pledging to open on Broadway next season.

The show, called “Tammy Faye,” features music by Elton John and lyrics by Jake Shears of the Scissor Sisters. The musical had a run last year at the Almeida Theater in London, where the critic Matt Wolf called it “spectacularly entertaining.”

The musical is being directed by Rupert Goold, the artistic director of the Almeida and a two-time Tony nominee for the plays “Ink” and “King Charles III.” The book is by James Graham, a prolific English playwright whose previous Broadway outings include “Ink” and the musical “Finding Neverland.”

John and Shears, although best known for their careers in pop music, have both worked extensively in theater. John has written songs for many shows, including “The Lion King”; won a Tony Award for “Aida”; and is now also reworking a musical adaptation of “The Devil Wears Prada” that was poorly received during an initial production in Chicago. Shears has not only written theater songs, but also performed in “Kinky Boots” on Broadway, and is currently starring in “Cabaret” in London.

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At least this version has some singing in the trailer for the musical.

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A prestigious Japanese all-female theatre company has admitted it feels responsible for the death of a young actress whose suspected suicide was reportedly caused by overwork.

Executives from Takarazuka Revue apologised for "loss of life" but did not announce a compensation package for the 25-year-old's family.

Chairman Kenshi Koba also said he was stepping down.

There's fierce competition to join the company, one of Japan's most popular.

Formed in 1913, it has achieved cult status in Japan for its glitzy interpretations of romantic musicals.

[This includes Japanese versions of foreign language (ie English, German, French etc) musicals such as Ahrens & Flaherty's Anastasia, Wildhorn & Black's Bonnie & Clyde, Levay & Kunze's Elisabeth, Presgurvic's Romeo & Juliet, and Yeston's Phantom.]

The troupe is highly sought after by aspiring young female singers and dancers, who operate in a rigid hierarchy. Often playing male roles, the female performers draw huge audiences.

"It is undeniable that a strong psychological burden was placed on [the woman], and we did not sufficiently fulfil our duty of care for her safety," Mr Koba told a news conference at the revue's base in the western city of Takarazuka.

Addressing relatives, he said: "We deeply apologise for not being able to protect a precious member of your family."

Regarding the family's request for compensation, Mr Koba said: "I want to make sure we apologise and compensate them.

"Unfortunately, we have not had the opportunity yet," public broadcaster NHK reported him saying.

The chairman and two other executives promised new measures to ensure nothing similar happened in future. It plans to reduce the number of weekly performances from nine to eight.

But they said they were not aware of young artists' struggles at the musical troupe. In a statement, they said they had received no complaints and were not aware of any staff shortages.

The actress, who had been with the company for six years, is not being named. Her family have chosen to remain anonymous because of the stigma still attached to suicide in Japan.

She was found dead in her condominium in Takarazuka on 30 September. Police said she died of suspected suicide.

An independent team comprised mainly of lawyers was commissioned by the company to investigate the circumstances surrounding the death. It did not confirm any incidences of bullying or harassment at the news conference.

But it found that it was "undeniable that the combination of long hours of activities and pressure from senior members may have placed a psychological burden" on the woman.

Her family are suing the company for compensation. The actress took her own life because the overworking and bullying by her seniors "compromised her mental and physical health", her family's lawyer said last week.

The lawyer said she was under an outsourcing contract with the company and that her overtime exceeded 277 hours a month, which was above the government's criteria for worker compensation. Takarazuka Revue has put the figure at 118 hours a month.

The woman's family have also claimed she suffered burns two years ago when a senior member pressed a hair iron against her forehead, an allegation the company denied when it was reported in a weekly magazine this February.

The company "turned a blind eye while subjecting [the actress] to abnormal, excessively long working hours, leaving her extremely fatigued," her family said in a statement, demanding that the company, along with those it alleges abused their daughter, acknowledge their responsibility and apologise.

Investigators reported "we could not confirm (that it was intentional)" that a senior member of the troupe had burned the 25-year-old's forehead with a hair iron, The Asahi Shimbun reported.

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Dear Evan Hansen will embark on tour in the UK in a brand-new production. The new production is directed by Adam Penford, artistic director of co-producer Nottingham Playhouse. The show will open at the Nottingham Playhouse on 9 September 2024, ahead of a UK tour. Casting has yet to be announced.

Says Penford:

This first, major, new and exciting UK production offers the opportunity to reexamine some of its contemporary themes and present this brand-new version to Nottingham and around the UK. I’m excited to begin the search for our Evan very soon.
The tour will open at Nottingham Playhouse on 9 September, running until 28 September, with subsequent stops including Curve Leicester (from 1 October), Brighton Theatre Royal (from 15 October), Alexandra Theatre in Birmingham (from 22 October), New Victoria in Woking (from 29 October), Leeds Grand (from 5 November), Liverpool Empire (from 12 November), Sunderland Empire (from 19 November) and New Theatre Oxford (from 26 November).

Into the new year, the show will visit Northampton Derngate (from 14 January 2025), Mayflower Southampton (from 21 January 2025), Milton Keynes Theatre (from 28 January 2025), Marlowe Theatre Canterbury (from 4 February), Bristol Hippodrome (from 11 February 2025), Manchester Palace Theatre (from 18 February 2025), King’s Theatre Glasgow (from 25 February 2025), His Majesty’s Aberdeen (from 4 March 2025), Grand Opera House Belfast (from 11 March 2025), Storyhouse Chester (from 18 March 2025), New Wimbledon Theatre (from 25 March 2025), Wolverhampton Grand (from 1 April 2025), Sheffield Lyceum (from 8 April 2025), Theatre Royal Plymouth (from 15 April 2025), Hull New Theatre (from 22 April 2025), Wales Millenium Centre Cardiff (from 29 April 2025) and Theatre Royal Norwich (from 13 May 2025).

As far as I'm aware this will be the first English language production of Dear Evan Hansen not to feature the original direction by Michael Greif. That production played on Broadway, the West End, Toronto, and toured the United States.

This new Nottingham Playhouse production will just beat out a different new production of Dear Evan Hansen to be staged in Australia. The Sydney Theatre Company production will begin performances on 12 October 2024, and is directed by Dean Bryant.

While these will be the first new English language productions, the show has been staged in Argentina, Finland and Israel in 2023, each with a different creative team.

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When you think of great Aussie (movie) musicals, some key films from the 1990s and 2000s come to mind: Strictly Ballroom, Muriel’s Wedding, Moulin Rouge!, Bran Nue Dae and The Sapphires. These films are often framed as “reviving” the musical genre for Australian audiences, due in large part to their box-office success.

While certainly fantastic films, there is actually a long history of Aussie musicals that have been popular with cinema audiences since the 1930s.

There are 73 films that have been classified as a “musical” or containing musical elements by the National Film and Sound Archive. They include comedies, children’s and animated films, dramas, revues, backstage musicals, biopics, dance films, rock musicals, soundtrack films, television musicals and live concert films.

The article goes on to talk about five films:

  • Funny Things Happen Down Under (1965) - an adaptation of the Terrible Ten children’s television show, Olivia Newton-John's debut feature
  • Oz (1976) aka Oz: A Rock ‘n’ Roll Road Movie, or 20th Century Oz on its release in the United States - a version of The Wizard of Oz as a rock'n'roll road movie set in the Australian outback
  • Starstruck (1982) - a backstage musical set in 1980s Sydney
  • Dogs in Space (1986) - set in the underground punk scene in late 1970s Melbourne, starring Michael Hutchence
  • One Night the Moon (2001) - featuring singer-songwriter Paul Kelly
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Weeks into his senior year of high school in Texas, Max Hightower earned a key male role for his campus’s production of Oklahoma! the musical. But the trans teen’s principal has since stripped the teen of the part, citing a new policy requiring students to only portray characters who align with the gender identity assigned to them when they were born.

Hightower and his family are now appealing the administrator’s decision to the school board while the play is put on hold pending a review.

The 17-year-old child’s ordeal offers up one of the latest disputes illustrating the hostile climate with which members of LGBTQ+ communities must grapple in politically conservative areas of the US, particularly in the US south.

“I had only seen stuff like this on the news,” Hightower told the Washington Post in a report published on Friday. “And I didn’t think it would happen in our school because nothing had happened before.”

As his family separately recounted to the Texas television news station KXAS, for four years, Hightower had excelled in the choir and theater programs offered up at Sherman high school, about 75 miles north of Dallas.

Hightower’s gender identity had never been an impediment. And the trans boy believed it would stay that way as recently as last month, when he landed the role of male character Ali Hakim for the production of Oklahoma! that Sherman was supposed to stage for three days beginning on 8 December.

Hakim is a love interest of one of the play’s female leads.

However, about two weeks later, Hightower and his parents received news that was devastating to them. Sherman’s principal said to the family that Hightower would actually lose out on the Ali Hakim role because of a new policy.

“Only males can play males, and only females can play females,” Max’s father, Phillip Hightower, recalled being told by the principal, according to KXAS.

Other students – cisgender and transgender alike – also learned that their roles would either be changing or eliminated because of the same policy, Max Hightower told the Post. Hightower described how many of those students were driven to tears, having spent weeks rehearsing songs, memorizing lines and erecting the set.

“It’s not fair,” he said.

The parents of Hightower and some of the other affected students resolved to turn to the local school board to pursue a reversal of the Sherman school’s decision.

“I’m not an activist – I’m not highly political. I have both liberal and conservative beliefs,” Phillip Hightower said. “I’m just a dad that wants to fight for his kid.

In a statement provided to various media outlets, officials of the school district governing Sherman high school said Oklahoma! would be under review until at least the middle of January because they had been alerted to the production’s “mature adult themes, profane language and sexual content”.

The statement claimed “there is no policy on how students are assigned to roles”.

“As it relates to this particular production, the sex of the role as identified in the script will be used when casting,” said the statement from the district, whose governing board next meets on Monday. “Because the nature and subject matter of productions vary, the district is not inclined to apply this criteria to all future productions.”

Phillip Hightower said the media statement was not consistent with the “kind of odd” policy outline that Sherman high’s principal communicated to his family. He added that, despite the school district’s stance, many in the local community rallied behind Max and his schoolmates after word of their dilemma spread.

A local college theater department had even invited Max to attend a special event over the weekend. “I didn’t see any hate in any of that,” Phillip Hightower told KXAS.

The Sherman high controversy unfolds despite stage theater’s long history of actors playing roles that don’t align with the gender they were assigned at birth. For instance, in William Shakespeare’s plays, boys and young men often portrayed characters who were women.

In September, a Texas law banning drag performances in front of youth took effect. Laws prohibiting minors from receiving gender-affirming care and mandating that college athletes compete on teams aligning with their birth-assigned gender also went into effect.

State-level lawmakers around the US weighed hundreds of anti-LGBTQ+ during legislative sessions this year, with nearly half of them in the south. Dozens passed, though in some cases their implementation has been at least delayed by court challenges.

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For the second consecutive year, Broadway cast albums made a clean sweep of the Grammy nominations for Best Musical Theater Album, shutting out both the West End and Off Broadway.

Competing for the 2023 Grammy will be Kimberly Akimbo, Parade, Shucked, Some Like It Hot and Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. Three of the five nominees are new shows, while two – Parade and Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street – are revivals.

Playbill goes into more detail:

Listed as nominees for Kimberly Akimbo are album producers John Clancy, David Stone, and Jeanine Tesori, along with lyricist David Lindsay-Abaire. Parade's nominees include cast members Micaela Diamond, Alex Joseph Grayson, Jake Pedersen, and Ben Platt; and album producers Jason Robert Brown and Jeffrey Lessser. Album producers Brandy Clark, Jason Howland, Shane McAnally, and Billy Jay Stein are the nominees for Shucked, while Some Like It Hot's nominees are actors Christian Borle, J. Harrison Ghee, Adrianna Hicks, and Natasha Yvette Williams; album producers Mary-Mitchell Campbell, Bryan Carter, Scott M. Riesett, Charlie Rosen, and Marc Shaiman; and lyricist Scott Wittman. Nominated for Sweeney Todd are actors Annaleigh Ashford and Josh Groban along with album producers Thomas Kail and Alex Lacamoire.

Also picking up nominations were Liz Callaway's To Steve With Love: Liz Callaway Celebrates Stephen Sondheim and Sondheim Unplugged (The NYC Sessions) Vol. 3, both in the Traditional Pop Vocal Album category.

The Met's Champion got a nomination for Best Opera Recording, along with Boston Modern Orchestra Project and Odyssey Opera Chorus's The Lord of Cries and The Dime Museum and Isaura String Quartet's Black Lodge.

Among the other stage names earning nominations were 9 to 5 composer Dolly Parton, nominated for Best Country Solo Performance for "The Last Thing On My Mind;" High School Musical: The Musical: The Series star Olivia Rodrigo for Song of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best Pop Solo Performance for "Vampire" and Album of the Year for Guts; and opera star Rhiannon Giddens for Best Americana Album for You're the One.

Shucked songwriters Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally also had a banner nomination day. Beyond their nod for Shucked's Broadway cast album, McAnally got a nomination for Songwriter of the Year, while Clark picked up nods for Best Country Song and Country Solo Performance ("Buried"), Americana Album (Brandy Clark), and Americana Performance and American Roots Song ("Dear Insecurity").

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Sheridan Smith is to star in a musical by Rufus Wainwright based on John Cassavetes’ 1977 film Opening Night, about an actor struggling with her new stage role. Directed by Ivo van Hove, whose book accompanies Wainwright’s music and lyrics, the show will open at the Gielgud theatre in London in March.

Widely regarded as one of the best films about theatrical life, Opening Night starred Gena Rowlands as Myrtle, who is haunted by the death of a teenage fan and bullied by her director during the out-of-town tryouts for a play heading to Broadway. Cassavetes, Rowlands’s husband, played Myrtle’s co-star and former lover. Wainwright said the film “has long been a shining beacon representing both excellence in cinema and the might of live theatre. An intense marriage of film and stage, it is about a very personal mental and creative survival that I think we can all relate to on a very deep human level.” He added: “I’ve been waiting for ages to write my first musical … I don’t think I could have aimed any higher.”

Smith, who had a West End hit with Shirley Valentine earlier this year, said that Myrtle was a “complex and challenging character” and that it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to work with Wainwright and Van Hove: “Quite frankly, if they’d asked me to read out the back of a cereal packet, I’d have been there.” Van Hove said that Opening Night “not only gives us an insight into the trials and tribulations behind the scenes of the theatre, but is also the heartbreaking story of a woman fighting for hope and self-determination in a world that doesn’t want to listen”.

The show will be presented by Wessex Grove, Gavin Kalin Productions and Playful Productions, who previously collaborated on Van Hove’s West End version of A Little Life starring James Norton.

Van Hove staged a play based on Opening Night in 2006 with the company Toneelgroep Amsterdam (now Internationaal Theater Amsterdam), which he led as artistic director. A scene from Opening Night inspired the 24-hour show The Second Woman, staged in London this year with Ruth Wilson.

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Stephen Sondheim was a city boy, a born Upper West Sider who in 1960 bought a townhome on 49th Street with the profits of Gypsy, then lived there for the rest of his life — mostly. He also had a country escape, a retreat in Roxbury, Connecticut, that saw more use as he got older. He bought that house in 1980 on the advice of Peter Wooster, the designer friend who knew the area and eventually settled in the property’s carriage house. The composer was there off and on — including on the fated weekend in 1995 when a fire swept through the townhouse (thankfully sparing his manuscripts, but killing his dog). Neighbors in the Turtle Bay garden district remember that he was rarely in town after the pandemic hit.

Sondheim died in 2021, his Manhattan townhouse went into contract a few weeks ago, and now his sprawling three-bedroom Connecticut compound is on the market for $3.25 million. (The link contains many photos of the home.)

The 1792 home was restored in a way that stripped it down to its essence: A vaulted ceiling in the main, open living area exposes wood beams. A sunny, glassed-in porch retains old stone flooring. Wide plank floors give the place character and spunk — especially in a brainy little wood-walled office, where two guitars sit by a radiator. There’s a library with a rolling ladder, and shelves and drawers that look designed to have held his archive. Then there’s a sunroom with windows on three sides, which now pour light onto a grand piano. Around the room are cubbyholes that likely held sheet music, and behind it is the chaise where one can assume Sondheim wrote, which he customarily did lying down.

Where there’s wall space, there are signed cast posters, translated show posters, and just plain theater posters. They even show up at the foot of a bed as though, in the place where Sondheim fled to escape the action, he also needed to be reminded of what he’d done.

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