Prouvaire

joined 2 years ago
 

As part of a longer interview Kate Miller-Heidke talks musical theatre, Muriel's Wedding and Bananaland:

“I think I was a very eccentric child, a bit socially backward, a sort of mixture of painfully awkward and introverted and also a terrible show-off who loved to sing. I didn’t know where I fit in for a long time, and then I discovered amateur musical theatre. I found my people. When I met the theatre kids I realised, ‘Oh, I’m not such a freak after all’.” She took violin and piano lessons and joined the children’s chorus of professional productions of Brisbane shows like Oliver.

But the highlight [of her career] so far has been the success of Muriel’s Wedding the musical. “It’s such a buzz to get to sit in the audience after a few champagnes and getting to watch what we’ve done without any pressure of performing myself. The opening night of Muriel’s Wedding at that point was the biggest thrill I’d ever experienced. Partly because it wasn’t me on stage.” Yes, she still gets nervous every performance, despite decades of experience. She’d be worried if she wasn’t she says.

This year promises to be a busy one for her and Nuttall. They plan to go to the UK where Muriel’s Wedding, which won five Helpmann Awards, including Best Original Score, is slated to open on the West End after a regional tour in Britain.

BANANALAND, the project that’s brought them to the Sydney Festival, was a project they began during COVID lockdown, with Nuttall writing the script and Miller-Heidke writing the music particularly with the voice of Max McKenna in mind. McKenna, then known as Maggie, starred in Muriel’s Wedding and has what Miller-Heidke describes as one of her “favourite voices on the planet.” It is directed by Simon Phillips, who also directed Muriel’s Wedding on stage.

BANANALAND follows the story of angry punk rockers Kitty Litter and their unexpected rise to fame when one of the band’s protest anthems becomes a hit with the unlikeliest of listenerships – kids. A narrative similar to that of the Wiggles, some of whom started in the band the Cockroaches.

“The main protagonist, Ruby Semblances, is in a band who are on a mission to save the world. She’s got a bit too much Rock Eisteddfod in her background. And she takes it very seriously. She almost has a messiah complex. She’s a magnetic presence and the rest of the band take their lead from her, and they have very strong messages which are quite didactic.

“We began it so long ago it started off with Joh Bjelke-Petersen in mind. Now it’s about Clive Palmer’s incursion into federal politics,” says Miller-Heidke, who, like Nuttall, is a Queenslander who grew up with Bjelke-Petersen and Palmer often discussed.

“The kids mistake the political anthem for a song about a magical land where everybody gets a free banana and it starts climbing the charts to become a hit with the very young set,” she says.

Things go bad, there’s hints of violence, a giant inflatable penis, and Miller-Heidke warns the show really is not intended for children. “Keir created the story, the characters and the whole script, and it’s very, very rare to get an original show put up like this. It costs millions of dollars. It’s very risky. Musicals usually take about 10 years to develop, and we’re just so lucky that Brisbane, now Sydney Festival got on board to support it.

“Because it’s a comedy it lives or dies by the laughs and by the time we got to opening night in Brisbane I was like, is this even funny? I don’t know any more. And then when the audience started to laugh, and then when that laughter kept building and building and there was this sort of runaway train of laughter I was like, ‘Oh, thanks’. That sort of exhilaration is really cool.”

 

Roundabout Theatre Company's 2024-2025 Broadway season will include a jazz-infused, New Orleans-style production of The Pirates of Penzance, which began as a small in-house reading before the pandemic, then was further developed in a benefit concert last season. The production, which will close out the 24-25 season will premier in April 2025 at the Todd Haimes Theatre on Broadway and star musical theatre heartthrob Ramin Karimloo as the Pirate King and David Hyde Pierce as the Major General and WS Gilbert. The Gilbert & Sullivan classic features a new adaptation by Rupert Holmes. Let's see if Karimloo will keep his shirt on during the show.

 

New West End musical The Time Traveller's Wife has posted early closing notices at the Apollo Theatre in London.

The show was originally booking to 30 March 2024, but will now close on 24 February 2024.

Anyone who has purchased tickets after 24 February will be contacted by their ticketing provider.

Based on the best-selling book by Audrey Niffenegger and the movie screenplay by Bruce Joel Rubin, The Time Traveller’s Wife boasts original musical from multi Grammy Award-winning composers Joss Stone, and Dave Stewart from Eurythmics. The shows’s book is by Lauren Gunderson, with additional songs by Nick Finlow (music) and Kait Kerrigan (lyrics).

Reviews for The Time Traveller’s Wife were mainly positive, if not glowing. Last Sunday, 7 January, the show celebrated 100 performances in the West End.

 

Burlesque has announced further dates for its world premiere production.

Based on the 2010 musical drama film, directed by Steve Antin, it revolves around a small-town girl named Ali Rose (played by Christina Aguilera in the original flick) who moves to Los Angeles and stumbles upon a struggling burlesque lounge owned by Tess (played by Cher on screen).

Penned now for the stage by Antin, the theatrical version will have tunes by Aguilera, Sia and Diane Warren, as well as additional numbers by Jess Folley and Todrick Hall and additional material by Kate Wetherhead.

Performances from 13 to 29 June at Manchester Opera House have now sold out, but the production has added a second run at the same venue from Thursday 3 October to Saturday 2 November 2024.

Before that, the piece will play at Glasgow Theatre Royal from 11 to 28 September 2024. These two runs will come prior to a West End transfer, with details to be revealed.

On the creative team are Nick Winston (director and choreographer), Soutra Gilmour (set designer), Tom Curran (musical arrangements and orchestrations), Ryan Dawson Laight (costume designer), Phil Bateman (musical supervisor), Chris Poon (musical director), Robin Antin (creative co-producer/associate choreographer), Harry Blumenau (casting director), Sarah-Jane Price (casting associate) and Lloyd Thomas (production manager).

Casting for the runs are to be revealed.

 

The multiple Academy Award winning motion picture Les Misérables will be re-released with a remastered version of the film exclusively in Dolby Cinema, featuring Dolby Atmos sound and Dolby Vision visuals.

The film will be released:

  • 14 February in Australia and New Zealand, the United Kingdom and Ireland
  • 22 February in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates
  • 23 February in the United States for a one-week engagement at AMC Theatres
  • this spring in South Korea, Germany, The Netherlands, Denmark
  • August in Japan
 

Michael, the Michael Jackson biopic starring Jaafar Jackson as the King of Pop, is getting a global release. Lionsgate is releasing the movie stateside on April 18, 2025, with Universal is handling overseas distribution.

Today, Lionsgate announced that it was beginning production on director Antoine Fuqua’s Michael on January 22.

The John Logan-scripted movie, produced by Bohemian Rhapsody‘s Graham King, follows the complicated man who becomes the King of Pop, from triumphs to tragedies, from his human side and personal struggles to his creative genius.

Last January, Jaafar Jackson, the 27-year old nephew of Michael Jackson, landed the title role. The singer and songwriter is the son of former Jackson 5 member and solo act Jermaine Jackson. Jaafar has been singing and dancing since age 12 and showcased himself singing tunes from Sam Cooke to Marvin Gaye, along with originals.

Fuqua said in an interview with EW: “It’s uncanny how much he’s like Michael … sounds like him, dances like him, sings. It’s really uncanny. Graham King, who is a fantastic producer, found him, and introduced him to me, and I was blown away.”

While the estate’s of musical legends can often hold sway of how their cinematic narrative is told, Fuqua says his Michael Jackson biopic will retell the King of Pop’s tale “as we know it” and tackle some of the controversies the singer was involved in during his lifetime.

“Just to tell the facts as we know it, about the artist, about the man, about the human being. You know, the good, bad and the ugly,” Fuqua said in that interview.

King said in a statement today: “I’m so honored to tell Michael’s story. It’s been a long journey and I’m excited for the film to show audiences around the world a perspective of Michael that they’ve never seen.”

The movie is not related to the stage musical MJ, currently playing on Broadway with productions scheduled for a US tour, London, Hamburg and Sydney.

 

An overview of what's coming to Broadway in 2024. Musicals include

  • Days of Wine and Roses
  • The Notebook
  • Water for Elephants
  • The Who's Tommy
  • The Outsiders
  • Lempicka
  • Hell's Kitchen
  • The Heart of Rock and Roll
  • Suffs
  • The Wiz
  • Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club
  • Smash
  • Tammy Faye
  • Sunset Boulevard
 

Interesting article about the thinking that went into adapting the musical to the screen.

20 years after the original Mean Girls premiered, Tina Fey has returned to the halls of North Shore High to bring the musical adaptation to the big screen.

In order to bring the 2018 Broadway hit to Hollywood, the writer, producer, and star enlisted director duo Arturo Perez Jr. and Samantha Jayne to helm the movie musical.

While describing their first meeting about the film, Fey says that "they very smartly knew and said, 'We think that because most people who see this movie will have seen the original, many of them will have seen the musical, how can we surprise them?"

The film features 12 musical numbers – cut down from the stage versions 21 songs – each of which completely immerse the audience into a musical frenzy. Along with choreographer Kyle Hanagami and Steadycam Operator Ari Robbins, the team aimed for audiences to feel like they are walking in each characters' shoes.

"I think for us, the rules that we set for the musical sequences was just whose perspective are we in and what's the feeling we're trying to achieve and then just using every cinematic tool possible to kind of raise those things up," Perez shared.

"It's one thing to be like, this is what the dancers and the performers are doing," Fey said of the complexities of filming musical numbers. "But where is the camera catching that?"

The film is mainly told through the lense of Janis and Damian, the high school outcasts who take in Cady as their way of getting revenge on Regina George. Fey describes Perez and Jayne's original pitch as framing the film with Janis and Damian as the directors.

"How would a bunch of 16-year-olds figure out how to make a movie? Okay, they'd bring their friends in who play in the band, but they actually also play at all the cool house parties. Alright, let's get them to do the score on screen. Let's get these girls who are in choir, but also have their little bedroom-pop thing going on, let's get them to do the singing, this Greek chorus that we can create," Jayne continues.

The film also seamlessly incorporates social media into the story, something that wasn't as prevalent during the original film. From TikTok montages to musical numbers shot on cell phones, the directors creatively use modern day technology to expand the story.

"That's why one of the things I love most about this movie is going from the telephone aspect ratio which is 9 x 16, and then you go to cinema-scope and you don't even notice it, hopefully. It's going from like small to massive. That was the most exciting part for us," Perez shares.

The songs, composed by Fey's husband, Jeff Richmond, with lyrics by Nell Benjamin, have also been updated for film.

"I think musically, the instrumentation could be so different than on Broadway because, after working with a live orchestra on Broadway, this is a very different palette," Fey says of her husband's work.

To perfect the pop sound that fits into the story as good as Regina George's Christian Louboutin heels, the writers also recruited star Reneé Rapp to contribute to some of the music.

After Rapp played the role of high school it-girl Regina George on Broadway, Fey knew she had what it takes to bring the role to the big screen.

"She had the voice. I knew on a really technical level that she was young enough to still play it in a closeup," Fey said. "When the musical ended in the pandemic, she went and did that HBO show, Sex Lives of College Girls, I just was so impressed to see her learning curve of like, 'Oh, stage acting, Jimmy Award-winner, now I'm a television comedy actor.' She understood it immediately. She just is so funny. She really understands the shift to the on-camera acting."

Joining Rapp in the film is a stacked lineup of fresh talent, including Angourie Rice, Auli’i Cravalho, Avantika, Bebe Wood, Christopher Briney, and Tony nominated A Strange Loop star Jaquel Spivey.

In order to create a realistic high school environment, the teams says they had extensive conversations regarding the film's aesthetic.

"We had lots of conversations about what the school looked like, what the world looks like, and it was really important for us to keep it really grounded and identifiable with teenagers," Jayne says. "We wanted all of these kids to be really reflective of the student bodies that kids see in their everyday high school. Keeping that world really grounded allowed us to break out into these more inner subjective reality sequences."

In the Spring of 2023, the production took over an old all-boys Catholic school in Middletown, New Jersey. Filming was completed in about a month.

"It was insane, but it was really fun," Fey shared. "All our offices were in the school, our dressing rooms were classrooms, we ate lunch in a tent next to the cafeteria because we were always filming in the cafeteria. But it was very upbeat. It turned spring while we were shooting. It felt like being part of a school year that was like coming to a happy ending by the time we got to the spring fling."

"I think for the actors, it was important for us to make it feel like, even though it's the dead of winter in New Jersey, to make it feel like a summer camp in a way," Jayne shares. "So even upon first meeting and bringing them in all together, we were just doing silly acting exercises and having them break the ice because you just you just want to create that safe environment."

As the film is introduced to a new generation, several high schoolers are having their own chance to take on the iconic roles as the musical version is licensed to schools around the country. Fey says that high school productions of the musical are something she has envisioned for years.

"Before Broadway even opened, as we were working on it, I just remember thinking, 'This is going to be so fun years from now when it's available to high schools because it has five female leads and you get to play your own age. If you have a gay theater boy in your school, he gets to be himself.' So the old theater teacher in me was like, 'This is going to be good.' I love hearing about and seeing clips of productions all over the country. It's really fun."

As Mean Girls opens in theaters on January 12, the team hopes that young performers find themselves in this new musical version of the beloved story.

"Hopefully, people currently doing the show will come have a cast party at the movie theater and come see us," Fey concluded.

 

Stephen Sondheim — composer-lyricist for A Little Night Music, Sweeney Todd, and more than a dozen other musicals — is having "a moment" as one of his Into the Woods lyrics might have put it.

Or perhaps a better fit for the Broadway legend, who was widely regarded as brilliant but an acquired taste when he died in 2021, would be a tweak to a lyric from the song "Children and Art" in Sunday in the Park with George:

"There he is, there he is, there he is,
Sondheim is everywhere,
Broadway must love him so much."

Indeed, the hottest ticket on the Great White Way at the moment, judging from what people are willing to pay for it, is Sondheim's notoriously troubled musical-that-goes-backwards, Merrily We Roll Along.

Its original Broadway run was a snappily disastrous 16 performances after it opened, and it has never entirely worked until now. But it's currently playing to SRO crowds and standing ovations at Broadway's Hudson Theater.

Meanwhile, the hottest ticket Off-Broadway, and already the longest running show ever to play at Manhattan's new venue The Shed, is Here We Are, the musical Sondheim was still working on when he died.

Also playing to capacity crowds in New York, his penny-dreadful horror tale Sweeney Todd, starring Josh Groban at the Lunt-Fontanne Theater. London's petite Menier Chocolate Factory has Pacific Overtures. And on tour in the U.S. is a gender-reversed revival of Company, the last show the composer-lyricist saw before he died.

All of the revivals were less successful in their original runs in the 1970s and '80s. As I've been catching them, I can't help thinking how pleased Sondheim would be — pleased and a bit surprised, no doubt — and wishing I could hear him talk about them, especially that new show, Here We Are.

And then, I discovered I could.

"I think the idea," says his unmistakable growl on a scratchy cellphone recording, "is to do it in the spring of '18."

D.T. Max interviewed Sondheim several times in 2017 and 2018 for a New Yorker profile that he turned into a book — Finale: Late Conversations with Stephen Sondheim. Sondheim was working at the time on what would become Here We Are, or rather, on its first half, which is based on the surrealist Luis Buñuel comedy The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, about three couples searching everywhere for a place to eat.

"There is a complete score [for that first act]," he tells Max in the recording, "but I want to add and tweak. Second act there's a complete draft of the book [by David Ives based on Buñuel's Exterminating Angel] and I've just begun the score."

Max had recorded his in-person interviews on his cellphone, and while the sound quality isn't all one might wish, the conversations are intriguing. For instance, this, about how a producer's stray remark decades ago planted the seed for Here We Are:

"It stems from a remark Hal Prince made in a cab once," remembers Sondheim. "We were looking out at night — coming back from the theater or something — and he said, 'Y'know what the dominant form of entertainment is? Eating out.' Because all the restaurants were lit up and that's what people were doing. They weren't going to the theater, they were eating. And I thought, 'Gee what an interesting idea.' And I didn't immediately think 'oh that would make a musical' but somehow, on seeing Discreet Charm..."

What Sondheim put to music and to his characteristically witty lyrics, was the frustration of diners who are perpetually being told they will not be getting food, or even coffee.

"We have no mocha.
We're also out of latte.
We do expect a little latte later,
But we haven't got a lotta latte now"

"I'm still feeling my way," says the songwriter, "because it isn't the kind of tight story that something like Sweeney or Merrily is. There are six main characters and they interact, but there's very little plot."

There's plenty of plot in his other shows — almost too much sometimes. Back in 1981, audiences got confused by the time-going-backwards thing in Merrily We Roll Along, and also couldn't keep its characters straight. The original production tried to clear up who-was-who with T-shirts saying things like "Best Pal."

The current production has a better trick: It cast Harry Potter's Daniel Radcliffe as the best pal; it's easy for audiences to keep him straight. He's playing a budding writer of musicals in the 1950s and '60s — exactly what Sondheim was back then.

"It relates to my life," Sondheim tells Max. "It's not about my life but it relates." When asked how seeing a Merrily production generally hits him, he says that remembering the frantic, gotta-put-on-a-show craziness of his youth gets to him every time, especially the deep-in-rehearsal-panic lyric, "We'll worry about it on Sunday."

"I always cry," he tells Max. "'We'll worry about it on Sunday' always makes me cry."

That song is called "Opening Doors," and its next lyric is "we're opening doors, singing 'here we are'...."

And here we are, four decades later, with his final show — called Here We Are — feeling like a valedictory victory-lap, filled with references to his earlier work.

The man who wrote a song (and a book of lyrics) called "Finishing the Hat," never finished that second act — in librettist Ives and director Joe Mantello's hands, music disappearing from the characters' lives becomes a plot point — but his legacy is secure. He talks in Finale: Late Conversations with Stephen Sondheim about feeling low energy, and even old-fashioned.

"The kind of music I write has nothing to do with pop music since the mid-'50s," he notes.

When gently reminded that he's regarded as a genius who's altered an art form, he deflects the compliment by citing "Stravinsky, Gershwin, Picasso" and saying he doesn't belong in their company.

He may have been the only person who thought that. But anyway, it's not up to him — posterity gets to decide who belongs in the genius pantheon.

And with stars and directors clamoring to do his shows and audiences embracing them as never before, the early verdict is clear: Stephen Sondheim's work — all of it — is, as Merrily's characters sing of the show that came out of all those frantic rehearsals...

"a surefire, genuine,
Walk-away blockbuster,
Lines down to Broadway,
Boffola, sensational,
Box-office lollapalooza,
gargantuan hit!"

 

Grammy and Tony-winning producer Van Dean has announced the launch of a new record label, Center Stage Records. The new label has over two dozen albums scheduled for 2024, including Broadway, Off-Broadway, and West End recordings, plus concept recordings and albums from solo artists.

Center Stage Records will also establish a London office, which will be under the leadership of Executive Director and London Producer Jamie Chapman Dixon. Additional Center Stage staff will include Robbie Rozelle as A&R (Artists & Repertoire) Director. Rozelle will also design artwork and packaging for new releases, and conceive and produce albums with artists.

Previously, Dean ran Broadway Records, which is under the ownership of Cutting Edge Group. Center Stage will take over the management and distribution of about two-thirds of Broadway Records' back catalog, with intent to collaborate with Broadway Records on select future releases.

Dean co-founded Broadway Records, which released nearly 300 albums under his leadership. Dean helped to produce Broadway Records' Grammy-winning cast recording of the 2015 Broadway revival of The Color Purple, and also served as a producer for the Tony-winning 2012 revival of Porgy and Bess, among numerous other producing credits.

 

Fresh off an early workshop of “The Light in the Piazza,” the actress Kelli O’Hara had a passing thought: What if there was an ambitious musical adaptation of “Days of Wine and Roses,” the 1962 addiction drama that starred Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick? It could give her a chance to reunite with “Piazza” composer Adam Guettel and with the actor Brian D’Arcy James, with whom she had starred in the short-lived Broadway musical “The Sweet Smell of Success.”

Listen to this week’s “Stagecraft” podcast.

“I just thought: What an awesome acting challenge and rich, artful experience [it could be],” O’Hara said in a conversation with James on Variety‘s theater podcast, “Stagecraft.” “Adam was intrigued by the idea and without me knowing, he went off and got the rights to it!”

It took 21 years of on-and-off work, but “Days of Wine and Roses” finally had its world premiere at Off Broadway’s Atlantic Theater last year and has just begun performances on Broadway. Both performers said they relish the opportunity to return to songs that can be challenging both for singers and for audiences.

“Adam constructs the composition to not necessarily introduce you to the melody straight away,” James explained. “There’s so much drama and character and story being parsed out through his music and in the structure of it, but once you get to a familiar landing spot — a melody — you are just overwhelmed by how satisfying it is.”

“Adam cares about how every single note matches the emotion,” O’Hara added. “He’s matching those vocal challenges to what the character is saying at the time, so when you, as a singer and an actor, learn it and digest it, you start to feel completely in sync with it.”

O’Hara also admitted that although she first imagined doing “Days of Wine and Roses” in her 20s, she’s glad for the long development process. “I realize now that I would have probably never been ready to play it then,” she laughed. “Nobody’s more naive than a 24-year-old girl saying, ‘I want to do that!'”

 

For Jonathan Tunick, an early love of “Tubby the Tuba” led to a career as an orchestrator. He talks about his Sondheim partnership, and creating a sound that “can hint at unspoken secrets.”

https://archive.md/4vxpq

To understand the role of the Broadway orchestrator, seek out the composer Stephen Sondheim's piano demo for the song "Losing My Mind" from the musical Follies and then compare it to the version on the original cast recording. The demo's tone is wistful and resigned, with a touch of the whiskey bar about it. In the finished version, the song sounds transformed: Ascending notes on the strings, interjections from the brass and crashing cymbals build to a powerful climax, evoking the heartache and inner turmoil contained in the lyric.

Link to Sondheim demo of ?Losing My Mind

What happened? The short answer: Jonathan Tunick.
"I seem to have a nose for the theater, and it's really like that," Tunick, the prolific Broadway orchestrator, said during an interview in his book-lined study on the Upper West Side. "If something works, you can almost smell it."

Link to OCR of 'Losing My Mind'

Sondheim himself called Tunick the "best orchestrator in the history of the theater" during a 2011 video interview with Sony Masterworks. His work can be heard in three very different Sondheim musicals on New York stages right now: Sweeney Todd, Merrily We Roll Along and Sondheim's posthumous musical, Here We Are.

In fact, Tunick, 85, has orchestrated nearly every Sondheim musical since 1970, including Company, A Little Night Music, Pacific Overtures, Into the Woods and Passion. For other composers, he orchestrated A Chorus Line, Nine, The Color Purple and A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder. An EGOT winner (that rare recipient of Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Awards), Tunick won a Tony for his Titanic orchestrations in 1997 (the first year the award was presented) and an Academy Award for the film version of A Little Night Music. Last fall he became the first orchestrator to have his portrait hung at Sardi's.

At the Sardi's event, at least a couple of guests could be heard wondering aloud: What does a Broadway orchestrator actually do?

Typically, for a Broadway show of the kind Tunick might orchestrate, the composer provides the vocal part along with some form of accompaniment. That accompaniment can be a basic chord sheet, a fully realized piano part or anything in between. It's the orchestrator's task - a long and lonely one, Tunick said - to turn that accompaniment into something an orchestra can perform.

There are, of course, more poetic descriptions. In Steven Suskin's book The Sound of Broadway Music, the original Carousel orchestrator, Don Walker, likened orchestration to "the clothing of a musical thought"; Hans Spialek, who orchestrated On Your Toes and numerous other Rodgers and Hart shows, compared it to "painting a musical picture."

Tunick's preferred analogy is "lighting for the ears." He often confers with a show's lighting designer to determine which colors and shadings will be used onstage. The orchestra, he said, has the ability "to provide its own shadings of light, darkness, warmth and texture to the music and lyrics."

For the Broadway premiere of Company in 1970, Tunick fashioned a crisp, gleaming sound that was the aural equivalent of the chrome-and-glass set by Boris Aronson. Tunick conjured a hellacious soundscape for the macabre Sweeney Todd: agitated strings, blazing horns and frantic xylophones that evoke the scurrying of rats. For Merrily We Roll Along, he replicated the bold, brassy up-tempo sound of 1960s Broadway overtures.

Tunick sees to it that the instruments never get in the way of the words. "He is always aware of the lyric and the dramatic moment," said Joel Fram, the music director of the Broadway revival of Merrily We Roll Along. He pointed to that show's "Our Time" as an example, with its twinkling piano, simple woodwind solos, gentle rhythmic figure on the bassoon and pizzicato cello - a suitable soundtrack for the youthful optimism of the show's protagonists at that point. "It serves the song rather than overwhelms it."

Charlie Alterman pointed to a favorite orchestration in Company, for which he served as the music director of the recent national tour. "It's a bubbling up of emotion somewhere inside the character of Bobby," he said, referring to the moment in the final number, "Being Alive," when, unexpectedly, the melody of "Someone Is Waiting" - an earlier song filled with a yearning for companionship - sneaks in like a dawning realization.

Link to OCR of "Someone is Waiting"

"Deep down there's something that remembers the feeling of "Someone Is Waiting" and wants to be heard," Alterman said. The choice is intriguing on an intellectual level, "but at a gut level, it does that incredible thing that good music does, where you can't quite explain it in your mind, but it's clear as day in your heart."

Tunick remembers sneaking those few notes into "Being Alive" - and that Sondheim was pleased with the addition. "At least it showed him that I was paying attention," Tunick said.

Link to OCR of "Being Alive"

More than merely making the music sound pretty or palatable, a great orchestrator "is also a playwright, telling the story and reflecting character in orchestral sound," said Michael Starobin, who orchestrated Sondheim's Sunday in the Park With George and Assassins.

As the "Being Alive" example above demonstrates, orchestration "can hint at unspoken secrets," Tunick said. "Things that the characters don?t say, or don't want to say, or don't even know."

One piece of music made a big impression on the young Jonathan Tunick: "Tubby the Tuba," the 1945 children's song, centers on a forlorn tuba who longs to play the melody instead of just the bass line. Much like Peter and the Wolf, the song highlighted the distinct characters of the individual instruments of the orchestra. "This idea penetrated my growing brain," he said. "It developed into a lifelong obsession."

Tunick had some perfunctory piano lessons as a youngster growing up in New York - "I sailed through the Diller-Quaile book in a week" - but it was a clarinet, a gift from his amateur clarinetist uncle, that kept his interest.

While a student at what is now Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, he started his own band and played in the school orchestra as well as in the All City High School Orchestra. He started writing music, majoring in composition at Bard College, before paying his way through Juilliard by performing with the school's orchestra.

He was considerably more interested in what was happening at Birdland than on Broadway. "Musicals at the time were a little stodgy," he said. "It was disposable popular entertainment. You'd throw it out like a used Kleenex. I was a little hipper than that."

While in college, a girlfriend introduced him to Frank Sinatra - and the possibilities of orchestral arrangement. He was struck by the way Nelson Riddle's arrangements on Sinatra's breakup album In the Wee Small Hours provided commentary, color and context. "He was tone painting," Tunick said.

College was followed by 10 years of fitful work as an arranger and orchestrator before a big break: orchestrating Promises, Promises, whose jazz-inflected score by Burt Bacharach brought a refreshingly contemporary sound to Broadway.

Emboldened by that show's success, Tunick called up Sondheim, whose originality and wit as a composer he had admired since hearing A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Tunick offered Sondheim his services for his next project.

When he first heard the piano renditions of the songs that would become Company, Tunick was taken aback. With a few exceptions -"Barcelona" sounds like Erik Satie by way of Brazil, he observed - the score had a sound entirely of its own. "If anything it was sort of like Stravinsky, but not quite," Tunick said, citing the peculiar melodies and rhythm of "The Little Things You Do Together" as an example of Sondheim?s startling originality. "What is that? In every case I had to give it careful thought."

Initially, Tunick wasn?t overly confident in his ability to do justice to the material. "I was terrified," he said. But, starting with Company, Tunick helped define the characteristic Sondheim sound. In contrast to the sumptuous blare of an entire orchestra at full blast, this was a sound defined by crisper lines, purer colors, more instrumental solos, more variation and contrast of tonal effects.

That sound is certainly present in Here We Are, the new musical about privileged urbanites trapped in an existential nightmare. Befitting the sinister surrealism of the source material - the Luis Bunuel films The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and The Exterminating Angel - Tunick's underscoring at times resembles the effervescently weird music of a Looney Tunes cartoon. And, once again, the orchestra knows something the characters don't, greeting the happy exclamation "What a perfect day!" with notes that jar and thud.

Orchestrating that show after Sondheim?s death in 2021 was "like going through the letters of a deceased friend," said Tunick, "editing them for publication." Tunick was happy with the result. "We went out on a high note," he added.

The musical collaboration will carry on, though.

Having already reorchestrated several Sondheim shows - not just the ones he orchestrated originally - Tunick is adapting the score of A Little Night Music for full orchestra, rendering it more suitable for performance by symphony orchestras and in opera houses. He will conduct a concert and recording of the new version this year.

In an even more profound and lasting way, of course, through cast albums and successive productions, the Sondheim-Tunick collaboration will continue to inspire generations of musical theater lovers - and reward ever closer listening.

Tunick's last meeting with Sondheim turned out to be only weeks before the composer's death, at a concert of Tunick's work at Sharon Playhouse in Connecticut. Tunick took the opportunity to say a few words to his longtime collaborator: "I know you hate sentimentality. But I have to tell you how much it's meant to me, working with you all these years."

As Tunick tearily remembers it, Sondheim put his arm around him, saying, "Jonathan, we're lucky we met one another."

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

If you enjoyed On the Basis of Sex you should check out RBG, the 2018 documentary about Ginsburg. Ginsburg also appears as a character in a couple of episodes of the fifth season of The Good Fight, played wonderfully by Elaine May.

I think I preferred the early Wes Anderson, before he went full Anderson. Check out Rushmore and (what I think is his best movie) The Royal Tenenbaums.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 3 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Movies:

  • Rebel Moon. If you gave an AI the prompt: "A Star Wars movie written and directed by Zack Snyder but with all Star Wars copyrighted material disguised" this is what you'd get. I know that's exactly what the movie was, minus the written by AI bit (though I wonder), but it felt almost like a parody of itself.
  • Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom. Mediocre, except for Patrick Wilson who elevated every soggy line he was given to read. They desperately wanted to recreate the Thor/Loki dynamic to the point where I thought in one scene I actually heard Aquaman call his brother "Loki".
  • One Life. Schindler's List if Schindler's List focused more on the red tape needed to rescue people from the Nazis, and Oskar's twilight years. Kidding aside, a decent movie, but more on the "worthy" end of the spectrum than the entertaining.
  • Poor Things. The best movie I've seen this year. May still be true 51 weeks from now.

TV:

  • For All Mankind. I enjoyed the "retro" early seasons more, but it's still a very watchable show, and one I still consider to be a Star Trek prequel if I squint and look at it slightly sideways. They certainly seem to be heading towards a Fundamental Declarations of the Martian colonies scenario this season. One of the few shows I'm watching week-by-week instead of saving up and bingeing.
  • A Murder at the End of the World. Well acted, somewhat slow moving murder mystery. Unfortunately I guessed the identity of the killer after two episodes, and thought both that, and a certain revelation about one of the characters, were overused tropes in the early 2020s.
  • Bodies. Decent crime mini series set across four time periods. I thought the more modern settings and characters were more interesting than the oldey timey (wimey) ones, but the show managed to bring all four storylines together in a pretty satisfying way.
  • Silo. Halfway through. Pretty good, but maybe not as good as I heard it was.
[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Thanks very much for this. I've been hoping that raltsm4k updates Floating Subs List to incorporate collections, but they haven't been active since mid-last year.

Given your code is partly based on this script, I wonder if you might consider modifyingraltsm4k's Floating Subs List script so that collections appear as part of the sidebar. As a fallback, maybe modify your script so that collections appear before magazines rather than after. This would make it easier to use both scripts, one to access magazines in the sidebar, and the other to more easily access liked collections.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

As others have pointed out, Foundation isn't a particularly faithful adaptation of Asimov's stories, but there good things in it. It might be more accurately titled Foundation and Empire IMO, because it focuses as much on the Empire side of the story as the Foundation. The first season was lopsided. The Empire plotline was compelling, the Foundation ones were... not. Haven't watched the second season yet, but apparently it's more consistent.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 25 points 2 years ago (15 children)

For All Mankind is the Star Trek prequel we should have had. Co-created by Ron Moore (Deep Space Nine, Battlestar Galactica), the show has a bunch of Trek alumni working behind the scenes. It features human drama (and sometimes melodrama), geopolitical diplomacy, sweeping cultural change and scientific adventure against the backdrop of a multi generational future history, starting with the first moon landing.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

Anyone who has the chance to see this show before it closes in April should do so. It really is a gem. The best new musical of last year with the best performance.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Fedilab is a Fediverse client for (according to the website) Mastodon, Peertube, Pixelfed, Pleroma, GNU Social and Friendica. You can also follow kbin users (and, I assume lemmy ones as well, though I haven't tried). The app will allow you to manage several accounts on Mastodon, Peertube and Pleroma instances.

You can block content by keywords or phrases (either hiding them with a warning or hiding them completely) but I don't know if you can bulk upload keywords. (You can add several keywords/phrases at a time manually.)

Unfortunately (for you) the app is currently only available on Android.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

LaChanze has posted on X that:

I am getting a lot of DM’s and posts about why I’ve been left out of the press as the original Celie in the @TheColorPurple (musical). I am thrilled for the movie’s success! Happy for all involved. However, I do want my royalty fee for the lyrics I added to “I’M HERE”. 💜

I'm going to assume that the bit about royalty fees was tongue-in-cheek as her own quote in the Time article makes clear that while her views on the character may have inspired the song, she didn't actually write any of the lyrics. (If she did, she would have been credited as one of the writers.)

Meanwhile, Barack Obama has tweeted

Update: I just saw The Color Purple and loved it. I'm adding it to this list as one of my favorite movies of the year.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

I love when shows pay tribute to each other, although I think it has more impact when it's done live - like when the Broadway production of Les Miz surpassed the run of A Chorus Line in 2002 after 6137 performances.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

While John Williams has worked on several movie musicals - most notably the film adaptation of Fiddler on the Roof, which he orchestrated and conducted - few people know he actually composed the music for a stage musical. Thomas and the King was a 1975 London musical about Thomas Becket and Henry II with lyrics by James Harbert and a book by Edward Anhalt. It was not well received and while a cast recording was made, I don't believe the show received any subsequent productions.

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

What have they done, sweet Jesus, what have they done?

[–] Prouvaire@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

As encouraging as a healthy box office is for producers and investors, Broadway prices are absolutely ridiculous, with London and other cities also getting increasingly prohibitively expensive. It's a trend that surely can't be good for the long-term health of the industry because it makes it more and more difficult for people who don't have high disposable income to see a lot of shows and so develop a love of the artform.

Yes, there are initiatives like ticket lotteries, cheap day seats and discounts which offer more affordable seats, but often these are very limited in number and/or with poor views. And while a $100 ticket may represent a decent discount, it's still a $100 ticket.

Pro-shots are becoming more popular and while these have their place, I personally think that nothing beats the experience of seeing a show live.

The economics of theatre, especially musical theatre, depresses me, because I don't know if there's a solution for the problem. Theatre is inherently expensive for a bunch of reasons I won't bother getting into, and the vast majority of shows don't make back their money. This means that investors look for higher returns for those small number of shows where they do make a profit to make up for the flops. This in turn drives ticket prices even higher, so it's a vicious circle.

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