March 2008 Archives

Tim Rice reacted with his trademark candor to news items that were reporting that he would be once again collaborating with his former composing partner Andrew Lloyd Webber on the sequel to Phantom of the Opera.

The report that the duo responsible for The Likes of Us, Joseph and the Amazing Colored Dreamcoat, Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita were back together, as has often been rumored as a possibility one day, was news not only to Lloyd Webber but also Rice.

Playbill.com picked up on reports from industry trade Variety and columnist Liz Smith in the New York Post that noted that Lloyd Webber "has already written the music for the sequel and waits impatiently for Tim Rice to do the lyrics."

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Said Sir Tim, "These stories in the U.S. about my being slow with the lyrics of Phantom 2 are ludicrous and hilarious." As far as there being early discussions with Rice about working on the sequel, "I have never been asked by Andrew Lloyd Webber to get involved. It's definitely not my type of show."

After a Lloyd Webber spokesperson contacted Playbill.com, the story was quickly pulled and a new one written reporting that lyricist Glenn Slater is the lyricist for the sequel to the worldwide blockbuster musical.
With composer Alan Menken, Slater wrote the film score of Newsies and additional songs for Disney's newest Broadway outing, The Little Mermaid. The pair are also working on stage musical adaptations of Leap of Faith, expected next Spring, Sister Act and Newsies.

Menken spoke of a period of frustration and difficulty when his long-time collaborator Howard Ashman died in 1991. Their major stage success up to that time was Little Shop of Horrors.

"The loss of Howard was a devastating blow," says Menken. "He wanted to do the film score to Newsies, but was too ill. He would have liked to finish Aladdin. There wasn't a long transition period. Because of projects on the table, there was very little time to find another collaborator. Tim Rice came in. Thankfully, he's a quick writer."

The duo won the Best Song Oscar for Aladdin's "A Whole New World."

On Broadway, they collaborated on the concert production of King David, which Menken would like to develop into a full-fledged musical, and Beauty and the Beast. For Aida,, Rice and Elton John won the Tony for Outstanding Score. Rice and John won a Best Song Oscar and Golden Globe for "Can You Feel the Love Tonight" from Disney's animated Lion King; and were nominated in the category for "Circle of Life" and "Hakuna Matata." For their contributions to Julie Taymore's stage adaptation, they were Tony-nominated.

Rice has been busy recently with the marriage of his daughter Eva, a best-selling novelist, celebrating the 40th Anniversary of Joseph... with Lloyd Webber and involved in a revised U.K. concert production of his, Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus' musical Chess scheduled for May and starring Josh Groban [Anatoly], Idina Menzel and Adam Pascal.

Lloyd Webber, who just turned 60 and has been making TV appearances on such TV reality shows as his U.K. TV search for Maria for his production of The Sound of Music and, here, Celebrity Apprentice, is rumored to be setting the Phantom sequel in New York, where the title character and Christine will meet again. It's been announced that Jack O'Brien will direct and Bob Crowley will design the show, which is expected sometime next year.

Rice and ALW came together twice more: in 1986 at the urging of Prince Edward to pen Cricket, a comedy about players of Rice's favorite sport, for Queen Elizabeth II's 60th birthday, which was performed at Windsor Castle; and in 2005 for a one-time-only festive premiere performance at ALW's Sydmonton Festival on his estate of their 1956 The Likes of Us, which was recorded for Decca Broadway.


Catch Encores! This Week

Tony and Drama Desk Award-winner Victoria Clark is essaying the role briefly portrayed by Shirley Booth on Broadway in 1959 in Marc Blitzstein's Juno, the second Encores! production of City Center's 2008 season, which plays five performances tonight through Sunday. The book is by Tony-winner Joseph Stein of Fiddler fame. Screen legend Melvyn Douglas costarred with Miss Booth.

This is a rare opt to experience the short-lived [16 performances] musical, based on O'Casey's 1924 play Juno and The Paycock .

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For Encores!, Michael Arden, Dermot Crowley, Tyler Hanes, DD-winner and Tony-nominee Celia Keenan-Bolger [...Spelling Bee] and Conrad John Schuck [Annie Get Your Gun revival, Annie] co-star in the 30 plus cast under the direction of Tony-winner and DD-nominee Garry Hynes [Beauty Queen of Leenane]. Featured is Tony and DD-nominee John Seyla [Movin' Out]. Guest music director is Eric Stern [Xanadu, '01 Follies revival], with choreography by Warren Carlyle.

Songs include "I Wish It So," "We're Alive," "What Is the Stars?", "Music in the House" and "One Kind Word."

Clark is Juno Boyle, a hardworking matriarch who struggles to hold family together in the face of the 20s confrontation between the Irish Republican Army and the U.K. Schuck plays her hard-drinking husband.

Jack Viertel is Encores! A.D. with Rob Berman as M.D. Season sponsor is the Newman's Own Foundation

Next in the series is No, No, Nanette, May 8 -12.

Tickets are $25-$95 and available at the City Center box office, through CityTix at (212) 581-1212 or online at www.nycitycenter.org.


One Night Only: A Timely Host

One of the year's always-eagerly anticipated dance events is the dance star-studded Career Transitions for Dancers October gala and this year there's another reason to eagerly anticipate: Four-time Tony and two-time DD-winner Angela Lansbury will be the hostess with the mostest.

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Rolex is returning as lead sponsor of On Broadway! A Glittering Salute to the American Musical, CTFD's 23rd Anniversary Jubilee on Monday, October 27 at 7pm at New York City Center. The evening of dance, dance, dance [and lots of it] from renowned choreographers will be followed by a supper dance at the New York Hilton.

Gala honorees, luminaries or benefactors of the dance world, as well as the recipient of the Rolex Award are yet to be announced. Among the honorary chairs are dance legend Cynthia Gregory, screen legend Jane Powell and theater legend Chita Rivera. Conde Nast Publications and the Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation are event underwriters.

On Broadway!, produced and directed by Ann Marie DeAngelo, is billed as "a glorious historical journey inside the Broadway musical seen through the eyes of legendary choreographers whose work transformed Broadway shows into some of the greatest musicals of all time."

Multiple Emmy-nominee and Golden Globe-winner Miss Lansbury has been named a Commander of the British Empire, is a Kennedy Center Honors recipient, a Theatre and Television Hall of Fame inductee and recipient of Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Screen Actors Guild and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts.

Career Transition For Dancers assists thousands of professional dancers identify their unique talents in preparation for establishing new careers when dance is no longer an option. For more information, visit www.careertransition.org.

Gala tickets are $600, $750 and $1,200 and include the performance and supper dance. To book, contact Marjorie Horne, McEvoy & Associates, at (212) 228-7446 X. 33; for group sales, (718) 499-9691. Show-only tickets at $45-$130 will be available at a later date at the City Center box office.


Remembering Gower Champion

Dancers Over 40 members will remember award-winning director/choreographer Gower Champion on Monday at 7:30 P.M. at St. Luke's Theater [308 West 46th Street, off Eighth Avenue]. Participating will be dancers and creative talents associated with Champion from 1951's Make a Wish to his last Broadway show, 42nd Street. Also marking an appearance will be his former wife and dancer/director/choreographer Marge Champion.

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Two panels will be presented. The first, on dancers, will include Bob Fitch [Mack and Mabel, 42nd Street], Lee Roy Reams [Hello, Dolly!, 42nd Street] and Iva Withers [Make a Wish, Happy Time]. The second panel will include Miss Champion and choreographers Karin Baker [42nd Street ] and Tony Stevens [Irene, Rockabye, Hamlet].

David Hartman, host of Thirteen/WNET's Walking Tours series who was featured in the original Hello, Dolly! as Rudolph the waiter, will moderate.

Numbers will be performed from Birdie, Carnival and 42nd Street. In support of the not-for-profit Dancers Over 40, there will be a raffle. The org provides support for the fiscal and physical needs of mature dancers, choreographers and related artists.

The event will be taped and donated to the Jerome Robbins Dance Collection at the Lincoln Center Library. Tickets are $5 for DO40 members; $15, non-members; and available at www.dancersover40.org/events or by calling (212) 330-7016. Seating is general admission.


New York, New York's Jerome Robbins

Jerome Robbins, one of America's most celebrated choreographers time, was uniquely New York born and raised. Many of his dances for Broadway and ballet recounted NYC lore and the joys and travails of its ordinary folk.

New York Story: Jerome Robbins and His World, an exhibit curated by Lynn Garafola, professor of dance at Barnard College and commemorating the tenth anniversary of Robbins' death, is on view through June 28 in the Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center, Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center.

In addition to personal papers, drawings, set and costume designs, letters, notes on characters and costumes, and photographs from the Library's Jerome Robbins Dance Division, there are loans from the Museum of the City of New York, the Paley Center for Media, the Jerome Robbins Trust and Foundation and private sources.

New York Story joins another exhibition at the Lincoln Center Library and Cullman Center: Writing to Character: Songwriters & the Tony Awards, running through June 14, is a multi-media tribute to the songwriters of the 70 Broadway musicals that have won Broadway's highest honors. It ranges from Kurt Weill for 1947's Street Scene, Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific, Frank Loesser's Guys and Dolls, Bock and Harnick's Fiddler on the Roof, through Kander and Ebb's Cabaret, Sondheim's Company and Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater's 2007 Spring Awakening.

Displayed are manuscripts, posters, photographs, cast recordings,videos and other memorabilia.


A Harvey Affair

On April 1, The New York Times TimesTalk series will celebrate the career of four-time Tony and three-time DD-winner Harvey Fierstein event with Harvey & Family at 6 P.M. at the TimesCenter [242 West 41st Street at Eighth Avenue].

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Honoring Fierstein will be his Catered Affair co-stars, Tony and DD-winner Faith Prince and Matt Cavenaugh; his Hairspray co-star Tony and DD-winner Dick Latessa; ACF composer John Bucchino; Tony-nominee Brooks Ashmanskas; and three-time Emmy-winner Edie Falco.

The tribute, produced in celebration of the 25th anniversary of New York's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center, will feature a conversation between Fierstein and Times culture new reporter and author Jesse Green; readings and performances from Fierstein's plays and musicals, including A Catered Affair, directed by Tony and DD-winner John Doyle and now in previews for an April 17 opening at the Walter Kerr.

Falco and Ashmanskas will read scenes from Fierstein plays Safe Sex and Torch Song Trilogy [celebrating the 25th Anniversary of its premiere]. Latessa and Cavenaugh will perform a scene from Fierstein and Jerry Herman's La Cage Aux Folles.

Tickets are $27 and available at TimesTalks.com or by calling (888) NYT-1870. For more on ACF, visit www.ACateredAffairOnBroadway.com.


Tell Them On a Sunday

Christine Ebersole and Billy Stritch are bringing their acclaimed live performance to CD. Sunday in New York is set for a May 13th release on Ghostlight Records, produced by Grammy-winner Russ Titelman . It features 13 tracks culled from the pair's recent sold out run at the Metropolitan Room. They range from Berlin, Rodgers & Hammerstein to Korie and Frankel [Grey Gardens] and Sondheim.

In a recent review, NYTimes' Stephen Holden wrote: "Ms. Ebersole, a bright, zany soprano and ebullient clown, can whirl on a dime and ... evoke an inexpressible sorrow under a facade of garrulous pluck. When she adds a spinning vibrato to her lemony voice, she can turn into a playful latter-day Kathryn Grayson or Jeanette MacDonald."

Also due in May from Ghostlight is South Pacific star Kelli O'Hara's much-anticipated CD, Wonder in the World, with 14 tracks orchestrated and arranged by Harry Connick Jr.

Lily's Back, as Producer

Tony Award winner Lily Tomlin and partner Jane Wagner have joined the producing team of Off-Broadway's Beebo Brinker Chronicles, Kate Moira Ryan [25 Questions for a Jewish Mother]'s stage adaptation of Ann Bannon's award-winning pulp novels of the 50s, now at 37Arts [450 West 37th Street, between Ninth and Tenth Avenues].

Directing is the very busy Leigh Silverman (From Up Here at MTC, Yellow Face, Well). Jenn Colella [High Fidelity] is Beebo. Among the seven cast members are Tony and DD-nominee Xanthe Elbrick [Coram Boy] and Obie-winning David Greenspan [Some Men, Faust].

BBC follows the lives and loves of four friends in pre-Stonewall Greenwich Village as they reunite in love and lust, finding themselves entangled in Beebo's web.

Beebo Brinker Chronicles' limited engagement is through April 27. Tickets are $46.25
- $56.25 and available at the box office, through www.TicketMaster.com. or by calling (212) 307-4100.


Paul Simon and Company

Legendary recording legend Paul Simon will be joined for his April Love in Hard Times concerts at BAM in April by recording artist and emerging actor Josh Groban and Broadway bombshell belter Luba Mason.

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Songs from the Capeman, April 1-6, will feature co-stars Mason, Claudette Sierra and Ray De La Paz from the composer's short-lived 1998 musical; the show's arranger/conductor Oscar Hernández; Little Anthony and the Imperials; New York Dolls guitarist Steve Conte, jazz vocalist Nicole Lequerica and, among others, the Spanish Harlem Orchestra.

Simon's BAM "residency" will also include Under African Skies from April 9-13, showcasing African and Brazilian influences he explored in the albums Graceland and Rhythm of the Saints. Guests will include David Byrne, Ladysmith Black Mambazo and Milton Nascimento.

Best-selling classical crossover artist and Grammy-nominee Josh Groban will join Simon for American Tunes, April 23-27, as "they explore urban rhythms and immigrant dreams." Among the guests will be the Roches.

Performances will be in the Gilman Opera House and Harvey Theatre. Some shows are sold-out. Remaining tickets, $20-$65, are available by calling (718) 636-4100 or visiting www.BAM.org, where you will find complete information regarding schedules and venues.


A Cirque of Another Kind, Well Almost

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We'll have to wait until maybe next year for the next edition of Cirque du Soleil but in the meantime a cirque show that's certainly in the same realm, Cirque Dreams, will make its Broadway debut in mid-June for 10 weeks with Jungle Fantasy, an incredibly-colorful family-friendly production [150 spectacular costumes and striking sets and visual effects], at the Broadway Theatre.

Florida-based CD was started in 1993 by creator and director Neil Goldberg. The show, presented in a proscenium setting, has a cast of 25 acrobats, contortionists, jugglers and musicians.

You'll be excused if you think you're seeing a Cirque du Soleil show. But while CD isn't quite the size of CduS, it delivers a rousing and quite dazzling entertainment.

Tickets prices won't be confused with CduS, but not all will be as close to the action. They're $25 [last row of the balcony?] - $85 and now available at www.telecharge.com or by calling (212) 239-6200 or (800) 432-7250. For more information, visit: www.cirquedreamsbroadway.com


All-Star CD Debuts to Benefit Actors Fund

After two years in the making, Brian Gari is debuting a unique edition CD of his score from his and Alan Knee's short-lived 1987 musical Late Nite Comic. The release coincides with Gari's book We Bombed In New London - the Inside Story of the Broadway Musical Late Nite Comic [Bear Manor Media, SRP $20].

The 23-track CD [Original Cast Records, SRP $15] includes the score as heard opening night and deleted songs. A Who's Who of Broadway and show business perform, including Liz Callaway, Mario Cantone, Jason Graae, Rupert Holmes, Brian D'Arcy James, Howard McGillin, Daniel Reichard, Tony Roberts, Seth Rudetsky, Mary Testa, Martin Vidnovic, Karen Ziemba and Chip Zien.

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That's quite a lineup. How did he pull that off? "I didn't have to sleep with them, although it might have been fun," said Gari, grandson of legendary entertainer Eddie Cantor. "However, I did plead a lot. Many of them know our show got a bad rap from the critics and they liked the idea of proving them wrong. With all proceeds going to the Actors Fund, that helped. I also had the ringing endorsement of the great Rupert Holmes, so many of his friends came aboard and encouraged others. Paul Shaffer is a long-time fan, all the way back to when he saw Late Nite Comic on Broadway."

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The sessions were also a reunion for some, such as composer Holmes and POTO star McGillin, who co-starred in Holmes Tony and DD-winning Mystery of Edwin Drood.

Gari was constantly amazed at the multi talents of the stars. "There was Seth Rudetsky and Karen Ziemba doing their harmony vocals themselves," he notes. "I can't say enough about Seth. He's underated as a singer. He's also hysterical."

Rudetsky had lots of competition from Mario Cantone and Shaffer. "Then there was Jason [Graae]. He's ever the cut-up, but he really got me by coming in and sing totally off-key. That scared the hell out of me, but it was a total put on! Sweet Liz Larsen came in with candy for everyone."

All in all, says Gari, "these wonderful stars made my music shine and for a good cause." The CD and book will be shortly joined by the LNC song folio and libretto from Samuel French.


Welcome Back, Lillias, But It's One Night Only

The DD-winning York Theatre Company will present Tony-winner Lillias White in a one-night-only concert staging of a new "musical mystery screwball comedy" by Patricia Miller and Jim Wann, The People vs. Mona this Sunday at 7:30. White joins a cast that includes Marc Kudisch, Christiane Noll and Ron Raines.

The People vs. Mona tells of a Georgia woman on trial for the murder of her husband who is pitted against a local prosecutor who wants to tear her property down for a casino. Making matters interesting is the fact that Mona's defense attorney happens to be the prosecutor's fiance. Making matters much worse, he's also attracted to Mona.

York A.D. Jim Morgan says the score combines folk, blues, gospel, jazz, rock, bossa nova - in addition to marching band music "to create a theatrical sensibility." The concert will be recorded for release on Jay Records.

Tickets are $35 in advance, $40 at the door and are available online at www.yorktheatre.org or by calling (212) 935-5820. of a small town hangs on the verdict. Seven actor/singers play all the roles in a multicultural cast, accompanied by three onstage musicians.


A Rare Revival

Musicals Tonight will present David Heneker's West End and Broadway musical Half A Sixpense with book by Beverly Cross for 10 performances from April 1-12 at the McGinn/Cazale Theatre [Broadway and 76th Street].

The rousing musical played Broadway in 1965 starring the English lead, U.K. matinee idol and best-selling recording artist Tommy Steele. It is based on H.G. Wells novel Kipps about a shop assistant who wins a fortune only to find that money can't buy love or happiness. Featured were John Cleese, Gover Dale, Polly James, Carrie Nye and Will McKenzie.

Songs include "All in the Cause of Economy," "She's Too Far Above Me," "If the Rain's Got to Fall," "Money to Burn" and "Flash, Bang."

Tickets are $20 and available at www.musicalstonight.org or by calling SmartTix at (212) 868-4444 or online at www.smartix.com.


Arlen and Harburg Revived

Through April 6, Medicine Show Theatre Ensemble [549 West 52nd Street, Third floor, between Tenths and Eleventh Avenues] is reviving their revival of Harold Arlen and E. Y. "Yip" Harburg's Horray for What! , the 1937 Broadway anti-war musical comedy. The book is by Howard Lindsay and Russell Crouse [Sound Of Music] and concerns a scientist who gets mixed up with spies and war profiteers when he accidentally invents a weapon capable of conquering the world. Directing the 15-member cast is Obie-winner Barbara Vann, with musical direction by Jake Lloyd and choreography by Dieter Riesle.

Tickets are $18 and available from Smarttix at (212) 868-4444 or online at www.Smarttix.com.

They Said, Like MacArthur, They'd Return - and Weren't Kidding:

Rita's Back and Feinstein's Got Her

Grandslam winner Rita Moreno, who holds the distinction of being an Oscar [for her spirited Anita in the film adaptation of WSS], Emmy, Grammy, Tony, Golden Globe, Presidential Medal of Freedom, Sarah Siddons Award winner and DD-nominee, returns to Feinstein's at Loews Regency [540 Park Avenue at 61st Street] April 1 - 5.

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The new show will feature songs by Arlen, Kander & Ebb, Lloyd Webber and Strouse. Moreno's wins gained her status in the Guinness Book of World Records, but up close and personal, as she'll be at Feinstein's, she reveals her gusty and sophisticated singing styles.

Considering her amazing performance record [going all the way back to her youth and her fiery featured role in the classic Hollywood musical, Singin' in the Rain], it appears she's also found the fountain of youth.

Admission for the early shows is $60 [$75, premium seating] with a $40 food/beverage minimum; $40 [$60, premium] with a $25 food/beverage minimum for late shows. Jackets suggested, but not required. Reservations recommended. Book online at feinsteinsatloewsregency.com or TicketWeb.com or call (212) 339-4095.


Rivers Is Back and Hitting Chelsea

After hitting herself all these months on that TV commercial and regailing us with star fashion dos and don't at the Oscars, Joan Rivers returns to live stand-up at the Cutting Room [19 West 24th Street, off Fifth Avenue] on Wednesdays at 8 from April 9 - June 4 [no shows April 23 or May 14]. With all that work, you might wonder if she can laugh at her own jokes.

Tickets are $30 with a portion of the proceeds going to God's Love We Deliver and Guide Dogs for the Blind. For reservations, call (212) 352-3101 or visit www.SpinCycle.com.

And They're Back, Too

The Metropolitan Room has an exciting April line-up. Jamie deRoy and special guests headline Jamie deRoy & Friends April 1. Broadway, cabaret and TV star Karen Mason plays eight shows over April 2-5 and 10-13. Metro Room chief Lennie Watts will again channel Manilow on the 5th.

Marcus Simeone debuts an all-new show, The Heart , beginning April 6 and once a month on Sundays through November [no shows in September].

Wait! There's more: sensational Marilyn Maye makes her much-anticipated return April 8 and 9, 11 and 13-16 with a new show, It's My Party... and I'll Sing if I Want To after receiving her Bistro Lifetime Achievement Award [on April 7] and celebrating her 80th birthday.

Later in April, two big returning stars: country legend and MR fav Larry Gatlin makes a rare appearance with the Gatlin Brothers; and that hot mama Sharon McKnight, who's been away much too long, will have the joint jumpin' and sizzlin'.

Covers and showtimes vary, so check out www.metropolitanroom.com, where you can also reserve. All covers have an additional two beverage minimum.

In November, Paul McCartney presented the music from his fourth classical album, Ecce Cor Meum [Behold My Heart] in concert to a SRO audience at London's Royal Albert Hall. Now, everyone can enjoy it. EMI Classics [SRP, $25] has just released a DVD of the concert with the added bonus of a documentary tracking the making of the album.

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For the concert, accompanying the acclaimed Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields Orchestra with Gavin Greenaway conducting, were soprano Kate Royal, the London Voices, Oxford Boys of Magdalen College Choir and Cambridge Boys of King's College Choir.

The DVD includes interviews with McCartney and behind the scenes footage of the recording of the album at the famed Abbey Road studio; and preparation to stage the concert at the Albert Hall.

The album, more than eight years in the making, was commissioned by Magdalen College. Then college president Anthony Smith wanted a choral piece which could be sung the world over by young people in the same manner of Handel's Messiah.

For much background, visit www.paulmccartney.com.


Recognizing Broadway's Dysfunctional Families

Drama Desk is hosting a lunch panel on Friday at Sardi's that will delve behind the scenes of two Broadway plays about dysfunctional families, Tracy Letts' August: Osage County and the revival of Pinter's The Homecoming. USA Today theater critic Elyse Gardner will moderate.

The panel guests are Letts and A:OC cast members Amy Morton, who plays daughter Barbara, and Sally Murphy, who plays Ivy' and H's Raul Esparza, who portray's Lenny, James Frain, who plays the shiftily ambivalent Teddy and Ian McShane, who's Max the benevolent paternal head of the rather unusual family in Pinter's scorching black comedy.

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Non-member tickets, at $45 each, are available for the 11:45 lunch and panel, which will begin at 1 and run 90 minutes. To reserve, contact DD prez William Wolf at [email protected].

Something to Sing About

The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center and the Tony Awards, presented by the American Theater Wing and the Broadway League, has mounted the exhibition Writing to Character: Songwriters and the Tony Awards in the Library's Vincent Astor Gallery. It runs through June 14, the day before the Tony Awards are broadcast from Radio City Music Hall.

Through annotated scores, designs, correspondence, photographs, posters and original cast recordings, the multi-media tribute shines a spotlight on the collaborative process of creating a Broadway musical.

Shows spanning several decades and ever changing musical tastes are featured - from Cole Porter's 1949 Kiss Me Kate, the shows of Kander and Ebb and Bock and Harnick right up to the 2007 Best Musical, Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater's Spring Awakening.

Admission is free. Entrance is from the Plaza or 111 Amsterdam Avenue at 65th Street.


Nashville Comes to Big Apple

Broadway pit keyboardist, orchestrator, arranger and music director for a ton of shows [not to mention the Temptations on tour] Jo Lynn Burks and guitarist and Metropolitan Room host Daryl Glenn have been toiling away for weeks to bring their concert version of Robert Altman's 1975 Oscar and Golden Globe Best Picture nominee Nashville to the MR [34 West 22nd Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues]. The show debuts Sunday at 4 P.M. and then plays March 10, 16 and 17 at 9:30.

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Joining Burks and Glenn are Tanya Holt, Jay Rogers [When Pigs Fly], Brad Wills and special guest Jay Rogers and Prairie Home Companion fiddle player Andy Stein.

Nashville starred Keith Carradine, later to come to Bway in The Will Rogers Follies, Ronee Blakley, Karen Black, Geraldine Chaplin, Shelley Duvall, Henry Gibson, Barbara Harris and Lily Tomlin [Oscar-nominated along with Altman] with so many cameos you couldn't keep count [but they included Scott Glenn, Jeff Goldblum, Eliot Gould and Julie Christie].

The movie jumped all over the place [literally], but the performances and the music made it a winner. If ever there was a film with voracious scene-stealers this was it - with Chaplin, Duvall and Gibson chewed up everything in sight and then some. One of the film's highlights was the Oscar-winning song "I'm Easy," written and sung by Carradine.

For Singin' Nashville at the Metro Room, there'll be a five-piece country band. In addition to performing the songs sung by Black and Blakley, Burks will be music directing. Vince DeGeorge is director. The show is produced by Benjamin Silliman.

Though he's been performing since childhood, Singin' Nashville marks Glenn's New York debut. The project "has been a true labor of love. The movie is brilliant, probably one of the ten best films ever made. The music really drew me in, especially the Keith Carradine song, which is the very definition of simplicity and yet so poignant. It made me want to pick up a guitar, and I'm from Kentucky so that whole country music thing just runs through my veins!"

He added that it didn't hurt that Burks is an Alabama native and that he's a friend of Altman's widow Kathryn, whom he said was totally supportive. "In fact, she put me in touch with Richard Baskin, who was the musical director for the film and wrote many of the songs."

Glenn is a huge fan of the Grand Ole Opry clog dancers, so you have to wonder if there will be some country tap on tap on the MR's postage-stamp size stage.

DeGeorge said that the challenge was "to honor the film and yet create a separate entity that works on it's own. It was a difficult balance but we struck the right tone."

Tickets for all performances are $20 plus a two-beverage minimum. To reserve, call (212) 206-0440.


Upcoming Cabaret

The Metropolitan Room is presenting Tom Wopat, taking a respite from rehearsals for A Catered Affair, with his Arlen tribute, Dissertation on the State of Bliss, on March 11 and 18 [wonder if that other Duke, John Schneider, currently in Chicago, will drop in].

This Saturday and on March 15, 22 and 29, Baby Jane Dexter Baby Jane Dexter celebrates the release of her You're Following Me! CD, recorded live at the MR last April.

On March 13,20 and 27, Joan Crowe debuts her The Key of Comedy, which "pays tribute to the jesters of jazz, the writers who have written not just great jazz tunes but also songs that have a sense of humor."

For a complete list of shows, showtimes and pricing, visit www.metropolitanroom.com.


Miscast?

Robert LuPone and Bernard Telsey, artistic directors of MCC Theater, celebrating its 22nd Season, have announced an all-star line-up for the company's annual gala, Miscast 2008 on March 10 at the Hammerstein Ballroom [311 West 34th Street, between Eighth and Ninth Avenues]. As in years past, the fundraiser brings together Broadway talent performing songs from roles in which they would never be cast.

The roster of performers includes Brian d'Arcy James, currently starring in Next to Normal, Emmy-winner, Tony-nominee and DD-winner Allison Janney, Jesse L. Martin of Rent and TV's L&O, Tony and DD-nominee Kelli O'Hara, two-time Tony and three-time DD-nominee Patrick Wilson and Tony and DD-winner Faith Prince, soon to be back on Broadway in A Catered Affair. Phil Reno is musical director.

Lynn Redgrave, giving a tour-de-force performance in MCC's production of Grace at the Lortel [closing on Saturday], is honorary chair. The event honors producers Jeffrey Richards and Jerry Frankel [August: Osage County, The Homecoming, November and Tony and DD Best Musical Spring Awakening.

A limited number of show only tickets are available for $50. To order and/or purchase tickets for the gala, call (212) 727-7722 X. 233.


Producer Knows Best

Four-time Tony Award-winning Broadway producer Stewart F. Lane reads from his book, Let's Put On a Show! Theatre Production for Novices [Heinemann Books, 176 pages; SRP $18] on March 6 from 1-3 P.M. at a free event at the Times Square Information Center [Seventh Avenue, between 46th and 47th Streets. Lane is owner of the historic Palace Theatre, and a producer of the current tenant, Legally Blonde, starring Laura Bell Bundy.

The book is described as a reader-friendly, novice-friendly guide through the process of producing a play or musical from concept to curtain without having to have a Broadway budget.


A Twist on a Classic

The New Victory and England's Kneehigh Theatre are debuting a new adaptation of Rapunzel, that classic children's story for the longhairs, through March 23, using puppetry, comedy, animation and live music "to create a world of a loveable heroine, deceitful rogues, evil brothers, enduring love - even magic pigs."

This is not the Rapunzel your Mommie read to you, but a totally re-imagined production by Annie Siddons. Directing is Kneehigh's A.D., Emma Rice. Edith Tankus, in the title role, is joined by a seven-member ensemble.

Tickets for Rapunzel, recommended for those seven and up, are $12.50-$35 and available at the New Victory box office, by calling (646) 223-3010 or online at www.NewVictory.org.


At the Ballet

Celebrating their 50th Anniversary, the Kansas City Ballet arrives to make their Joyce Theatre debut from March 11-16, 2008. The program will feature three works, including two premieres. Choreography is by William Whitener; Twyla Tharp and Donald McKayle. Featured music will be by Alexander Glazounov, Brahms and in "Hey-Hay, Going to Kansas City," Charlie Parker and Count Basie.

The KCB was founded in 1957 by French-born Tatiana Dokoudovska, one of the famous prima ballerinas with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo troupe. William Whitener is A.D., with Jeffrey Bently as exec director. The company is comprised of 25. Over the years, more than 550 dancers have performed with KCB.

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For the Joyce engagement, tickets are $25-$44 and available at the box office, through JoyceCharge (212) 242-0800 and online at www.joyce.org.


Horray for Arlen and Harburg, and Lindsay and Crouse

Medicine Show Theatre Ensemble [549 West 52nd Street, between Tenth and Elevenths Avenues, Third floor] is reviving their 1983 production of the long-thought lost Horray for What!, the Broadway anti-war musical comedy by Harold Arlen and E.Y "Yip" Harburg with book by Tony-winners Howard Lindsay and Russell Crouse [The Sound Of Music], from March 13- April 6.

The musical played five and a half months in 1937, directed by Vincente Minelli and choreographed by Agnes De Mille. The stars were Ed Wynn and Vivian Vance. Songs include "Down With Love" and "God's Country."

This spoof of jingoism and war profiteering centers around Chuckles, a mild-mannered scientist, who accidentally invents a poison gas capable of conquering the world, and Breezy, a weapons manufacturer, who knows the formula will make him rich and sets about attempts to get it.

Directing the 15-member cast is Obie-winner Barbara Vann. Musical direction is by Jake Lloyd with Dieter Riesle as choreographer.

The musical was lost until 1983, when Vann and the late James Barbosa, Medicine Show founders, procured what apparently was the only extant copy from Lindsay's widow, the acclaimed actress Dorothy Stickney. The score was pieced together from various sources including the Harburg archives and with the assistance of Arlen biographer Ed Jablonsky, who found some of the music digging through Arlen's closet.

Lindsay and Crouse's Broadway credits also include librettos for Anything Goes, Red Hot and Blue, Call Me Madam, Mr. President and State Of The Union, for which they won the 1946 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

Tickets are $18 and available from Smarttix, (212) 868-4444, or online at www.Smarttix.com.


... And Israel Horovitz

Proactive Artists is presenting From Harlem to the Bronx: Two Plays by Israel Horovitz, the Obie-winning The Indian Wants the Bronx and the rarely produced Rats, at Manhattan Theatre Source [177 MacDougal Street], through March 22. Doug Schenider directs as well as performs with the six-member cast.

TIWTB and Rats ran Off-Broadway in 1968 with Al Pacino starring in the former and directing the latter. Horovitz is A.D. of Massachusetts' Gloucester Stage Company, which he founded. .

Tickets are $20 and available from Smarttix, (212) 868-4444 or online at www.Smarttix.com. For performance schedule, log onto www.ProactiveArtists.com.


A Shavian Interlude

Project Shaw continues it's four-year program of tackling every play Shaw ever wrote. This month, David Staller presents and directs In Good King Charlie's Days on March 17 at 7 p.m. at the Players Club [16 Gramercy Park South, between Park and Lexington Avenues].

The play is set in 1680 in Isaac Newton's home, where King Charles II is in hot pursuit by all of his mistresses, including the notorious Nell Gwyn. What follows is a tremendous send-up of philosophy as Shaw challenges everything we hold dear.

Since Shaw was a theater critic before becoming a playwright, cast members and narrators have beem members of the theatrical press. Narrating will be the Village Voice's Alexis Soloski. The cast of 10 includes two-time DD-nominee Nancy Anderson as Nell Gwynn, Mary Bacon [Rock 'n' Roll], DD-nominee Ed Dixon as Newton and Tony and two-time DD-nominee Daniel Jenkins [remember him way back in Big?] as King Charles II.

Tickets are $20 and available through TheaterMania at (212) 352-3101 or online at theatermania.com and projectshaw.com.


Stars for a Cause Celebre

Cause Celebre, the theater company devoted to fostering an understanding of psychological, physical and social issues, will present Christine Ebersole, Mercedes Ruehl, Marian Seldes [definitely as you've never seen or heard them before] and Linda Powell in readings and performance on March 18 at 6:30 P.M. at the Players Club [16 Gramercy Park South, between Park and Lexington Avenues] to benefit prison reform and the Fortune Society.

Also onhand, doing a series of hard-hitting prison-themed readings, will be John Doman and Isiah Whitlock Jr. from HBO's The Wire. Two members from Fortune Academy, the Society's Harlem residence for homeless with criminal records, will read selections from a dramatic story of change and hope they created with Fortune Society founder, writer and radio host David Rothenberg. Co-directors are Antony Marsellis and Christopher Hart.

Tax-deductible tickets, which include a post-program reception, are $100. To purchase, call (212) 362-2560 or (646) 366-9340.


From Israel with Love

Tel Aviv's Gesher Theatre will present Momik, based on the first part of David Grossman's novel See Under: Love , at Borough of Manhattan Community College's Tribeca Performing Arts Center [19 Chambers Street and the West Side Highway] from March 20-22 at 7:30 P.M. The performances are in Russian with English super-titles.

The play was adapted by Yevgeny Arye and Elena Laskina, and is directed by Gesher A. D. and founder Yevgeny Arye. This stop is part of the American-Canadian tour, dedicated to the 60th Anniversary of the State of Israel.

The story is of nine year-old Momik, the son of Polish Jews and Holocaust survivors who immigrated to Israel after World War II, 1950s Jerusalem and of his investigation into the Holocaust, triggered by the arrival of his long-lost grandfather, and his quest for answers.

Tickets are $45-$65 and available by calling (212) 220-1460 or online at www. Smarttix.com and www.Tribecapac.org.


New on CD

David Yazbek, the writer of brash, witty show tunes for such musicals as The Full Monty and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, has a dark side of brutal sarcasm. And that side, presented in his unusually titled CD, Evil Monkey Man [Ghostlight Records, SRP $19], has found favor with critics and the public.

As he displayed brilliantly in his recent American Songbook concert, Yazbek blends catchy pop, rock, jazz, bossa nova, blues and Broadway melodies with edgy, thought-provoking and absurd lyrics.

Making noise and good music are Yazbek on piano, guitarist Erik Della Penna, saxophonists Tony Orbach and Paul Vercesi, trombonist Mike Boschen, bass player Marcel Pierre DuClos and drummer Dean Sharenow. Lending some operatic embellishments to two of Yazbek's tunes is soprano Lauren Flanigan.

Acclaimed songwriter Carol Hall, the composer of the smash 1978 Broadway musical, The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas [which played for almost five years], is just out with her CD, Hallways, The Songs of Carol Hall [LML Music; 14 tracks, SRP $17]. Tracks include one of the hits from TBLWIT, "Hard Candy Christmas" and "Jenny Rebecca," as well as rock legend Leslie Gore's "Hungry for You" and Carol Woods' "My Circle of Friends."

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In her liner notes, Hall says, "A song is not a song until somebody sings it"; and sing they do: in addition to Hall, Tom Andersen, Hubert "Tex" Arnold [who co-produced with Hall], Scott Coulter, Gore, Bobby Gosh, Sally Mayes, Amanda McBroom, powerhouse vocalist Woods and the Broadway Inspirational Voices.

Arnold's credits include being music director, arranger and conductor for the legendary Margaret Whiting's radio, television, recording and concert performances for over 25 years.

The first to record a Hall song was a young Streisand. Other tunes have been covered by Tony Bennett, Barbara Cook, Michael Feinstein, McBroom, Maureen McGovern, Miriam Makeba, the late Mabel Mercer, Olivia Newton-John, Chita Rivera, Frederica von Stade, Whiting, Julie Wilson, Lari White - even Big Bird and Kermit the Frog.

Hall is a prolific writer of children's songs, including such favs as "It's All Right to Cry" and "Parents Are People." She also created the score to the theatrical version of the popular children's series Max and Ruby, which ran Off Broadway in 2007.

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Tony and DD-nominee Kelli O'Hara recently gave a preview of her upcoming debut solo CD, Wonder in the World [Ghostlight Records] at American Songbook. Accompanied by a 10-piece ensemble, O'Hara performed songs she's written and others by Arlen, Cahn and Van Heusen, Connick, Joel, McLean, R&H, Styne and Taylor.

For the concert and on the CD, due in stores soon, the music is arranged, orchestrated and written by Harry Connick, Jr., who plays piano, bass, drums and keyboards as well as dueting with O'Hara on one track. One of the most talked about tracks is O'Hara's rendition of Adam Guetel's "Fable," which was Victoria Clark's 11:00 number in Light in the Pizza, which co-starred O'Hara, who's currently starring as Nellie Forbush in R&H's classic South Pacific at Lincoln Center's Beaumont Theatre.

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