Tim Dunleavy  |  James Marino  |  Matthew Murray  |  Ellis Nassour  |  Michael Portantiere
Blind Item  |  Contact Us  |  Legal  |  ?

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
       

NEW!

BroadwaySpace

TICKETS

Telecharge.com
Ticketmaster.com
Google Broadway

CHAT

All That Chat (Talkin'Broadway)
Finishing The Chat (Sondheim.com)
MusicalFans.net
rec.arts.theatre.musicals
The Stephen Sondheim Society

BROADWAY NEWS

American Theater Web
American Theatre Magazine
Back Stage
Broadway.com
NYTheatre.com
Playbill.com
Show Business Weekly
Talk Entertainment
TheaterMania.com
Time Out New York
Variety

NYC AREA NEWS

NY1
The New York Times
AM New York
Daily News
New York Post
Newsday
Journal News
The Star-Ledger
The Village Voice
The Wall Street Journal

WEST END

Compare Theatre Tickets.co.uk
Theatre.com
Whatsonstage.com [UK]
ATW - London
Musical Stages [UK]
Albemarle of London
Londontheatre.co.uk
Google News

CHICAGO

Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Tribune

LA/SF

Los Angeles Times
San Francisco Chronicle

COLUMNS

Steven M. Alper
Army Archerd
Peter Bart
Michael Buckley
Andrew Cohen
Corine Cohen
Ken Davenport
Peter Filichia
Michael Fleming
Andrew Gans
Ernio Hernandez (Playbill Archives)
Ernio Hernandez (Cue & A)
Harry Haun
Joel Markowitz
Michael Musto
Ellis Nassour
Tom Nondorf
Richard Ouzounian
Rex Reed
Frank Rizzo
Richard Seff
Mark Shenton
The Siegel Column
John Simon
Robert Simonson (Week in Review)
Robert Simonson (Brief Encounter)
Steven Suskin
Terry Teachout
Theater Corps
Matt Windman
Linda Winer
Matt Wolf

PODCAST

AP on Broadway
DC Theatre Scene

MUSIC

150 Music
2die4 Music
Bayview Records
Columbia Broadway
Decca Broadway
Dink Records
DRG Records
First Night Records
Fynsworth Alley
Harbinger Records
Jay Records
LML Music
Must Close Saturday
Original Cast Records
PS Classics
Sh-K-Boom
TVT Records

Talkin'Broadway's List of Upcoming CD Releases

RADIO

Radio Playbill
Say It With Music
Old is New
Broadway's Biggest Hits

TV

Theater Talk
BlueGobo.com
Classic Arts Showcase
American Theatre Wing Seminars
Women in Theatre

AWARDS

Tony Central
Oscar Central
Tony Awards
Drama Desk Awards
The Drama League Awards
Lortel Awards
Academy Awards
Emmy Awards
Grammy Awards

GoldDerby

DATABASE

Internet Broadway Database
Internet Off-Broadway Database
Internet Movie Database
Internet Theatre Database
Musical Cast Album Database
[CastAlbums.org]
Show Music on Record Database (LOC)
CurtainUp Master Index of Reviews
Musical Heaven
FlyRope
StageSpecs.org

ROAD HOUSES

Gammage [AZ]
Golden Gate [CA]
Curran [CA]
Orpheum [CA]
Community Center [CA]
Civic [CA]
Ahmanson [CA]
Pantages [CA]
Temple Hoyne Buell [CO]
Palace [CT]
Rich Forum [CT]
Shubert [CT]
Bushnell [CT]
Chevrolet [CT]
Broward Center [FL]
Jackie Gleason [FL]
Fox [GA]
Civic Center [IA]
Cadillac Palace [IL]
Ford Center/Oriental [IL]
Shubert [IL]
Auditorium [IL]
Kentucky Center [KY]
France-Merrick [MD]
Colonial [MA]
Wilbur [MA]
Charles [MA]
Wang [MA]
Wharton Center [MI]
Whiting [MI]
Fisher [MI]
Masonic Temple [MI]
Orpheum, State, and Pantages [MN]
Fabulous Fox [MO]
New Jersey PAC [NJ]
Auditorium Center [NY]
Shea's PAC [NY]
BTI Center [NC]
Blumenthal PAC [NC]
Schuster PAC [OH]
Playhouse Square [OH]
Aronoff Center [OH]
Ohio [OH]
Victoria Theatre [OH]
Birmingham Jefferson [OH]
Merriam Theater [PA]
Academy of Music [PA]
Benedum Center [PA]
Providence PAC [RI]
Orpheum [TN]
Hobby Center [TX]
Music Hall [TX]
Bass Hall [TX]
Paramount [WA]
Fox Cities PAC [WI]
Marcus Center [WI]
Weidner Center [WI]

This list is compiled from various sources. If you have additions or corrections to the Road Houses list, please contact us.

REVIEWS

The New York Times
Variety
New York Post
The New York Times
NY1
Aisle Say
CurtainUp
DC Theatre Scene
Stage and Cinema
TotalTheater.com
Off-Off Broadway Review
TheaterOnline.com
TheaterScene.net
TheaterNewsOnline.com

FESTIVALS

The New York International Fringe Festival
The American Living Room Festival
Summer Play Festival
The New York Musical Theatre Festival
Adirondack Theatre Festival
NAMT: Festival of New Musicals

SPECIAL

BC/EFA: Broadway Cares / Equity Fights AIDS
The Actors' Fund
Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation

EDUCATION

Google Shakespeare
Actor Tips
AACT
ArtSearch
Broadway Classroom
Broadway Educational Alliance
Camp Broadway
Great Groups - New York Actors
Theatre Communications Group (TCG)
Theatre Development Fund (TDF)
Off-Broadway Theater Information Center

UNIONS/TRADE

AEA
SAG
AFTRA
AGMA
The League
Local 1
ATPAM
IATSE
AFM
AFM - Local 802
DGA
Dramatists Guild
USA 829
WGA, East
WGA, West
SSD&C
AFL-CIO
League of Professional Theatre Women
Live Broadway
OffBroadway.com

NYC NON-PROFITS

Cherry Lane Theatre
City Center
Drama Dept.
Ensemble Studio Theater
Jean Cocteau Rep.
Lark
Lincoln Center Theater
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Lucille Lortel Foundation
Manhattan Theatre Club
MCC
Mint
Pearl Theatre Company
Public Theater
Roundabout
Second Stage
Signature
The York Theatre Company

REGIONAL

Actors Theatre
Alabama Shakespeare Festival
Alley Theatre
ACT
American Musical Theatre in San Jose
American Repertory
Arena Stage
Barrington Stage Company
Bay Street Theatre
Berkeley Rep
Casa Manana
Chicago Shakespeare Theater
Cincinnati Playhouse
CTC
Dallas Summer Musicals
Dallas Theater Center
Denver Center
George Street
Goodman
Guthrie
Goodspeed
Hartford Stage
Hudson Stage Company
Theatre de la Jeune Lune
Kennedy Center
La Jolla
Long Wharf
Lyric Stage
Mark Taper Forum
McCarter
New Jersey Rep
North Shore
Old Globe
Ordway
Oregon Shakespeare
Paper Mill
Prince Music Theater
The Rep (St. Louis)
Sacramento Music Circus
San Francisco Mime Troupe
Seattle Rep
Shakespeare Theatre Co. (DC)
The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
South Coast Rep
Steppenwolf
Theater of the Stars (GA)
Theater Under the Stars (TX)
Trinity Rep
Two River Theater Company
Utah
Victory Gardens
Westport
Williamstown
Yale Rep

KEWL

Broadway Abridged
HopStop
Epenthesis
Bradlands
The Smoking Gun
Seating Charts
Entertainment Link
Mermaniac.com
BreakupGirl!
The Onion
Bored.com
Dead People Server

 
 





Part One
by ELLIS NASSOUR

There's never been a holiday season with so much Broadway-related product in the market place. You'll have no problem finding a theater or arts gift for that special someone � or yourself! The list is long: books galore � big ones, small ones; DVDs; CDs; tickets to several worthwhile attractions. There�s something for everyone � even if you�re on a limited budget. If you�re not, you're going to have some festive holidays! Of course, there's the gift that never fails to please: tickets to a Broadway or Off Broadway show!

Broadway Musicals: The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time by Ken Bloom and Frank Vlastnik [with a foreword by Jerry Orbach] will sing and dance its way into the hearts of any theater lover. It will certainly rank as one of the most lavish and beautiful theatrical books ever published -- worth the price alone for the more than 850 photographs -- the majority in glorious color, many culled by the authors from private collections.

Speaking of price, this 336-page book is the bargain of the year � an unbelievable top suggested $34.95 [Black Dog & Leventhal]. In addition to stories of the hits shows, there are synopses, cast and song lists, production credits, profiles and a helpful Index -- and tales of show biz egos, behind-the-scenes brawling, backstabbing and backstage anecdotes.

The insider gossip and often biting picture captions aside, Bloom and Vlastnik set the musicals in a historical and cultural context with stories of the legendary stars, directors, producers and choreographers. Shows are catalogued not by year but alphabetically, with a nod to Off Broadway. Sections include Star Turns, Revues, Broadway Houses and such irreverent titles as Notable Flops, Great Scores from So-so Shows, Stars Who Tried To Conquer Musicals and Cast Albums.

There�s detail, detail, detail � for instance, director Joshua Logan�s deciding factors in casting male roles for his shows; how Mary Martin might have been the star of Funny Girl with Sondheim as lyricist, Fosse as choreographer and a couple of these geniuses suggesting cutting �People�!

Nothing has been overlooked! For older fans, the book is a fantastic trip down memory lane; for younger ones, it�s a well-documented primer on Broadway's musicals from their roots in 19th-century operetta through the golden era of the book musical and into today.

You�ll have to get a large, heavy-duty stocking for this oversized book. If you�d like your copy personally autographed, be at Drama Book Store [250 West 40th Street] tomorrow [Monday, November 15th] as Bloom, a playwright, theater director and radio host [and author of 2003�s Jerry Herman: The Lyrics] and Vlastnik, a veteran of numerous Broadway musicals, will be at signing copies from 6 to 8 P.M. On hand will also be several surprise guests.


from Broadway Musicals: The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time
Clockwise : Rex Harrison, Julie Andrews, My Fair Lady, 1956; Gwen Verdon
gets a lift from Eddie Phillips, Damn Yankees, 1955; volatile belter Dolores Gray
has a leg up on Andy Griffith, Destry Rides Again, 1959 [she not only didn't get
along with him but also got into a slapfest with choreographer Michael Kidd,
who ungallantly returned fire; irrepressible Barbara Harris popping out,
The Apple Tree, 1967.



Want more Broadway, well, remember that amazingly compresensible three-part PBS series, Broadway: The American Musical? Just in time for gift-giving or collecting, the three-disc DVD set [Paramount Home Entertainment/PBS Home Video, suggested list price $60] is out. Julie Andrews is host and frequent narrator as 100 years [1893-2003] of Broadway milestones come alive. Like the series, it's organized into six time periods, with rare archival footage, home movies and tracks from Original Cast Recordings.

There�re fascinating portraits of the creators and collaborators who toiled on and off stage to define and develop the musical. Among those appearing are Mel Brooks, Carol Channing, Betty Comden, Joel Grey, Kitty Carlisle Hart, Arthur Laurents, Hal Prince, Stephen Sondheim and Tommy Tune. The DVD contains five hours plus of bonus features -- including additional performances and interviews.

Oh, the DVD�s not enough? OK, there�s the companion book [Bulfinch Press; $60] by theater scholar Laurence Maslon and series creator/director Michael Kantor. At an imposing 470 pages, it�s another candidate for a heavy-duty stocking. Highlights: 200 color and over 300 B&W photos [many oversized], lively sidebars, a Who�s Who for each time period, a selected chronology of musicals and an Index.

The five-CD fold-out set [Columbia Broadway Masterworks, $48] has a lively 55-page readable booklet [how nice it would have been if they had designed a sleeve for it!] and features more than 100 of the more memorable songs from the Broadway musicals. However, depending on your tastes, it�s far from definitive. Last, but certainly not least, for the budget-conscious, there's the 21-track Best Of single CD [Decca Broadway, $14].


When is it not good to buy or give a DVD or book on Broadway?
Among those available this season:
Broadway: The American Musical

Broadway: The Golden Age and The Back Stage Guide to Broadway.


Hot off the presses are two more titles about Broadway: One, the DVD of award-winning filmmaker Rick McKay's Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There [RCA Victor, $20]. In theatrical release, the documentary won over 15 festival Best awards. Countless stage greats [Carol Burnett, Kitty Carlisle Hart, Carol Channing, Barbara Cook, Fred Ebb, Jerry Herman, Angela Lansbury, Hal Prince, Chita Rivera, Stephen Sondheim, Elaine Stritch, Tommy Tune, Gwen Verdon] tell of making it on Broadway and recollect memorable career moments. There's 88 minutes of additional footage. The bonus material includes director commentary and deleted scenes, such as Marian Sledes speaking on Katharine Cornell and June Havoc on Pal Joey and a sneak preview of the 2005 sequel, Broadway: The Next Generation.

The Back Stage Guide To Broadway by Robert Viagas [Back Stage, $12.95] is a lively, in-depth guide that tells you everything you need to know. Viagas, author with Louis Botto of Playbill's At This Theater, reveals insider tips on the how-tos of securing tickets to sold-out shows, meeting stars, where to eat and stay, picking shows for children and, most importantly, on how not to get fleeced. Illustrated and indexed, with a Theatre District map. Even the natives will enjoy this, and it handily fits into your jacket pocket.

Tonight at 7 P.M. and next weekend [Friday, 7 P.M.; Saturday, 9 P.M.; and Sunday] is your last chance this season to catch the powerhouse vocals of Klea Blackhurst, who took the New York cabaret scene by storm in 2001 with her Merman tribute [winning the 2002 MAC [cabaret] Award for Best Female Vocalist]. You may recall her �Dear, Mr. Gershwin� show-stopping turn in Off Broadway�s Radio Gals and her New York debut in Oil City Symphony [when she replaced the usually irreplaceable Deborah Monk]. Comparisons shouldn�t be necessary; but, hey, when you�ve got Merman-style chops and Midler-style brassiness, why the heck not?

In Autumn in New York, with crystal clarity and a belt that�ll knock you out, she pays tribute to Vernon Duke. She�s backed by Michael Rice and the Pocket Change Trio. As wonderful as Blackhurst�s inspired vocals are her tales of Duke�s arrival in the U.S. and his dreams of writing for Broadway. It will be an evening you�ll long remember. And you can take Klea home � at least, her CD �Everything the Traffic Will Allow.� [Order a copy at: www.kleablackhurst.com.] At Opia with a $30 cover, $15 minimum � and she�s worth every nickel; (212) 688-3939 [130 East 57th Street, at Lexington Avenue, in Hotel Habitat].

Now through Sunday [November 21], that sweet Cinderella is making a comeback with the New York City Opera�s sumptuous production. The kids will get swept into the fairy tale world of enchantment with the eye-popping costumes. The Rodgers and Hammerstein score [with some hints of what was to come in The Sound of Music two years later] will keep adults alert. But this is not your mother's Cinderella [as seen on TV in 1957]. Sarah Uriarte Berry [Nicola in Taboo, and a Beauty and the Beast Belle] is an ideal Cindy with TV�s Christopher Sieber [recently in Chicago] as the Prince. Ren�e Taylor and Dick Van Patten play Queen and King.

The real fun lies in the offbeat casting -- totally against type -- of demure Lea DeLaria [it's worth going just to see her in those costumes!] and SNL�s Ana Gasteyer as the evil stepsisters, glamour drag artist Lypsinka, a.k.a. John Epperson as the stepmother [no doubt in the Joan Crawford mode] and the legendarily purrfect Eartha Kitt as the Fairy Godmother. Kitt, no doubt, will do it her way -- but the bets are on that she walks off with the show.

It�s quite a journey for Epperson, �a sort of personal triumph.� He moved to New York froms Mississippi wanting a mainstream career, �but," he says, "I was too frightened to do the traditional things, including auditioning. I even went so far to create a character that didn't have to speak or sing! I�ve finally gotten over that. I got this role by auditioning � singing and reading lines."

He adds, "It's my first uptown gig and I�m very proud. Proud of myself and proud to be working with such a fine company at Lincoln Center -- where I once worked as a rehearsal pianist for American Ballet Theatre in the Met�s basement.�

DeLaria has been enamored of musical comedy since childhood. "I was this six-year-old weirdo theatre person in the Midwest, where the thought bubble over most everyone's head had a pick-up truck or a motorcycle! While everyone drove around in their trucks, drinking beer and throwing the cans in back, I was in the basement tap-dancing and singing, 'Broadway rhythm's got me!' I could hit a high C. I still can. Only now, it depends on what key you're in. It's a high C in the key of Lauren Bacall, but not in the key of Bernadette Peters!"

Naturally, Merman was an inspiration. "When I started doing school musicals," she recalls, "Mom said I should write Ethel and send a tape. Since she didn't have a daughter, maybe, she'd adopt me! Garland and Ella Fitzgerald were my idols, too."

Gerald Steichen is waving the baton over the NYCO orchestra. Direction and choreography is by Baayork Lee, a veteran of musicals going back to the early 50s and not only Connie in ACL but also an assistant to Michael Bennett and Bob Avian. For performance times and tickets, visit nycopera.com or call Ticketmaster, (212) 307-4100.

Sunday, November 21, can probably lay claim to the Who�s Who event of the season. The Metropolitan Opera Guild and dozens of luminaries will salute show business legend Kitty Carlisle Hart and her late husband, playwright/director Moss Hart with Hart to Hart, a concert celebration at 6 P.M. in Avery Fisher Hall. Julie Andrews and Beverly Sills will co-host. Among those appearing are Jane Alexander, Michael Feinstein, Robert Goulet, Rosemary Harris, Celeste Holm, Thomas Hampson, Audra McDonald, Anna Moffo and Rise Stevens.


The amazing and glamourous Kitty Carisle Hart --
like that battery bunny, still going strong.

The concert will be followed by dinner on the Fisher Promenade. The benefit committee includes Governor Pataki, Senators Clinton and Schumer, Mayor Bloomberg, former Governor and Mrs. Cuomo, former Mayor Koch, Rocco Landesman, Harold Prince, Happy Rockefeller, Steven Spielberg, Mike Wallace and Joanne Woodward.


Besides tributes to Miss Hart, who for 20 years was chair of the New York State Council on the Arts, in song, there'll be clips from such films as A Night at the Opera -- as well as her many appearances on TV�s To Tell the Truth. Moss Hart's career will be highlighted by performances of songs from Berlin, Porter, Rodgers and Hart and Weill and Ira Gershwin shows he wrote books for. There will be rare performance footage from his You Can't Take It with You [written with George S. Kaufman; winner of the 1936 Pulitzer Prize] and The Man Who Came to Dinner [also written with Kaufman] and musicals, such as Lerner and Loewe�s My Fair Lady and Camelot [which he also directed] and Weill and Ira Gershwin�s Lady in the Dark.

Miss Hart, for decades one of New York�s most glamorous socialites, starred in opera, film and Broadway musicals. Moss Hart�s work dominated Broadway from 1930 until his death in 1961 at age 57 at the peak of his career. His screen credits include Gentlemen�s Agreement, Hans Christian Andersen and the musical remake of A Star is Born. His 1959 autobiography, Act One, was a best-seller. Miss Hart�s autobiography, Kitty, was published in 1988.

U.S. Trust is underwriting the gala, with fine wines donated by Ruffinio. Proceeds benefit the Guild�s education programs and the Metropolitan Opera. Individual concert tickets are $50 � $2,500. For information and gala tickets, contact the Guild at (212) 769-7062.

Renoir, Degas, Chagall, Picasso and Toulouse-Lautrec are alive and well at Lincoln Center. Their masterpieces spring to vivid life in Damrosch Park, through January 9th, as one of New York�s most cherished holiday traditions returns: The Big Apple Circus. Picturesque, the 27th season in their intimate one-ring tent is billed as �all-new�; and except for one of our favorite clowns, Grandma, it is. This edition is the best ever. A couple of reasons why: Russia�s gravity-defying 13-member Kovgar Troupe of teeterboard aerial acrobats; the spirited juggling of Spain�s sensational Picaso Jr. [evidently no relation to Picasso]; and Russia�s dexterous comic Vallery. Tickets: Ticketmaster, (212) 307-4100.

There�ll be dozens of new CDs of interest in the racks for the holiday season. One is the lush soundtrack from Joel Schumacher�s highly-anticipated Warner Bros. film adaptation of The Phantom of the Opera [Sony Classical/Really Useful], with Gerard Butler [whom you�ll sureley remember from movies Lara Croft and the Cradle of Life: Tomb Raider II and Timeline] Emmy Rossum [Mystic River, Day After Tomorrow] and two-time Tony Award-nominee Patrick Wilson singing one of Andrew Lloyd Webber�s most popular musical theater scores [lyrics by Charles Hart]. Co-stars include Minnie Driver and Miranda Richardson. In addition to "Music of the Night," "All I Ask of You" and "Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again," there�s "Learn To Be Lonely," written for the film and performed by Driver. There�ll be two editions: a deluxe, two-disc version in a collector's package; and a single-disc CD.

Hugh Panaro is the reigning Phantom on Broadway. At the end of January, POTO begins it's 17th year.

Other CDs of interest are either in stores or coming soon. Take Look, Ma, I�m Dancin� [1947] by Broadway and film songwriter Hugh Martin ["Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas," "The Trolley Song"], which has been remastered for the first time on CD [Decca Broadway]. The show starred tiny dynamo Nancy Walker as a brewery heiress who underwrites a Russian ballet tour so she can be the star. Broadway favorite Harold Lang [Kiss Me, Kate] was co-star. Of special interest: two tracks -- "Let's Do A Ballet" and "Horrible, Horrible Love" � which were recorded but never put on the original LP after being cut are heard for the first time. In addition, there are alternate takes of songs and notes by Martin.

Of special interest to the younger set: A 40th Anniversary two-CD expanded soundtrack [28 tracks, plus bonus features; Disney, $19] from Mary Poppins, starring Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke. Disney also has something for the older set: Superstar Hits, a CD, featuring Christina Aguilera, Phil Collins, Billy Crystal, Celine Dion, Elton John, Sting, Tina Turner, Vanessa Williams, Stevie Wonder and Wynonna singing themes from the studio�s blockbusters.

Since this is also the season for giving, remember the dedicated work of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS.








Published on BroadwayStars.com on Saturday, November 13, 2004
[Link to this Feature]



Ellis Nassour is an international media journalist, and author of Honky Tonk Angel: The Intimate Story of Patsy Cline, which he has adapted into a musical for the stage. Visit www.patsyclinehta.com.
For a listing of all features written by Ellis, click here.


     
BROADWAYSTAR'S FIVE DAY FORECAST


2007-08
Broadway Season

June 28 - Old Acquaintance (AA)

July 10 - Xanadu (Hayes) [Robert Ahrens, Dan Vickery, Tara Smith/B. Swibel and Sarah Murchison/Dale Smith]

Aug 19 - Grease (Atkinson)

Oct 4 - Mauritius (Biltmore) [MTC]

Oct 11 - The Ritz (54)

Oct 18 - Pygmalion (AA)

Oct 25 - A Bronx Tale (Kerr)

Nov 1 - Cyrano de Bergerac (Rodgers)

Nov 4 - Rock 'N' Roll (Jacobs)

Nov 8 - Young Frankenstein (Hilton)

Nov 9 - Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (St. James)

Nov 10: Local One Strike Begins

Nov 28: Local One Strike Ends

Dec 2 - Cymbeline (Beaumont)

Dec 3 - The Farnsworth Invention (Music Box) [Dodger Properties with Steven Spielberg, Dan Cap Productions, Fred Zollo, Latitude Link and the Pelican Group]

Dec 4 - August: Osage County (Imperial) [Jeffrey Richards, Jean Doumanian, Steve Traxler, Jerry Frankel, Steppenwolf]

Dec 6 - The Seafarer (Booth)

Dec 9 - Is He Dead? (Lyceum)

Dec 16 - The Homecoming (Cort) [Richards, Frankel]

Jan 10 - The Little Mermaid (Lunt)

Jan 15 - The 39 Steps (AA)

Jan 17 - November (Barrymore)

Jan 24 - Come Back, Little Sheba (Biltmore)

Feb 21 - Sunday In The Park With George (54)

Feb 28 - Passing Strange (Belasco)

Mar 6 - Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Broadhurst) [Stephen C. Byrd]

Mar 9 - In The Heights (Rodgers)

Mar 27 - Gypsy (St. James)

Mar 29 - Macbeth (Lyceum)

Apr 3 - South Pacific (Beaumont)

Apr 17 - A Catered Affair (Kerr) [Jujamcyn Theaters, Jordan Roth, Harvey Entertainment / Ron Fierstein, Richie Jackson and Daryl Roth]

Apr 24 - Cry Baby (Marquis)

Apr 27 - The Country Girl (Jacobs)

Apr 30 - Thurgood (Booth)

May 1 - Les Liaisons Dangereuses (AA)

May 4 - Boeing-Boeing (Longacre)

May 7 - Top Girls (Biltmore)

TBA - Godspell

2008-09
Broadway Season

Oct 16 - Billy Elliot (Imperial)

Nov 08 - Dividing the Estate (a Shubert theater)

Dec 14 - Shrek: The Musical (Broadway) [DreamWorks]

Talked About
Not Scheduled Yet

TBA - 50 Words

TBA - Addams Family (Elephant Eye)

TBA - American Buffalo

TBA - An American Vaudeville [Farrell, Perloff]

TBA - The Beard of Avon [NYTW]

TBA - Being There [Permut]

TBA - Benny & Joon [MGM]

TBA - Billy Elliot

TBA - Brave New World [Rachunow]

TBA - Breath of Life [Fox]

TBA - Busker Alley [Margot Astrachan, Robert Blume, Kristine Lewis, Jamie Fox, Joanna Kerry & Heather Duke]

TBA - Broomhilda

TBA - Bye Bye Birdie [Niko]

TBA - Camille Claudel [Wildhorn]

TBA - Camelot

TBA - Carmen [Robin DeLevita and The Firm]

TBA - Catch Me If You Can

TBA - Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon [Bob and Harvey Weinstein]

TBA - Cry Baby [Grazer, Gordon, McAllister, Epstein]

TBA - Designing Women [Alexis]

TBA - Don Juan DeMarco [New Line]

TBA - Dreamgirls [Creative Battery]

TBA - Duet

TBA - Equus

TBA - Ever After [Adam Epstein]

TBA - Fallen Angels (Shubert) [Kenwright]

TBA - Farragut North [Richards]

TBA - Father of the Bride

TBA - The Female Of The Species (TBA)

TBA - Fool For Love (AA) [Roundabout]

TBA - Girl Group Time Travelers

TBA - Golden Boy

TBA - Harmony [Guiles, Karslake, Smith, Fishman]

TBA - Hitchcock Blonde

TBA - The Importance Of Being Earnest

TBA - Jerry Springer: The Opera! [Thoday, McKeown]

TBA - Jesus Hopped The 'A' Train (Circle)

TBA - Josephine [Waissman]

TBA - Leap of Faith

TBA - A Little Princess [Ettinger, Dodger]

TBA - Midnight Cowboy [MGM]

TBA - The Minstrel Show - Kander and Ebb and Stroman

TBA - Moonstruck [Pittelman, Azenberg]

TBA - Mourning Becomes Electra [Haber, Boyett]

TBA - Monsoon Wedding

TBA - The Night of the Hunter

TBA - The Opposite of Sex [Namco]

TBA - Orphans

TBA - Pal Joey [Platt]

TBA - Paper Doll

TBA - The Paris Letter

TBA - The Philadelphia Story

TBA - Peter Pan

TBA - Porgy and Bess [Frankel, Viertel, Baruch, Routh, Panter, Tulchin/Bartner]

TBA - The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert

TBA - The Princess Bride

TBA - Princesses [Lane, Comley]

TBA - Poe the Musical

TBA - Rain Man [MGM]

TBA - Robin Hood

TBA - Secondhand Lions

TBA - South Pacific

TBA - Speed-the-Plow

TBA - Stalag 17

TBA - Starry Messenger

TBA - Syncopation

TBA - A Tale Of Two Cities

TBA - Torch Song Trilogy

TBA - Turn of the Century

TBA - West Side Story

TBA - The Wall [Weinstein, Mottola, Waters]

TBA - Will Rogers Follies [Cossette]

TBA - The Wiz [Dodger]

TBA - Zanna [Dalgleish]

This list is compiled from various sources. If you have corrections to the Broadway Season, please contact us.

 
   


Tim Dunleavy  |  James Marino  |  Matthew Murray  |  Ellis Nassour  |  Michael Portantiere
Blind Item  |  Contact Us  |  Legal  |  ?



© 1997 - 2010 2die4 Productions, Inc.


https://broadwaystars.com/ellis/2004_11_13_ellisarchive.shtml  |   172.69.7.61