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

 
 




THE PRODUCERS ON FILM:
STROMAN, LANE AND BRODERICK SCORE BIG TIME;
TV ONCE UPON A MATTRESS
STARS BROADWAY FAVORITES

By ELLIS NASSOUR


After so many disappointments [Rent and Chicago, excluded] it�s such a rare treat to have a film adaptation of a Broadway musical, as in Mel Brooks' The Producers, work so well onscreen.

One writer's opinion, anyway. And, it would seem, the two packed auditoriums where I viewed the film with audiences that roared in laughter. The big question is will those three star raves and the thumb's up overide the neasayers.

Director/choreographer Susan Stroman, amazingly [well, not according to all critics] in her film directorial debut, deserves the lion�s share of credit [or to read some of the reviews, blame].

There was never any illusion that the Broadway stage show would be classy. The material is tasteless and often vulgar, like in so many of Brooks films. Yet it worked, and won a record 12 Tony Awards.

Stroman has recaptured the production on film in a throwback to the old-fashioned movie musicals she popcorned her way through as a kid.

If anything, The Producers is better on film than onstage, mainly thanks to the repackaging of Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick, who saw their careers soar to dazzling heights in the career-defining roles of Bialystock and Bloom.

More so than onstage, Lane seems to be channeling Zero Mostel�s unbeatable performance in the original film from the twisted mind of Brooks. Lane and Broderick play off each other with hilarious results, particlarly at their initial meeting in the "We Can Do It" sequence. Lane�s gift for comedy is well known, but it�s Broderick who�s full of surprises. He explodes onscreen, expanding his stage persona with ab fab slapstick and never sounded better on the vocals.

At a press event, Broderick said, "My goal wasn�t to just document the stage version, because then it would feel stale." He explained that onstage you have to deliver the material with a bit more subtly. �On film, you can't be very subtle. I wanted the movie Max to be its own, new thing." He succeeded.

Broderick, daydreaming, segues into a spectacular "I Wanna Be A Producer" production
number with
girls, girls, girls in pearls, pearls, pearls>
The critical shellacing from some critics aside, there�s much to enjoy in the film.

Some things can be done better onstage; others, bigger and better onscreen.

The latter is certainly true regarding what Stroman has done with Broderick�s �I Wanna Be A Producer� number, where he transforms from mousy accountant to a Merrick-wanna-be. It�s great fun when those file cabinets pop open revealing girls, beautiful girls, in miles and miles of smiles and pearls.

�Matthew really enjoyed learning the new choreography,� points out Stroman. �He has a real song and dance man inside him.�Stroman staged the number across three stylized sets: a shiny black floor with a backdrop that expands like an accordion, a riser of sparkling stairs and a multi-tiered platform that illuminates Bloom�s name in thousands of lights [inspired, she says, by the unique photography of Busby Berkeley films].

Lane and Broderick�s recreation of their stage performances should put an end to the gossip that in the The Odd Couple revival they are delivering the same performances they gave onstage in The Producers. These guys aren�t copying anything. Seeing them again in these role, it becomes clear that they're not cloning their performances in TOC.

The duo were a team, became a team again [TOC] and are once more a team. But, says Lane, don�t expect them to continue a career path where they become the new Martin and Lewis or Abbott and Costello. �Something like The Producers [onstage] really only happens once in a lifetime,� explains Lane, �but not everything we do is going to be The Producers. It was such a phenomenon. No one could have predicted what would happen. Now, all you can hope is that lightning will strike twice!�

When Brooks started planning the film adaptation, he says, �I was adamant that as many as possible of the original talents responsible for the success of the Broadway show would return for the film version, including Susan and, it goes without saying, Nathan and Matthew.�

These include Tony-winner Gary Beach and Tony-nominee Roger Bart, who created the roles of, respectively, �flamboyantly untalented� director Roger De Bris [and you don�t get the impression in the film that he is that unsuccessful] and his �common-law� assistant Carmen Ghia. Onscreen, they seem even more outrageously over the top � if that is possible. It could be the contrast of seeing them on a giant screen as opposed to from Row R.

The list included the ensemble of very talented pigeons, but, sadly, not Brad as Third Reich playwright Franz Liebkind. Studios think they have to have names to guarantee box office, so Oscar is relegated to a blink-your-eye-and-he�s-gone cameo and Will Ferrell fills his shoes. He�s a gifted clown and acquits himself nicely.

The false note in the major casting is Uma Thurman as luscious Swedish secretary/ receptionist Ulla, whose charms land her a plum role in the designed-to-be-a-flop Bialystock plots. Uma�s got it, and she certainly tries to flaunt it � it would seem with the help of a mighty push-up bra. Unfortunately, especially when singing [which she does quite okiedokie], she slips in and out of that Swedish accent.

The splashy opening number, �Opening Tonight� and other ensemble moments feature a rooster of theater names; among them: Brent Barrett [in high leather drag!], George Dvorsky, Kathy Fitzgerald [from the stage musical], Hunter Foster, Judy Kaye, Andrea Martin, Nancy Opel, Marilyn Sokol and Karen Ziemba [not to mention Jai Rodriguez as Sabu!]. John Barrowman, gone Germanic blonde, as the singing stormtrooper, adds a jolt of theatricality to the �Springtime for Hitler� number, especially with his clarion tenor.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .... ... ... ... ... .... ... . ........Break a leg, if not box office records>

Beach interrupts Broderick and Lane walking off with the entire movie when, in the true spirit of the show-must-go-on legend, Ferrell, who�s been cast as Hitler, breaks a leg and he�s forced to go out there a gay director and come back a star. At first, the audience is aghast. Bialystock and Bloom are plotting their getaway in the face of the season�s � no, the decade; nah, the century�s � biggest flop. But Beach, flamboyant as ever, wins them over and, unfortunately for Bialystock and Bloom, critics rave and lines form at the box office.

What is Beach�s little nod in the Broadway musical, still playing at the St. James, of a hint of Judy Garland�s "Born in a Trunk" sequence in A Star Is Born is now an all-out tribute. Beach shines. Faithful fans will get the joke, but how Beach�s big moment plays to the unknowing will be anybody�s guess.

Tony Award-winning costume designer William Ivey Long is another veteran of the stage show who worked on the film.

There are several inside jokes. Tony-winning co-book writer Thomas Meehan also takes the liberty to salute the street he lives on in the far West Village. The timeline of the film has been pushed back from 1968 to 1959 when, as you can see in the Shubert Alley sequences featuring posters of The Sound of Music, West Side Story and Destry Rides Again, Broadway was abuzz with hits.

Production designer Mark Friedberg superbly recreated on a soundstage West 44th Street, including Sardi�s, Shubert Alley and the Shubert Theatre [where Bialystock�s office would logically be when he first spots Ulla getting out of that Rolls Royce]. In the continuity department, as you will catch in the Central Park scene at the Bethesda fountain [you�ll have fun spotting which extras are there, then gone and suddenly back again], and with Broderick�s quick-dry, no-wrinkle shirt [way before their time here!] somebody was not being alert.

Brooks was determined to shoot the film, just as he did the original 1968 film, in New York. �We�re a Broadway story!� he says enthusiastically. �It would have been heartbreaking not to shoot here. And the studio was only eleven and a half blocks away from where I was born.�

It was shot at the new, state-of-the-art Steiner Studios, a 100,000-square-foot facility at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Freidberg supervised construction of sets on four soundstages.

Stroman comes through with shining colors in her initial job behind the cameras, which, she says, �became like another dancer to me. One day on set, I watched as a camera crewman passed the crane up into space. It was as if he was passing a dancer into the air.�

She had the production storyboarded, so every move was planned. �The cameramen loved shooting to the tempo of the music,� she reports, �and scenes and production numbers were planned so the camera would partner the actors as if they were a dance couple. If the actor took eight counts to move from left to right, so did the camera.�

Growing up, she was an avid fan of movie musicals and.�wanted to be like Ginger and Fred and Gene Kelly in Singin' in the Rain. It was glorious the way they glided and danced.� It was this love of dance that got her interested in theater. �I always imagined scenarios with hordes of people dancing through my head, but movie musicals faded away. We all thought the genre was gone. But musicals will always be alive in theater.�

Stroman says she finds �something timelessly appealing� about the story of The Producers. �Like any good musical, each character fulfills all his hopes and dreams. Audiences either see themselves in Leo, a caterpillar who wants to become a butterfly, or they see themselves as Max, a man who was on top and wants to rise there again. We also have a love story � the nerdy accountant wins the beautiful girl.�

The idea of turning The Producers into a stage musical was an interesting journey. In 1998, David Geffen �hounded me,� says Brooks, about turning the film [which won Brooks as screenplay Oscar] into a stage production. I�d been a fan of the theater since my Uncle Joe took me to see Cole Porter�s Anything Goes when I was nine.�

Unknown to Geffen, Brooks had long had the desire to be a Broadway composer/ lyricist. He had written songs for his films, including �Springtime for Hitler� and �Prisoners of Love� for The Producers.

Geffen suggested Brooks meet with Jerry Herman. When they discussed the project, Herman told Brooks he knew of a better candidate to write the score. He sat at the piano and played some of the composer�s songs. The composer was Brooks.

He brought aboard Meehan, a friend and collaborator [Spaceballs, To Be or Not To Be] to co-write the book. It didn�t hurt that he�d won a Tony for his Annie book.

Stroman was at work on Contact when she got a call from out of nowhere. �It was Mel and he said, �I want to meet you. Tonight.�� She was about to say, �But�� but realized this was Mel Brooks. �I knew all of his movies, all the lines. I got very excited.�

She dropped everything, hurried home and before she knew it there was a knock at the door. �And there he was, this legend.� But Brooks didn�t speak. �He launched into full voice, singing �That Face� [the song that would open Act Two of The Producers]. He sang right past me, down my hall and then jumped on my sofa. He finished the song, looked down at me and said, �Hello, I�m Mel Brooks.��

She laughs that when he offered her the job she thought, �No matter what happens with this show, it�s going to be a great adventure. And it has been. In fact, it has been one of the greatest times of my life.�

Twelve Tony Awards, two national touring companies and three international productions later, Brooks asked Stroman, �If we were to make this show into a movie, what movie would you want to make it like?�

She answered, �Singin� in the Rain,� and Brooks told her �You�ve got the job!� He says that SITR is the classic of �a head-to-toe musical where you see the dancers, not just in quick cuts to faces or eyes or ears, but you see beautiful bodies in motion.�

Stroman was excited to introduce a camera into the mix. She notes, �In the theater, the audience sees everything in a wide shot. On film, I was able to use the close-up to tell the story more immediately and in a more intimate way. Plus, getting a close-up on the humorous faces of Nathan, Matthew, Gary and Roger heightens the comedy even more.�

Brooks did give Stroman advice. He told her that she must say �action� and then, when you�re happy, �cut.� Highly complimentary, Brooks says, �I knew that Susan would take to this. She has an incredible visual gift.�

Broderick agrees. �Susan came extremely prepared and was a very hard worker. At rehearsals, we never had to fill the time. She had it all well planned. You could feel her strength and her smarts. Her transition to movies just seemed effortless.�

Regarding the adaptation, Meehan explains that the structure of a movie is traditionally three acts, �but Broadway musicals are two acts. Just as Mel and I took his three-act screenplay and fashioned it into a two-act Broadway musical, we had to take the stage book apart and reconstruct it all over again.�

He noted that the Act One finale �Along Came Bialy,� which takes place in what he called �little old lady land� [with 50 of Bialystock�s investor honeys on walkers], is in the middle of the film. �We didn�t need a big orgasmic finish to send the curtains down,� he laughs, �because the show is still rolling.�

Expanding the production to the screen, says Meehan, �gives it a previously unexplored breadth. When you take it off the stage and put it in movies, you can do a lot more in terms of locations. This movie doesn�t just take place in offices and theatres [a brief sequence was shot in the St. James], but throughout the city. Putting it onscreen, we gave it more room to breathe.�

But, for Lane and Broderick, the transition from performing onstage to onscreen was initially a bit startling. For one thing, onstage, with applauding audiences in gales of laughter, they had to, as Lane describes, �put air between certain lines� until the laughter subsided. n front of the cameras, their audience of 1,500 people shrunk to a crew of 70, boom mikes and a rather large camera.

Lane jokes, �Matthew said that shooting this on film was like doing a very quiet Wednesday matinee. We were used to an audience who are an active part of the process. That gave us a certain rhythm. But in shooting the film, we had to let go of all that � to go back to what it is your character wants and needs.�

Observing the differences between the theater and film performance, Broderick adds, �Movies are very slow, with a lot of waiting around. You have to have energy when you need it over a three-month period. Onstage, you�re sort of shot out of a cannon. You go out and it�s boom, boom, and you don�t stop. It�s a very different feeling.�

Douglas Besterman, who won a Tony for his orchestrations of the stage production, was back with a score arranged for a much larger orchestra: 70 musicians. Patrick Brady, the music director and frequent conductor of The Producers onstage, conducted and was vocal arranger and, since the majority of the numbers were pre-recorded, the resident lip-synch policeman, carefully scrutinizing each performance so the vocals were perfectly in synch. In a bit of a departure from traditional movie musical shooting, the actors didn�t always have to be in sync with a playback. They were given the option to sing live.

The movie soundtrack [available on Sony] has 23 numbers [the original cast CD has 20], mostly in the same sequence as onstage. The deletion of �The King of Broadway,� except as a bonus track, is puzzling. Missing also is the Lane/Broderick duet, "Where Did We Go Right?"

Brooks has written two new songs, "You'll Find Your Happiness in Rio" and �There�s Nothing Like A Show On Broadway,� which could become an opening number for the Tony Awards and a perennial in piano bars. It�s heard in the closing credits sequence, which you don�t want to miss.

The Producers was nominated for 14 2001 Tonys and won 12, setting a new record. It received Tonys in each nominated category, including three for Brooks [Musical, Score and Book, the latter shared with Meehan. It will surely be in the running for Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations.


[Photos: ANDREW SCHWARTZ]


HOLIDAY TV SPECIAL : ONCE UPON A MATTRESS


Carol Burnett and Tracey Ullman � two �queens of comedy� and both six-time Emmy Award winners � top the spectacular cast in ABC�s Sunday airing of the Mary Rodgers/Marshall Louis Barer musical comedy Once Upon A Mattress. Just days before it�s release on DVD, it�s a two-hour holiday presentation on The Wonderful World of Disney.

Burnett, who played the princess in the Off Broadway and Broadway original, now stars in the much-expanded role of Queen Aggravain, with Ullman as Princess Winnifred.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . Carol Burnett stars again, but in a different role>
The special, directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall [Tony, Choreography, Wonderful Town], co-stars Zooey Deschanel, Michael Boatman, Edward Hibbert [Fraiser] and Matthew Morrison [The Light in the Piazza, Hairspray].

Denis O�Hare [Drama Desk winner, Sweet Charity; Tony winner, Take Me Out] plays Prince Dauntless. The legendary Tom Smothers is King Sextimus, the benevolent but mute ruler to Burnett�s conniving queen [the running gag is that he�d rather be deaf than mute!].

Bob Mackie, the legendary designer of some pretty incredible frocks for Ms. Burnett [who is the executive producer] is onhand with some dazzling costumes and headpieces.

Denis O'Hare plays Prince Dauntless;
and with Carol Burnett, as Queen Aggravain>

The story tells of Dauntless, desperate to find a wife, who comes in the unlikely person of Winnifred. The hitch is that the Queen�s not too happy about his choice and sets an edict that the bride-to-be must be so sensitive that she can feel a pea under a mountain of mattresses.

Burnett created the role of Princess Winnifred in 1959 when the play premiered off-Broadway. The show then moved from the East Village to The Great White Way and Burnett made her Broadway debut.� She later starred in 1964 and 1972 TV productions of the musical.

Marc Platt [Legally Blonde; Broadway�s Wicked], Burnett and Burnett veteran Marty Tudor are executive producers. Janet Brownell [Eloise at the Plaza, Gilda Radner: It�s Always Something] wrote the teleplay, based on the original stage book by Jay Thompson, Dean Fuller and Martin Barer.

Marshall is director-in-residence for City Center Encores!, where she served as artistic director for four seasons.

Published on BroadwayStars.com on Friday, December 16, 2005
[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.


(none)  |   172.70.126.41