42nd Street (musical)

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42nd Street
Original cast album
Music Harry Warren
Lyrics Al Dubin
Book Michael Stewart
Mark Bramble
Based upon Novel by Bradford Ropes
Productions 1980 Broadway
1984 West End
2001 Broadway revival
2007 UK Tour
Awards Tony Award for Best Musical
Olivier Award for Best Musical
Evening Standard for Best Musical
Tony Award for Best Revival
Drama Desk Outstanding Revival

42nd Street is a musical with a book by Michael Stewart and Mark Bramble, lyrics by Al Dubin, and music by Harry Warren. The 1980 Broadway production won the Tony Award for Best Musical and became a long-running hit, and the show was produced in London in 1984 (winning the Olivier Award for Best Musical) and its 2001 Broadway revival also won the Tony for Best Revival. The show is frequently revived.

Based on the novel by Bradford Ropes and the subsequent 1933 film adaptation, it focuses on the efforts of famed dictatorial Great White Way director Julian Marsh to mount a successful stage production of a musical extravaganza at the height of the Great Depression.

The fact that prior to this the only movie musical adapted for the stage had been the 1974 flop Gigi did not deter producer David Merrick from taking a gamble with a $3 million production. He felt audiences once again were ready to embrace the nostalgia craze started by the successful revivals of No, No Nanette, Irene, and his own Very Good Eddie several years earlier, and augmented the familiar songs from the film's soundtrack with a liberal dose of popular tunes from the Dubin-Warren catalogue. Taking his cue from Hollywood's Busby Berkeley, famed for his elaborate musical numbers, director/choreographer Gower Champion filled the stage with spectacular dance routines, starting with forty pairs of feet tap-dancing away as the curtain slowly rose for the first act as they did at that time.

Contents

[edit] Productions

In July 1980, 42nd Street premiered at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. After six previews, the Broadway production opened on August 25, 1980 at the Winter Garden Theatre, eventually moving to the Majestic and then the St. James before it finally completed its 3,486-performance run. (Frank Rich called this a sign of the "shift of power" on Broadway, as the show had to leave the Winter Garden to make way for Cats and the Majestic to accommodate The Phantom of the Opera.) The original cast included Jerry Orbach as Julian Marsh, Tammy Grimes as Dorothy Brock, Wanda Richert as Peggy Sawyer, and Lee Roy Reams as Billy Lawlor. Replacements later in the run included Barry Nelson, and Don Chastain as Julian, Elizabeth Allen, Dolores Gray, and Millicent Martin as Dorothy, and Lisa Brown (Nola Reardon of Guiding Light and Iva Snyder of As The World Turns) and Karen Ziemba as Peggy. The show's designers, Robin Wagner (sets), Theoni V. Aldredge (costumes), and Tharon Musser (lights) were the same team who had designed A Chorus Line.

The opening night triumph was overshadowed by tragedy. Following eleven curtain calls, Merrick went onstage and stated, "This is tragic," drawing gales of laughter from the ecstatic audience. He went on to explain that Champion had died of cancer just hours before the performance, and his shocking announcement, made before an army of reporters and cameramen, drew a stunned reaction. The producer had advised only Bramble of Champion's death and managed to keep the news a secret from the cast (including Richert, the director's girlfriend), crew, and the public in order to guarantee nationwide headlines and extraordinary media publicity for the show the following day [1]. 42nd Street proved to be not only Champion's last show but Merrick's final success.

In a case of life imitating art, the career of teenaged Catherine Zeta-Jones, a chorus member in the 1984 West End production, was launched when illness felled both the actress portraying Peggy Sawyer and her understudy on a night one of the producers happened to be in the audience. Zeta-Jones filled in and was impressive enough to be cast permanently in the role shortly afterward.

Bramble revised the book for and directed the Broadway revival that opened, after 31 previews, on May 2, 2001 at the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, where it ran for 1,524 performances. The cast included Michael Cumpsty as Julian, Christine Ebersole as Dorothy, Kate Levering as Peggy, and David Elder as Billy. Meredith Patterson, who made her Broadway musical debut in the chorus and was the understudy for the role of Peggy Sawyer, took over the role after three months. Other replacements in the run included Patrick Cassidy and Tom Wopat as Julian and Shirley Jones and Beth Leavel as Dorothy.

The Broadway revival production is currently touring the UK, producted by UK Productions. The cast includes Paul Nicholas as Julian for the first part of the tour, later replaced by Dave Willetts, Julia J Nagle as Dorothy, Jessica Punch as Peggy and Ashley Nottingham as Billy.

[edit] Plot

Act I

Auditions for 1933's newest show, Pretty Lady, are nearly over when Peggy Sawyer, fresh off the bus from Allentown, Pennsylvania, arrives with valise in hand. Billy Lawlor, already cast as one of the juvenile leads, notices Peggy and hopes to charm her into accepting a date with him. He informs her she's missed the audition but he can help her bypass that process, but choreographer Andy Lee has no time for Billy's latest conquest and tells her, "Beat it, toots." Embarrassed and flustered, Peggy rushes off, only to slam right into director Julian Marsh himself.

One-time star Dorothy Brock, indignant at being asked to audition for a role, is reassured by Julian he merely wants to make sure the songs are in her key. Despite his feeling Dorothy is a prima donna past her prime, he agrees to cast her in order to get financial backing from her wealthy beau Abner Dillon. Outside of the theatre, writer Maggie and chorus girls Anytime Annie , Phyllis, and Lorraine take pity on Peggy and invite her to join them for lunch and some advice. They encourage her to show them a dance routine that is witnessed by Julian, who decides there might be room for one more chorus girl after all.

At a pre-production party, Julian learns that Dorothy is seeing old boyfriend Pat Denning behind Abner's back. Knowing this could destroy the show's future, he decides to put an end to the affair. One phone call to an unsavory acquaintance and Denning is visited by a couple of thugs who convince him to break it off with Dorothy. Soon after the show's cast heads to Philadelphia for the out-of-town tryout.

On opening night, Peggy trips and crashes into Dorothy, knocking her to the stage. Julian fires the young chorine on the spot.

Act II

Dorothy's ankle is broken, and the show may close. The chorus kids, certain Peggy could fill the lead role, find Julian and tell him that Peggy's a fresh young face who can sing and dance circles around Brock. Julian decides it's worth a shot and rushes off to the train station to catch Peggy before she departs.

At Philadelphia's Broad Street Station, Julian apologizes to Peggy and asks her to stay and star in Pretty Lady, but she responds that she's had enough of show business and wants to go home to Allentown. Dumbfounded, Julian tries to coax her with the words "Come on along and listen to the lullaby of Broadway...." After the cast joins him in the serenade, Peggy decides to accept his offer.

Forced to learn the part in two days, Peggy is on the verge of a nervous breakdown when she has an unexpected visit from Dorothy, who has been watching the rehearsals and realizes beneath her nervous exterior, Peggy is good, "maybe even better than I would have been." She even offers a little friendly advice on how to perform a dance routine.

The opening night curtain is about to rise when Julian stops by for a last minute pep talk in which he utters the now iconic line, "You're going out there a youngster, but you've got to come back a star!" The show is a huge success sure to catapult Peggy into stardom. And even though she's invited to and expected to attend the official opening night party, Peggy decides to go to the chorus party instead. Julian is left alone on stage with only a single ghost light casting his huge shadow on the back wall. He quietly begins to sing, "Come and meet those dancing feet on the avenue I'm taking you to... 42nd Street." and that was the end of it.

[edit] Characters

  • Billy Lawlor (Leading tenor in "Pretty Lady")
  • Peggy Sawyer (Nervous but enthusiastic new chorus girl from out of town)
  • Julian Marsh (Famous and notorious director)
  • Dorothy Brock (Past her prime Prima Donna, renowned for inability to dance)
  • Abner Dillon (Producer of "Pretty Lady"; Dorothy's Texan admirer)
  • Pat Denning (Dorothy's former stage and romantic partner)
  • Andy Lee (Choreographer)
  • Bert Berry & Maggie Jones (The producers and writers of "Pretty Lady")
  • Oscar (Onstage rehearsal pianist for the show "Pretty Lady")
  • Mac (Stage Manager)
  • Annie, Lorraine, Phyllis (experienced chorus girls who help Peggy get accustomed)

[edit] Song list

Act I
  • Overture
  • Audition
  • Young and Healthy
  • Shadow Waltz
  • Go Into Your Dance
  • You're Getting to Be a Habit With Me
  • Getting Out of Town
  • Dames
  • I Know Now
  • I Know Now (Reprise)
  • We're in the Money
Act II
  • Sunny Side to Every Situation
  • Lullaby of Broadway
  • About a Quarter to Nine
  • Shuffle Off to Buffalo
  • 42nd Street
  • 42nd Street (Reprise)
  • Finale Ultimo

[edit] Awards and nominations

1980 production

  • Tony Award for Best Musical (winner)
  • Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical (Dave Kelley, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Wanda Richert, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Costume Design (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Lighting Design (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Choreography (winner)
  • Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical (nominee)
  • Theatre World Award (Wanda Richert, winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Musical (nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical (Lee Roy Reams, nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Choreography (winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Costume Design (winner)

1984 London production

2001 revival

  • Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical (winner)
  • Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical (Christine Ebersole, winner)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Kate Levering and Mary Testa, nominees)
  • Tony Award for Best Scenic Design (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Costume Design (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Lighting Design (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Choreography (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical (nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a Musical (winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical (Christine Ebersole, nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Choreography (nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Set Design of a Musical (nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Costume Design (nominee)

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Awards
Preceded by
Kiss Me, Kate
Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical
2001
Succeeded by
Into the Woods
Languages