Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Two move movies turning into musicals


Two Original Musicals Selected For Annual Sundance Institute Theatre Lab

September 22, 2009
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Two Original Musicals Selected For Annual Sundance Institute Theatre Lab
Los Angeles, CA (RPRN) 09/22/09 — TWO ORIGINAL MUSICALS LIKE WATER FOR CHOCOLATE AND LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE,SELECTED FOR ANNUAL SUNDANCE INSTITUTE THEATRE LAB AT WHITE OAK
OCTOBER 25 - NOVEMBER 8, 2009

– Sundance Institute announced today the projects chosen to participate in its annual Sundance Institute Theatre Lab at White Oak. The two projects selected for this season's Lab are Like Water for Chocolate, a musical adaptation of the best-selling 1989 novel by Mexican author Laura Esquivel composed by Lila Downs and Paul R. Cohen with book by Quiara Alegria Hudes; andLittle Miss Sunshine, a musical adaptation of the popular 2006 film by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris with music and lyrics by William Finn, and book and direction by James Lapine. Under the artistic direction of Philip Himberg, Producing Artistic Director of the Sundance Institute Theatre Program, the Lab runs October 25 through November 7, 2009 at White Oak in Yulee, Florida.

The Sundance Institute Theatre Lab at White Oak focuses on support for innovative musical theatre as well as on ensemble-generated work. Janice Paran, an Associate Artist of the Sundance Institute Theatre Program, who has served as a dramaturg for the Program's Labs in Utah and White Oak as well as its New York Lab at the Public Theater, returns as Lab dramaturg. Dramaturgical support will also be provided by Chris Burney, associate artistic director of Second Stage in New York. Alan Filderman serves as casting director.
"This is a critical time for the arts, and we're honored to provide creative resources and energy to these gifted artists," said Himberg. "This year's projects hold special meaning for Sundance Institute since the film versions both found audiences at the Sundance Film Festival, and we're thrilled that these well-loved stories will be finding new life on the stage. Although we have always supported both emerging and established artists, the Sundance Theatre Program has yet to have the opportunity to support either Mr. Lapine or Mr Finn in the development of new work. It is also meaningful to be extending our lab to two international artists – Lila Downs and Paul Cohen of Mexico City - who are crossing over to collaborate with American musical theater artists. In our eighth iteration of Sundance Institute Theatre Lab at White Oak, it is a great pleasure to support these two musical theatre projects."
LIKE WATER FOR CHOCOLATE
Lila Downs, composer & lyricist
Paul R. Cohen, co-composer
Quiara Alegria Hudes, bookwriter
Ted Sperling, co-director
Jonathan Butterell, co-director
Michael, Levine, designer
Like Water for Chocolate is a musical adaptation of the best-selling 1989 novel by Mexican author Laura Esquivel. The film version of the book premiered at the 1993 Sundance Film Festival. It is a romantic tale of food, magic and passion. Making her musical theater debut, Mexican singer-songwriter Lila Downs wrote the songs with her long-time collaborator Paul Cohen, and the script is by Tony Award- and Pulitzer Prize-nominee Quiara Alegria Hudes. Like Water for Chocolate will be a feast for all the senses, incorporating Mexican cooking and the power of food, the magical realism of Mexican folk tales, and both contemporary and ancient theater techniques. The show is being conceived collaboratively with co-directors Ted Sperling and Jonathan Butterell and designer Michael Levine, who bring their extensive backgrounds in innovative theater works (The Light in the Piazza, See What I Wanna See,Mnemonic) to this exciting new project. Bursting with beautiful and powerful music, choreography and stage craft, the musical Like Water for Chocolate will bring this beloved book to life in three dimensions for a whole new audience.

Quiara Alegria Hudes
(book)was nominated for a 2008 Tony Award for her book of the Broadway musical In the Heights (Tony Award for Best Musical). In 2007 she was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her
play Elliot, A Soldier's Fugue (Page 73 premiere). Other works include the musical Barrio Grrrl! (Kennedy Center premiere) and the plays 26 Miles (Alliance Theatre premiere) and Yemaya's Belly (Portland Stage Company premiere, Clauder Prize). Her honors include a Joyce Foundation Award, the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Musical, the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Musical, and the Paula Vogel Award in Playwriting. Hudes has degrees from Yale (BA) and Brown (MFA) Universities.
Lila Downs (music and lyrics), born in Oaxaca, Mexico, is the daughter of Mixtec cabaret singer Anita Sánchez and Allen Downs, a Scottish/English-American art professor. She graduated from the University of Minnesota in voice and anthropology. Downs is accompanied on her musical journey by her longtime band, La Misteriosa, multicultural multi-instrumentalists who include Paul Cohen, her collaborator, producer, and husband. She played a role in the Salma Hayek film about Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, sang the Oscar-nominated song "Burn It Blue," and became the first Mexican to perform on the Academy Awards telecast. She also captured a Latin Grammy for 2004's Una Sangre. Downs taps into the native Mesoamerican music of the Mixtec, Zapotec, Maya, and Nahuatl cultures with her Grammy-nominated release, “Shake Away.” www.liladowns.com
Multi-instrumentalist/Composer/Arranger Paul R. Cohen (co-composer) was born in New York City, and spent his childhood in New Jersey. He attended Haverford College and majored in psychology and fine arts, and later studied drawing and sculpture at the New York Studio School. In the late 1970s he began a career as a clown and juggler, went to the Ringling Bros. Clown College and toured with the Clyde Beatty Cole Bros. Circus (U.S.A.), Le Cirque Baroque(Paris) and Los Hermanos Mendoza (Guatemala). During the early 1980s he began studying music, playing saxophone in the band of the Cirque Baroque in France and then in dance bands and jazz ensembles in the city of Oaxaca, Mexico. He began his longtime collaboration with singer/songwriter Lila Downs in Southern Mexico in the late 1990s. Paul has been the musical director of the Lila Downs touring ensemble since 1999.
Ted Sperling (co-director) is a director, music director, arranger, orchestrator, conductor, singer, pianist and violinist. He is the music director and conductor for the Tony Award-winning revival of South Pacific and recent revival of Guys and Dolls. Sperling won the 2005 Tony and Drama Desk Awards for his orchestrations of The Light in the Piazza, for which he was also music director. Other Broadway and off-Broadway credits as music director include Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, The Fully Monty, How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying, Kiss of the Spider Woman, My Favorite Year, A Man of No Importance, Wise Guys, A New Brain, Saturn Returns, and Floyd Collins. Sperling’s work as a stage director includes the off-Broadway productions of Striking 12 and See What I Wanna See. He has conducted the scores for the films The Manchurian Candidate and Everything Is Illuminated, and directed the short musical film, Love Mom. As soprano Audra McDonald’s music director since 1999, Sperling has conducted the New York Philharmonic in a live TV broadcast for New Year's Eve, as well as performances of "La Voix Humaine" at the Houston Grand Opera. He has conducted for Deborah Voigt, Patti LuPone and Victoria Clark. Sperling made his professional acting debut as an original cast member of the Broadway musical Titanic. He currently holds the post of Director of the Music Theater Initiative at the Public Theater.
Jonathan Butterell (co-director) recently directed Giant, by Michael John LaChiusa and Sybille Pearson, at the Signature Theater. He is also developing a stage version of A Star is Born for Warner Brothers. Broadway credits include The Light in the Piazza, Fiddler on the Roof, Assassins and Nine, previously seen at Donmar Warehouse (London). Additional Donmar credits: Company (West End), Habeus Corpus, Into the Woods (co-directed), How I Learned to Drive, The Maids, Electra (Broadway transfer). He directed Michael Ball in Alone Together: Divas at the Donmar; served as associate director on Othello (RNT), and Hamlet (RSC) and co-directed Peter Pan (Royal Festival Hall) and Sweeney Todd (Opera North). West End credits include Sondheim's Passion. He directed Orpheus Descending and Strindberg's Creditors (Theatre Project Tokyo). New York credits include Wise Guys(workshop), A Man of No Importance (Lincoln Center) and See What I Wanna See (Public Theater).
Michael Levine (designer) has designed sets and costumes for major opera companies in North America and Europe including Metropolitan Opera, San Francisco Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Santa Fe Opera, Teatro alla Scala, Vienna State Opera, Welsh National Opera, English National Opera, and Paris Opera. His designs have also been seen at Royal Shakespeare Company, in the West End, and on Broadway. Recent productions include direction and design for Wagner’s Rheingold at Canadian Opera Company, Puccini’s Madama Butterfly at the Met, and Bernstein’s Candide for Théâtre du Châtelet and La Scala. Levine received his early training at the Ontario College of Art in his native Toronto and London’s Central School of Art and Design. His many awards include a Gemini Award for Best Production Design for the movie September Songs, Paris Critics’ Prize for Britten’s Midsummer Night’s Dream at Aix en Provence, and Edinburgh Festival Music and Arts award for the Canadian Opera Company’s production of Bluebeard’s Castle with Erwartung.
LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE
James Lapine, book & direction
William Finn, music & lyrics
A musical version of the quirky and popular film Little Miss Sunshine, which premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival, created by frequent collaborators and Tony award winners William Finn (music and lyrics) and James Lapine (book and direction). The story follows the travails of the dysfunctional Hoover family as they make their way in a vintage yellow VW bus from Albuquerque to Southern California for a kid's beauty pageant.
James Lapine (book & direction) has collaborated with William Finn on Falsettos, A New Brain and The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. With Stephen Sondheim he has done Sunday in the Park with George, Into the Woods, and Passion. He has written the plays Table Settings, Twelve Dreams, Luck, Pluck & Virtue, The Moment When, Fran's Bed and Mrs. Miller Does Her Thing. On Broadway he also directed Michel LeFranc's Amour; the revival of The Diary of Anne Frank; and David Henry Hwang’s Golden Child. He has also directed the films Impromptu, Life with Mikey and Earthly Possessions.
William Finn (music & lyrics) is the writer and composer of Falsettos, for which he received two Tony Awards: Best Book of a Musical (with James Lapine) and Best Original Score. He has also written and composed In Trousers, March of the Falsettos and Falsettoland (Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical, two Los Angeles Drama Critics Awards, two Drama Desk Awards, the Lucille Lortel Award and Guggenheim Fellowship in Playwriting). Mr. Finn wrote the lyrics to Graciela Daniele's Tango Apasionado (music by the great Astor Piazzolla) and, with Michael Starobin, the music to Lapine's version of The Winter's Tale. His musical Romance in Hard Times was presented at The Public Theater. Recently, he wrote Painting You for Love's Fire, a piece commissioned and performed by the Acting Company, based on Shakespeare's sonnets. A graduate of Williams College, where he was awarded the Hutchinson Fellowship for Musical Composition, Finn now teaches a weekly master class at the NYU Tisch Graduate Program in Musical Theatre Writing. His most recent projects include Elegies, A Song Cycle (Lincoln Center) and The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee which had a three-year run on Broadway and has been produced nationally and all over the world. For the past four years he has been the Artistic Head of the Musical Theatre Lab at the Barrington Stage Company in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.
White Oak is located on a 7,500 acre property in Yulee, Florida, conceived by Howard Gilman as a sanctuary for animals and a place of peaceful yet productive retreat for the people and activities he cared about. In 1982, Gilman established the White Oak Conservation Center on the property for the conservation and propagation of threatened and endangered species. White Oak, which houses the Baryshnikov Dance Studio, has also hosted residencies by performing artists and dance companies; national and international conferences; and seminars and workshops directly related to the Foundation's primary fields of interest: performing arts, wildlife conservation and cardiovascular research.
Sundance Institute Theatre Program
The Sundance Institute Theatre Program is a program of the Sundance Institute. Through its developmental activities at the Sundance Institute Playwright’s Retreat at Ucross, the Sundance Institute Theatre Lab at White Oak, Sundance Institute East Africa,and two new pilot theatre programs at Mass MoCA and Governors Island, the Program identifies and assists emerging theatre artists, contributes to the creative growth of established artists, and encourages and supports the development of new work for the stage. Under the guidance of Producing Artistic Director Philip Himberg, more than 85% of the work coming out of the Program’s labs has found professional production at theatres across the United States, Mexico and Europe. Recent productions of Sundance-developed work include: Passing Strange by Stew and Heidi Rodewald, which won the 2008 Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical and Grey Gardensby Doug Wright, Scott Frankel and Michael Korie.
Sundance Institute
Founded by Robert Redford in 1981, Sundance Institute is a not-for-profit organization that fosters the development of original storytelling in film and theatre, and presents the annual Sundance Film Festival. Internationally recognized for its artistic development programs for directors, screenwriters, producers, film composers, playwrights and theatre artists, Sundance Institute has nurtured such projects as Angels in America, Spring Awakening, Boys Don't Cry, Sin Number, Born into Brothels and Trouble the Water. www.sundance.org.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Regina Spektor & New Musical

Regina Spektor Will Pen Music for Landau's Grimm-Inspired Beauty Musical
By Kenneth Jones16 Sep 2009


Singer-songwriter Regina Spektor, known for plucky and searching alt pop songs, will collaborate with playwright-director Tina Landau and lyricist Michael Korie to create a Broadway-aimed musical, Beauty, a new riff on "Sleeping Beauty," to be produced by Elephant Eye Theatrical.
Landau (Floyd Collins) will write the book and direct; Spektor (a Sire/Warner Bros. recording artist) the music, and Korie (Happiness, Grey Gardens) the lyrics.
Stuart Oken, Michael Leavitt, Five Cent Productions make up Elephant Eye, which is also behind the new musical The Addams Family. They are aiming Beauty for the 2011-12 Broadway season, following an out-of-town tryout.
Beauty is billed as "an expansion of Landau's 2002 acclaimed one-act play produced by the La Jolla Playhouse; Beauty uses the 1812 Grimm fairy tale 'Sleeping Beauty' as a jumping off point for a contemporary and hauntingly provocative story of beauty lost and beauty found."
Known for her alternately frisky and ruminative lyrics and piano-based music, Spektor is a Russian-born, Bronx-bred artist who practiced on an out-of-tune piano in the basement of her local synagogue before she emerged as a singer-songwriter in small clubs in New York City in 2001. Her latest album is "far," following her breakout recording "Begin To Hope" (which has sold more than one millions copies worldwide). She'll appear on TV's "Saturday Night Live" on Oct. 10 and will headline at Radio City Music Hall on Oct. 14.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

"Passing Strange" - next movie musical

It's just a filmed version of the stage production, not with all the editing and funding of a real movie turned musical... but it's better than nothing!

http://www.ny1.com/content/ny1_living/104736/ny1-movie-review---passing-strange-/Default.aspx

Saturday, September 12, 2009

It's not a weekend without WERS: Broadway Radio Program

One of my highlights of living in Boston was finding Emerson College's "Broadway and Beyond" Radio program from Standing Room Only. It's exactly what it sounds like - Broadway, from the beginning of recording to current Broadway shows. It gives me music to work to, clean house to, sing to, and adds to my list of needed soundtracks. Often it is my therapy of a few hours just to myself. Also, the variety is superb.

And now that I don't live in Boston, one of my best "moving back home highlights" was that WERS is online so I can still have my musical theater radio program. My fiance knows of it, either doesn't mind my singing in the house or leaves :) either way, he knows it's in my weekend plans and doesn't ask me to turn it down, sing quieter, or anything (and if "Defying Gravity" comes on... he just may sing along). Good Man.

so yes, on the East coast: Saturday: 10-2pm and Sunday: 12-2. http://www.wers.org/

Any other sites that play Broadway? I don't have satellite radio, and I find that Broadway station old and not up to date with soundtracks.

Friday, September 11, 2009

There are no small roles...

Actors' Equity Names West Side Story Cast Members Outstanding Broadway Chorus
By Andrew Gans10 Sep 2009

Cast members of the acclaimed revival of West Side Story will receive Actors' Equity Association's Third Annual Advisory Committee on Chorus Affairs (ACCA) Award for Outstanding Broadway Chorus.

The award, which "honors the distinctive talents and contributions made by the chorus of a Broadway musical," will be presented during the Sept. 22 ACCA meeting at Actors' Equity Association (Equity) headquarters in New York City.
Winners, who were part of the March, 19, 2009, opening-night cast of West Side Story, include Isaac H. Calpito, Hayley Carlucci, Peter John Chursin, Madeline Cintron, Kristine M. Covillo, Lindsay Dunn, Yurel Echezarreta, John Arthur Greene, Manuel J. Herrera, Marina Lazzaretto, Chase Madigan, Yanira Marin, Mileyka Mateo, Kaitlin Rae Mesh, Angelina Mullins, Kat Nejat, Christian Elan Ortiz, Pamela Otterson, Danielle Polanco, Sam Rogers, Michael Rosen, Amy Ryerson, Jennifer Sanchez, Manuel Santos, Michaeljon Slinger and Tanairi Sade Vazquez.
In a statement Kim Jordan, Equity's Second Vice President and ACCA Chair said, "The chorus of West Side Story truly exemplifies the talent, dedication and hard work that this award represents. They are an incredible example of what it means to be the heart and soul of a musical."

ACCA members attended the 11 musicals that opened during the 2008-2009 season. Five were nominated for the award: Billy Elliot, Shrek, Hair, White Christmas and West Side Story. As part of the selection process, the committee members "considered what both the director and choreography required of the chorus, the requisite skill of the chorus actor and the contributions the entire chorus made to the overall production," according to a press statement.
West Side Story, directed by Arthur Laurents, plays the Palace.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Love some Jerry Orbach

Not only originating tons of roles, and the best voice for "Try to Remember" from the "Fantastics" - but a super romantic. Well done Lenny with your Law & Order one liners.


http://www.clydefitchreport.com/?p=3891

Another Opening....

Info about new season:

Musical revivals outpace new musicals on Broadway this fall

By: MICHAEL KUCHWARA Associated Press09/08/09 2:25 PM EDT

NEW YORK — New musicals will be in short supply this fall on Broadway, but a quintet of revivals plus one other major show at the historic Apollo Theatre will ensure that New York isn't bereft of song and dance.
The two new shows are — surprise — originals, not based on a movie, play, television series, comic strip, novel or action figure.
Up first is "Memphis," arriving Oct. 19 at the Shubert Theatre after successful runs in LaJolla, Calif., and Seattle. It's an interracial love story set against the backdrop of a momentous time for pop music — the 1950s — as rhythm and blues crosses into the mainstream and a white disc jockey, played by Chad Kimball, finds romance with a black singer, played by Montego Glover.
The story is by Joe DiPietro (author of "I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change") who also co-wrote the lyrics with the show's composer, David Bryan of Bon Jovi fame.
Also on tap is a transfer from off-Broadway — "Fela!" — the life story of Nigerian superstar Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, musician, political activist and self-proclaimed hedonist. Sahr Ngaujah won raves for his portrayal of the charismatic Kuti, and for the Broadway run, the actor will be joined by the Tony-winning Lillias White as his mother.
"Fela!" will be directed and choreographed by Bill T. Jones, who collaborated on the book with Jim Lewis. Kuti's Afrobeat music will rock the Eugene O'Neill Theatre Nov. 23.
In "Bye Bye Birdie," the teenagers of Sweet Apple, Ohio, meet their idol, Conrad Birdie just before he is to be inducted into the Army. This genial 1960 musical introduced composer Charles Strouse and lyricist Lee Adams to Broadway. Now, in its first Broadway revival, "Birdie" inaugurates the reborn Henry Miller's Theatre, a new, environmentally friendly theater built behind the auditorium's original facade.
The Roundabout Theatre Company production, which opens Oct. 15, stars John Stamos as Conrad's manager, and Gina Gershon as the manager's long-suffering secretary. The teen idol is played by Nolan Funk, while Robert Longbottom directs and choreographs.
"Finian's Rainbow" has one of Broadway's most beloved scores. "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?" and "Old Devil Moon" are just two of the wonderful songs written for the show by composer Burton Lane and lyricist E.Y. Harburg.
The revival is an expansion of what "Encores! Great American Musicals in Concert" did last spring at City Center. Most of its actors will be back for this satiric tale about an Irish immigrant, his feisty daughter and a leprechaun who follows them to America. The cast includes Jim Norton as Finian, Kate Baldwin as his daughter, Christopher Fitzgerald as the leprechaun and Cheyenne Jackson as the handsome labor organizer who woos the young woman.
"Finian" hopes to find its pot of gold at the St. James Theatre Oct. 29.
The stage version of Irving Berlin's "White Christmas" was a big hit at the Marquis Theatre during the last holiday season. So why not bring it back again.
The musical, based on the 1954 movie classic, begins performances Nov. 13 for a run through Jan. 3. The film starred Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney and Vera-Ellen. No word yet on who will play those roles for the return Broadway engagement.
"Ragtime" is one of musical theater's most ambitious shows. Based on E.L. Doctorow's epic novel of early 20th-century America, it tells the story of three distinct families — one white Anglo-Saxon Protestant, one black and one Jewish immigrant — mixing them with such real-life historical figures as Harry Houdini, Emma Goldman and Evelyn Nesbit.
The musical, which has a book by Terrence McNally and a score by Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty, was first seen on Broadway in 1998. This revival was done last spring at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington. Look for it Nov. 15 at the Neil Simon Theatre.
Also on tap, although no theater, cast and opening date have been announced, is a production of "A Little Night Music," the Stephen Sondheim-Hugh Wheeler musical about rueful romance, loves lost and won. Based on the Ingmar Bergman film "Smiles of a Summer Night," it is best known for the song "Send in the Clowns." A December opening is likely.
The Apollo on West 125th Street is not technically Broadway but the famous theater will be the starting point for a major revival of "Dreamgirls," the classic Michael Bennett musical about the birth of a Supremes-like singing trio during the heyday of 1960s Motown.
A limited, four-week engagement, Nov. 7-Dec. 6, precedes a lengthy national tour. The cast features Moya Angela as the ill-used Effie White with Syesha Mercado, Adrienne Warren and Margaret Hoffman as the Dreams. Its official opening night: Nov. 22.

Another Broadway Season - yea!


OPENING THIS FALL

Plays and musicals scheduled to open on Broadway before Dec. 31, 2009.

Plays

  • A Steady Rain, Sept. 29, Gerald Schoenfeld
  • Superior Donuts, Oct. 1, Music Box
  • Wishful Drinking, Oct. 4, Studio 54
  • After Miss Julie, Oct. 22, American Airlines
  • In the Next Room (or the vibrator play), Nov. 19, Lyceum
  • Race, Dec. 6, Ethel Barrymore

Play revivals

  • Hamlet, Oct. 6, Broadhurst
  • The Royal Family, Oct. 8, Samuel J. Friedman
  • Oleanna, Oct. 11, Golden
  • Brighton Beach Memoirs, Oct. 25, Nederlander
  • Broadway Bound, Dec. 10, Nederlander

Musicals

  • Memphis, Oct. 19, Shubert
  • Fela!, Nov. 23, Eugene O'Neill

Musical revivals

  • Bye Bye Birdie, Oct. 15, Henry Miller's
  • Finian's Rainbow, Oct. 29, St. James
  • White Christmas, performances begin Nov. 13, Marquis
  • Ragtime, Nov. 15, Neil Simon
  • A Little Night Music, December (no specific date or theater officially announced)

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Sharing some Glee for "Glee"

STAGE TO SCREENS: "Glee" on TV: Michele & Morrison

By Michael Buckley
06 Sep 2009

Lea Michele and Matthew Morrison
Lea Michele and Matthew Morrison
photo by Patrick Ecclesine/ © FOX

This month: Experiencing "Glee" with two of its stars, Broadway's Lea Michele and Matthew Morrison.

*

Expectations are "as high as an elephant's eye" for "Glee," the new one-hour FOX musical series that starts its weekly run Sept. 9 (Wednesdays, 9 PM ET), and features a mix of Broadway, Top 40, R&B and country music.

Ten million viewers watched the May 19 pilot (available on FOX.com and hulu.com), aired directly following the "American Idol" season finale. "Blissfully unoriginal in a witty, imaginative way," observed the New York Times reviewer. The Los Angeles Times critic claimed it was "the first show in a long time that's just plain full-throttle, no-guilty-pleasure-rationalizations-necessary fun." Asked Entertainment Weekly, "Has there ever been a TV show more aptly named?" And the New York Post's Pop Wrap dubbed it "2009's best new series."

It wasn't initially intended for TV. Ian Brennan who, in high school, had belonged to a glee club, wrote a feature-film screenplay that was brought to the attention of Ryan Murphy ("Nip/Tuck," "Popular"). He, in turn, thought that it was better suited to television, and was somewhat inspired by his high-school days, when he played the leads in all the musicals.



Murphy, Brennan, and Brad Falchuk wrote a pilot, which Murphy described to the L.A. Times (April 26) as "the anti-'High School Musical.'" FOX quickly picked it up.

Dating back at least as far as "That's Life," the 1968 show that starred Robert Morse in an original musical comedy each week, there have been previous TV-musical series — e.g. "Cop Rock," "Viva Laughlin" — but none of them succeeded. "Glee," Murphy told Variety, "is a different genre, there's nothing like it on the networks and cable." He 's currently directing the feature "Eat, Pray, Love."

The series focuses on idealistic teacher Will Scheuster, "Mr. Scheu" (Matthew Morrison), who teaches Spanish at the Lima, OH, McKinley High School that he formerly attended. He takes charge of the glee club, New Directions — seeking to motivate the students, make them a success, and shepherd them to the Nationals' competition.

Lea Michele and Chris Colfer in "Glee"
photo by Carin Baer/FOX
Comprising the glee club are six students: Lea Michele (the bullied Rachel), Cory Monteith (who's 27, playing the decade younger strapping jock, Finn), Kevin McHale (physically challenged geeky guitarist Artie), Amber Riley (Mercedes, up-front about refusing to sing back-up), Chris Colfer (the closeted Kurt) and Jenna Ushkowitz (a shy punk rocker). Important to the plots are Dianna Agron (as Quinn, Finn's cheerleader-girlfriend) and Finn's best friend, fellow football-team member Puck (Mark Salling).

Artie is a wheelchair user, and one of the future numbers has the glee club all in wheelchairs. Colfer experienced difficulties in high school in wanting to sing "Defying Gravity," because it's considered a female's song. That experience inspired a plotline on one of the episodes.

Among the songs in store this season: Kanye West's "Gold Digger," Salt-N-Pepa's "Push It," Dionne Warwick's "I Say a Little Prayer," Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline," Rihanna's "Take a Bow," Celine Dion's "Taking Chances," Beyonce's "Single Ladies," Jasmine Sullivan's "Bust Your Windows," Celine Dion's "All by Myself," Avril Lavigne's "Keep Holding On," Jordin Sparks/Chris Brown's "No Air," Queen's "Somebody to Love," Carrie Underwood's "Last Name," Chic's "Le Freak" – and, from the Broadway front: "Tonight" (West Side Story), "Maybe This Time" (Cabaret), numbers from Wicked, and "Don't Rain on My Parade" (Funny Girl).

Jane Lynch practically steals the show as Will's nemesis, Sue Sylvester, coach of "the Cheerios," the school's cheerleaders. Having seen two new "Glee" episodes, I can report that Sue's character is even more over the top than on the pilot. Lynch excels in the role, coming across as a butch Cruella de Vil who stops just short of hissing, spewing venom, and pursuing puppies.

Other adults include Will's wife, Terri (Jessalyn Gilsig, who did 17 "Nip/Tuck" episodes); Will's colleague Emma Pillsbury (Jayma Mays), who has a crush on him; Ken (Patrick Gallagher), the football coach who, in turn, likes Emma; Mr. Figgins (Iqbal Theba), the principal; and Sandy Kenyon (Stephen Tobolowsky), the glee-club leader whom Will replaced.

In the two new episodes, the club performs for the first time in front of the student body; Will gets an extra job; Rachel encounters more self-esteem and jealousy problems; and Kurt goes out for football — with some surprising results. The series' best moment, thus far, is a very touching scene — beautifully written and acted — shared by Kurt and his father (Mike O'Malley).

To promote the series, several cast members participated in an August tour — 10 cities, 12 days — garnering enthusiastic reactions and increasing the volume of positive buzz among "Gleeks" (the appellation for fans).

Estimated cost of each episode? $3 million. Shooting time per show? Ten days. Between five and eight musical numbers are featured each week. Among the coming guest stars are Tony winners Kristin Chenoweth, John Lloyd Young, Debra Monk, plus Cheyenne Jackson, Victor Garber, Josh Groban, Eve.

Filmed at Hollywood's Paramount Studios, the first 13 episodes have been shot, and it's believed that the "back nine" will be green-lighted, in short order, to complete a full season.

*

Lea Michele in "Glee"
photo by Carin Baer/FOX
After Lea Michele was cast as Rachel Berry, she learned that Murphy had written the character for her. "I wish I'd known; I would have been less nervous at my audition." She laughs. "I didn't think I'd ever be as lucky to find a part that's so right for me."

Michele, according to the New Times reviewer, "stands out as...the talented and monstrously ambitious self-promoting star singer of the glee club." The Los Angeles Times critic observed that Michele "appears positioned for major stardom with this role."

"I'd met Ryan [Murphy]," she recalls, "when I visited Jonathan [Groff, herSpring Awakening co-star] on the set of 'Pretty/Handsome' [an unsold Murphy pilot]." Since her pilot had a different fate, I jokingly ask if Groff still speaks to her?

"Of course. If that were true, he wouldn't be my best friend. Our scenes in Spring Awakening [Michele played Wendla to Groff's Melchior] brought us very close. I stay with him every time I'm in New York. Hopefully, he'll be on 'Glee' on one of the 'back nine' episodes."

For her audition, she sang "On My Own" and a song from Thoroughly Modern Millie. Favorites among the songs she's performed on the show include "Don't Rain on My Parade" ("a great moment; I'm a huge Barbra fan"), "Defying Gravity" ("with Chris Colfer, who plays Kurt"), and a duet from Cabaret "that I do with Kristin Chenoweth. We had a great time with her. She's so funny."

Already a stage veteran at 23, Michele was a replacement Young Cosette and Young Eponine in Les Miserables, the Little Girl in Ragtime, Chava in the Fiddler on the Roof revival, and a Drama Desk nominee for Spring Awakening. "When I was Rachel's age, I knew what it was to want to perform."

If "Glee" succeeds, is Michele committed to the series? With a laugh recalling any actor lucky enough to be working steadily, she replies, "Are you kidding?"

*

Matthew Morrison in "Glee"
photo by Carin Baer/FOX
Matthew Morrison, most recently Lt. Cable in the revival of the Rodgers & Hammerstein classic South Pacific, has performed in musicals that represent three generations of Richard Rodgers' family. Sir Harry in the TV-movie version of daughter Mary Rodgers' "Once Upon a Mattress," he earned Tony/Drama Desk/Outer Critics Circle nominations, as Fabrizio, in grandson/son Adam Guettel's A Light in the Piazza.

Very comfortable in Mr. Scheus' shoes — "I get to sing and dance" — Morrison had to face the challenge of "memorizing all those lines," instead of learning a part and keeping it fresh, eight times a week. Of course, unlike working onstage, television provides the safety net of retakes.

Since his Broadway characters (including Link Larkin in Hairspray) share a common denominator of youth, he considers Will his "first adult role," which, at 30, suits him fine.

Still smarting from having shot five TV pilots in as many seasons, none of which was picked up, Morrison was initially pessimistic about the future of a musical series.

"On the Street Where You Live" was his "Glee"-audition song, and for the callback, he points out, "I bought a ukulele and accompanied myself on 'Over the Rainbow.'"

Morrison's delighted that his character's sparring partner is Jane Lynch, whom he greatly admires. Revealing that the cast was often allowed to improvise, he acknowledges that Lynch frequently broke him up.

When the first-season DVD is released, one of the bonuses, Morrison discloses, will be a number of funny flubbed moments, and he (and others) responding to Lynch's comments.

Kristin Chenoweth plays a former glee-club star who, explains Morrison, "was a senior when I was a freshman." She dropped out of school and has experienced some hard times.

Matthew Morrison with Victor Garber on "Glee"
photo by Carin Baer/FOX
Victor Garber and Debra Monk guest star as Will's parents. His father encourages Will "to have the balls" to follow through with his plans, something at which the elder Scheuster failed. Will's mother is alcoholic.

"Josh Groban's in that episode," notes Morrison, "and tries to hit on Debra Monk." But that's as much as he'll divulge about the storyline. "You have to see it."

Fans of musical theatre, he believes, will respond favorably to the show tunes that are interspersed throughout the episodes. "But doing a rap number ["Gold Digger"] was the most fun I had." Though not all musical-theatre fans enjoy rap, Morrison insists, "They'll like this. You'll see!" *

A repeat of the pilot, in a Murphy director's cut, aired Sept. 2, and the Sept. 4 airing of the pilot allowed fans to tweet questions and receive answers on Twitter.

Gleeks unite, Broadway fans tune in, Trekkies convert! The offbeat Club "Glee" is steamrolling your way and prospects seem good that the series — again, to quote Mr. Hammerstein — "looks like it's climbin' clear up to the sky."

*

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Let's Start at the Very Beginning

I like theater. I like the atmosphere, dressing up to attend entertainment, seeing talented people, having my heart skip a beat when someone belts higher than I can, and getting wrapped up in the story. It's not entirely my fault. Some of my earliest memories are watching movie musicals or attending theater. I loved it and am grateful, but while other kids were on teams, I was singing to soundtracks. It led me to choirs, school shows, community theater, but mostly to singing in my house or car and being an avid theater supporter.

I often give random musical trivia or inform my friends that a certain actor has been on Broadway as well as the movie we rented.... whether they want to know such trivia or not. People humor me because they're kind, but sometimes it comes in handle. Cranium - I am always the hummer of songs. Trivial Persuit - musicals that have won Oscars. I won't even go into my annual Tony's Award Party.