Tag: Stephen Sondheim

  • Chita Rivera A Broadway Legend Remembered

    Chita Rivera A Broadway Legend Remembered

    Chita Rivera was a force to be reckoned with. A dancer of remarkable stamina and electric stage presence, Rivera clawed her way back to the top after having her leg crushed in an automobile accident. She’s said to have danced as well in her 70s as she did as a younger woman (albeit without the flying splits and backflips).

    Sadly, Chita was cheated whenever her Broadway triumphs were translated to the big screen. However, the recasting of “West Side Story” opened the door for Rita Moreno.

    Stephen Sondheim’s lyrics for the showstopper, “America,” caused some controversy from the start, due to of its ironic barbs about life in Puerto Rico, but Leonard Bernstein’s dynamic take on the huapango and Moreno’s energy sold the number (with the lyrics tweaked over the years).

    Rivera was the recipient of two Tony Awards (she was nominated for ten), two Drama Desk Awards, and a Drama League Award. She was the first Latina and Latino American to receive a Kennedy Center Honor, in 2002, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, in 2009. She was awarded a Tony for Lifetime Achievement in 2018.

    Besides “West Side Story,” she also created roles in “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Chicago,” and “Kiss of the Spider Woman.

    Rivera was 91 years-old. R.I.P.

  • Stephen Sondheim Broadway Legend Dies at 91

    Stephen Sondheim Broadway Legend Dies at 91

    Tragedy tonight! Broadway legend Stephen Sondheim has died.

    The composer and lyricist credited with having reinvented the American musical was the recipient of every major honor, including nine Tony Awards, an Academy Award, eight Grammy Awards, a Pulitzer Prize, a Laurence Olivier Award, and a 2015 Presidential Medal of Freedom.

    Sondheim’s passing occurs only two weeks before Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” is set to introduce him to a whole new generation of fans. He was only 27 when he collaborated with Leonard Bernstein and Arthur Laurents on the original 1957 production.

    It was the beginning of a storied career that included music and lyrics for “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” “Company,” “Follies,” “A Little Night Music,” “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” “Sunday in the Park with George,” and “Into the Woods.” He also provided the words for Laurents’ “Gypsy,” with music by Jule Styne.

    Following an early mentorship with Oscar Hammerstein II – whom he had known since the age of 10, since Hammerstein turned out to be his best friend’s father – he fell in with Princeton University’s total serialist Milton Babbitt, whom he described as “a frustrated show composer.” It was an unlikely pairing, but the two clicked. Together, they dissected everything from Rodgers and Hart to Mozart.

    Sondheim’s uncanny facility with words – imbued with virtuosic wit, insight, and humanity – frequently added up to more than just a stunt lyric. In any case, he always regarded himself foremost as a composer. His revitalizing approach to the American musical theater made him the most revered and influential composer-lyricist of the second half of the 20th century.

    At the time of his death, he was 91 years-old.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/26/theater/stephen-sondheim-dead.html?fbclid=IwAR0-CWvvBfk2JWFVsXRI3H8NjSzTbFHeWzl_pUaYUwsv-pbAnDKIeMlFf7o

  • Leonard Bernstein Birthday Playlist

    Leonard Bernstein Birthday Playlist

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY, LEONARD BERNSTEIN!

    Enjoy a lovingly-curated Bernstein playlist (below).


    “Rhapsody in Blue” from the keyboard, with the fearless Stanley Drucker on clarinet

    Bernstein conducts “Prelude, Fugue and Riffs” on “Omnibus” in 1955

    Bernstein and Aaron Copland create demo record of “Fancy Free” for Jerome Robbins. Stick around for commentary at the end, with self-incriminating interjection by Copland!

    Bernstein’s sensational eleventh-hour debut with the New York Philharmonic, at 25, in 1943

    An entire playlist of Bernstein rarities!

    Conducting Haydn – with his face

    Lauren Bacall sings “The Saga of Lenny,” lyrics by Stephen Sondheim (with apologies to Kurt Weill), for Bernstein’s 70th birthday celebration.

    Bernstein’s death reported on ABC News in 1990.

    Bernstein conducts his recently-composed “Candide Overture” on a televised Young People’s Concert in 1960

    Bernstein conducts Mahler’s “Resurrection Symphony” as a memorial tribute, broadcast live, two days after the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qruHjywjE_g

    Bernstein on the future of music, from one of his Harvard lectures. The answer is yes!

    Bernstein celebrates the fall of the Berlin Wall with a multinational ensemble and Beethoven’s 9th

  • Sondheim’s Hated Song West Side Story Controversy

    Sondheim’s Hated Song West Side Story Controversy

    The song that Sondheim hated:

    It was changed for the movie (“bright” and “tonight” to “gay” and “today”) and placed out of sequence:

    And then completely dropped from a more recent production of the show.

    But then, artists aren’t always the best judges of their own work.

  • Sondheim at 90 A Celebration in Pie

    Sondheim at 90 A Celebration in Pie

    Stephen Sondheim is 90. Why settle for cake, when there’s pie?

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