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Annie (musical)

Annie is a musical with music by Charles Strouse, lyrics by Martin Charnin, and a book by Thomas Meehan. It is based on the 1924 comic strip Little Orphan Annie by Harold Gray (which in turn was inspired from the poem Little Orphant Annie by James Whitcomb Riley). The original Broadway production opened in 1977 and ran for nearly six years, setting a record for the Alvin Theatre (now the Neil Simon Theatre).[1] It spawned numerous productions in many countries, as well as national tours, and won seven Tony Awards, including for Best Musical. The musical's songs "Tomorrow" and "It's the Hard Knock Life" are among its most popular musical numbers.

Annie
Original Broadway windowcard
MusicCharles Strouse
LyricsMartin Charnin
BookThomas Meehan
BasisLittle Orphan Annie
by Harold Gray
Productions1976 Goodspeed Opera House
1977 Broadway
1978 West End
1978 North American tour
1978 US tour
1979 US tour
1981 US tour
1983 1st West End revival
1997 1st Broadway revival
1998 2nd West End revival
2000 UK tour
2005 US tour
2006 UK tour
2011 UK tour
2012 2nd Broadway revival
2014 US tour
2015 UK tour
2017 3rd West End revival
2019 UK tour
2022 US tour
2023 UK tour
2023 US tour
AwardsTony Award for Best Musical
Tony Award for Best Original Score
Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical

Background edit

Charnin first approached Meehan to write the book of a musical about Little Orphan Annie in 1972. Meehan researched by rereading prints of the comic strip, but was unable to find any satisfactory material for a musical other than the characters of Annie, Oliver Warbucks, and Sandy, so he decided to write his own story. As Meehan, Charnin and Strouse were all from New York, and given what he saw as the downbeat mood of the then-current Nixon era and Vietnam War, Meehan set his story in New York during the similarly downbeat Great Depression. Meehan saw the character of Annie as a 20th-century American female version of the titular orphan characters created by Charles Dickens in works such as Oliver Twist and David Copperfield, with the mystery of Annie's abandonment and unknown parenthood as consistent with a strand of mysteries in Dickens' tales. Meehan's book was accepted by Charnin and Strouse, but considerable material had to be trimmed out – material which Meehan would later restore for his novelization.[2]

Plot edit

Act 1 edit

In 1933 in New York City, eleven-year-old Annie sleeps in an orphanage with many other girls her age. When six-year-old Molly wakes up from a bad dream, Annie comforts her by singing about her own parents; even though they abandoned her at the orphanage as a baby, she holds on to the hope that they will come back for her ("Maybe"). Annie decides to escape to find her parents, but is caught by Miss Hannigan, the cruel keeper of the orphanage. To punish Annie's behavior, she forces all the girls to clean, and they lament the terrible conditions of the orphanage ("It's the Hard Knock Life"). Later on, Bundles the laundry man comes in to pick up the blankets, allowing Annie to escape in his truck. Miss Hannigan realizes she's gone and chases after the truck. The other orphans cheer her on, but await punishment when Hannigan returns ("Hard Knock Life (Reprise)").

Annie escapes, running into a friendly stray dog. She tells him of better days to come ("Tomorrow"). She fools a police officer into believing he is her dog, named Sandy. Later, Annie and Sandy stumble upon a Hooverville, a shanty town full of formerly well-off people suddenly rendered homeless by the Great Depression. They sarcastically toast the former president ("We'd Like to Thank You, Herbert Hoover"). The shanty town is broken up by the cops, who take Annie back to the orphanage.

At the orphanage, Miss Hannigan vents her frustration at being surrounded by children ("Little Girls"). Grace Farrell, the assistant to the billionaire Oliver Warbucks, comes to the orphanage, asking for an orphan to spend Christmas at his mansion. Seeing how poorly Miss Hannigan treats Annie, Grace insists on taking her.

At Warbucks's mansion, Grace introduces Annie to the staff and explains that she will have every luxury available ("I Think I'm Gonna Like It Here"). Oliver Warbucks returns, and isn't happy to have Annie in his mansion, having assumed all orphans were boys. Warbucks instructs Grace to take her to a movie while he works, but when he realizes that Annie has never seen New York, he decides to take her there himself, walking the 45 blocks to the Roxy and seeing New York City in all of its glory ("N.Y.C.").

Grace pays Miss Hannigan a visit to tell her that Warbucks wants to officially adopt Annie. Hannigan becomes furiously envious that the orphan she hated so much will suddenly have everything. Her ne'er-do-well brother Rooster and his girlfriend Lily drop by in hopes of a handout. When Miss Hannigan mentions that Annie is going to be adopted by Warbucks, Rooster realizes they can use this situation to their advantage ("Easy Street").

Having noticed a broken locket around Annie's neck, Warbucks buys her a new, more expensive one from Tiffany's. He wonders whether he is ready for such a big change in his life ("Why Should I Change A Thing?"). When he offers Annie the locket and attempts to take off the old one, Annie bursts into tears, as the locket was the only thing left to her by her parents, and she still holds out hope that they will return for her. Warbucks pledges to find her parents no matter what it takes, calling J. Edgar Hoover to get the Federal Bureau of Investigation on the job ("You Won't Be An Orphan For Long").

Act 2 edit

Annie appears on Bert Healy's radio show ("Maybe (Reprise)"), where Warbucks announces that he is offering $50,000 to the couple who can prove they are her parents. Healy then sings a song with the Boylan Sisters ("You're Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile"). At the orphanage, the girls are listening to the show. They joyously sing along ("You're Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile (Reprise)").

A couple claiming to be Annie's parents, Ralph and Shirley Mudge, arrive at the orphanage. In fact, they are Rooster and Lily in disguise. They believe they can pass themselves off as Annie's parents with Hannigan's help, for which she demands half of the money ("Easy Street (Reprise)").

Warbucks brings Annie to Washington, D.C., where she meets President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Roosevelt and his Cabinet are inspired by her optimism and decide to make it a cornerstone of their administration ("Tomorrow (Cabinet Reprise)").

Once back home, Warbucks tells Annie how much he loves her ("Something Was Missing"). Because all the people claiming to be her parents were frauds, he offers once again to adopt her, and Annie gleefully accepts. The delighted staff get Annie dressed for the formal adoption proceedings, and tell of how her arrival has changed their lives ("Annie"). As Judge Louis Brandeis shows up to begin the adoption proceedings, Warbucks and Annie dance together ("I Don't Need Anything But You").

They are interrupted by Rooster and Lily in disguise. The two present forged documents, as well as the other half of Annie's locket, seemingly confirming their story. Warbucks requests that she be allowed to stay one more night, and they can take her away on Christmas morning. The next morning, Annie wonders if her life with her parents will really be as good as her life with Warbucks could have been ("Maybe (Second Reprise)"). Warbucks receives a surprise visit from Roosevelt and his Secret Service. The FBI has learned that Annie's parents are actually David and Margaret Bennett, who died some time ago; Annie truly is an orphan. Mr. and Mrs. "Mudge" show up to take Annie and the money, but are quickly exposed. They are arrested by the Secret Service, along with Miss Hannigan. Annie is adopted by Warbucks, who notes that this Christmas is the beginning of a new life for them, for the orphans (all of whom are adopted by wealthy friends of Warbucks), and for the rest of the country, thanks to Roosevelt's New Deal ("A New Deal for Christmas"/"Tomorrow (Second Reprise)").

Characters edit

Source: MTI Shows[3]

Characters Description
Oliver "Daddy" Warbucks Billionaire businessman who opens his home – and his heart – to Annie.
Annie Bennett The title character. The spunky and optimistic 11-year-old orphan who is looking for her birth parents. She ends up getting adopted by Oliver Warbucks.
Grace Farrell Oliver Warbucks' faithful secretary, who loves Annie from the start.
Miss Agatha Hannigan The disillusioned orphanage matron. She hates children, but is fond of alcoholic beverages.
Daniel "Rooster" Hannigan Miss Hannigan's younger brother, a convict who escaped jail so he could rob his sister and plot to abduct Annie.
Lily St. Regis Rooster's girlfriend, an egotistical gold digger. She and Rooster pose as Annie's "parents" so they can fool Warbucks and get their hands on a $50,000 reward.
Drake The butler at the Warbucks Mansion; a good friend to Grace, Annie and Warbucks.
Franklin D. Roosevelt President of the United States, he aids Warbucks in the search for Annie's parents. Upon meeting Annie, he is inspired to make a new deal and restore America's economy.
Molly The youngest orphan, Annie's best friend.
Pepper The bossiest orphan, who likes to take control and is rivals with Annie.
Duffy The oldest orphan, who often hangs around with Pepper.
July The quietest orphan, who is mother-like to all the other orphans.
Tessie The crybaby orphan, who is known for the line "Oh my goodness".
Kate The shyest orphan, who rarely speaks.
Louis Brandeis Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. He is called upon to assist in Annie's adoption.
Bert Healy Radio announcer who agrees to broadcast Annie's search for her parents.
The Boylan Sisters Singers on the Bert Healy Show who hope to be famous someday.
Fred McCracken and Wacky A ventriloquist and his dummy, who are guests on Bert Healy's Oxydent Hour of Smiles.
Lt. Ward A policeman sent after Annie, he finds her in the local Shantytown, Hooverville.
Sandy An abandoned mixed-breed dog that, once Annie rescues him, becomes her companion and pet.
Bundles The laundry man who initially helps Annie escape.
Cordell Hull, Frances Perkins, Louis Howe, Harold Ickes, and Henry Morgenthau Jr. Franklin Roosevelt's Cabinet members who sing "Tomorrow (Cabinet Reprise)" with Warbucks and Annie.
Star-To-Be An upcoming Broadway star, who sings a solo in "N.Y.C."
Mrs. Greer, Mrs. Pugh, Cecile, and Annette Warbucks's servants. They do a lot of housekeeping and are often supervised by Drake and Grace.
Dog Catcher and Assistant Dog Catcher Characters who try to catch Sandy.
Sophie and the Apple Seller Child citizens of Hooverville.
Kaltenborn and Radio Announcers Announcers on the radio.
Usherette A female usher who seats Annie, Grace, and Warbucks in the movie theater.
Jimmy Johnson A guest on Bert Healy's Oxydent Hour of Smiles, who calls himself "radio's only masked announcer".
SFX Man A member of Bert Healy's radio show, who controls the sound effects for the show and encourages crowd participation.
Men and Women of Hooverville Men and women who are homeless and live in shanties in the town of Hooverville.

Notable casts edit

Character Original Broadway[4]

1977

Original West End[5]

1978

First US Tour[6]

1978

First Broadway Revival[7]

1997

Second West End Revival[8]

1998

Second Broadway Revival[9]

2012

Hollywood Bowl

2018

Annie Bennett Andrea McArdle Kathy Jo Kelly Brittny Kissinger Charlene Barton

Tasha Gold

Libby Gore

Sophie McShera

Lilla Crawford Kaylin Hedges
Oliver "Daddy" Warbucks Reid Shelton Stratford Johns Norwood Smith Conrad John Schuck Kevin Colson Anthony Warlow David Alan Grier
Miss Agatha Hannigan Dorothy Loudon Sheila Hancock Jane Connell Nell Carter Lesley Joseph Katie Finneran Ana Gasteyer
Grace Farrell Sandy Faison Judith Paris Kathryn Boulé Colleen Dunn Kate Normington Brynn O'Malley Lea Salonga
Daniel Francis "Rooster" Hannigan Robert Fitch Kenneth Nelson Gary Beach Jim Ryan Andrew Kennedy Clarke Thorell Roger Bart
Lily St. Regis Barbara Erwin Clovissa Newcombe Lisa Raggio Karen Byers-Blackwell Gail Marie Sharpter J. Elaine Marcos Megan Hilty

Notable Broadway replacements edit

Original Broadway

Second Broadway Revival

Production history edit

The New York Times estimates that Annie is performed 700 to 900 times each year in the United States.[11]

Pre-Broadway tryout edit

Annie had its world premiere on August 10, 1976, at the Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam, Connecticut, under the direction of Michael P. Price. Kristen Vigard was the first actress to play the title role. However, the producers soon decided that Vigard's genuinely sweet interpretation was not tough enough for the street-smart orphan. After a week of performances, Vigard was replaced by Andrea McArdle, who had been playing one of the other orphans, Pepper. Vigard went on to become McArdle's Broadway alternate.

Broadway original edit

 
Andrea McArdle, Reid Shelton and Sandy, 1977

The original Broadway production opened at the Alvin Theatre on April 21, 1977, and starred Andrea McArdle as Annie, Reid Shelton as Warbucks, Dorothy Loudon as Miss Hannigan, and Sandy Faison as Grace Farrell, with Danielle Brisebois as Molly, the youngest and smallest orphan. It was nominated for eleven Tony Awards and won seven, including the Best Musical, Best Score, and Best Book. Replacements in the title role on Broadway included Shelley Bruce, Sarah Jessica Parker, Allison Smith and Alyson Kirk. Replacements in the role of Miss Hannigan included Alice Ghostley, Dolores Wilson, Betty Hutton, Marcia Lewis, and June Havoc. Ann Ungar understudied and played for Dorothy Loudon in the role of Miss Hannigan. She also understudied Alice Ghostley and Dolores Wilson.[12] Annie was evicted from the Alvin Theatre in September 1981 to make way for Merrily We Roll Along, which began its months long journey to finding a new permanent home.[13] On September 16, the show moved to ANTA (now the August Wilson), knowing the production would need to move again due to contractual obligations to the new musical Oh Brother! On October 29, Annie moved to the Eugene O'Neill Theatre, and finally moved to its final home at the Uris (now the Gershwin) on December 12 to make room for a revised Little Me. This move was made possible partly because of the early closing of the revival of My Fair Lady, had originally been scheduled to run through the end of that year.[13] The show closed on January 2, 1983, after a total of 2,377 performances, setting a record for the longest running show at the Alvin Theatre (now the Neil Simon Theatre), until it was surpassed by Hairspray in 2009.[1]

United States national touring companies edit

During the Broadway run of Annie, there were four touring companies that were launched from the original production to tour to major North American cities:

The first national touring company opened in Toronto in March 1978 with Kathy Jo Kelly as Annie, Norwood Smith as Daddy Warbucks, Jane Connell, Ruth Kobart as Miss Hannigan, and Gary Beach as Rooster. It played in Miami from April 12 to May 13, 1978, then continued for a few more cities until it landed in Chicago where it played for 32 weeks. In April 1979, it continued on the road in with Mary K. Lombardi now in the lead as Annie. In the fall of 1980, Theda Stemler took over the part and was replaced in Boston when she grew too old. On May 15, 1981, Louanne Sirota, who had played Annie in the long-running Los Angeles production, took over the role for four months. In August 1981, Becky Snyder became the company's last Annie, closing the tour on September 6, 1981.

The second national touring company (sometimes referred to as the West Coast or Los Angeles production) opened in San Francisco on June 22, 1978, with Patricia Ann Patts starring as Annie, Jennifer Cihi as Pepper and the then-unknown Molly Ringwald as one of the orphans. The show landed in Los Angeles on October 15, 1978, for an open-ended run at the Shubert Theatre. Children’s television host Tom Hatten played Franklin D. Roosevelt. On June 12, 1979, Sirota, just 9 years old (up until that time, all Annies had been 11 or older), took over the role from Patts. Marisa Morell took the role in December 1979, closing the Los Angeles run and continuing on tour with the show through December 1980. Kristi Coombs (who played the youngest orphan Molly in the first national touring company) then played Annie until this touring company closed in Hawaii on August 22, 1982. Alyssa Milano played orphan Kate in 1981.

The third national touring company opened in Dallas on October 3, 1979, with Rosanne Sorrentino (who would later go on to portray Pepper in the 1982 film version) in the title role. This company toured to 23 cities playing mostly shorter runs of a month or less. On March 27, 1981, Bridget Walsh took over as Annie. Becky Snyder (who had closed the first national tour) joined this company in the summer of 1982 and stayed with it until it closed in September of that year.

The fourth national touring company opened on September 11, 1981, with Mollie Hall playing Annie. This production was a "bus and truck" tour, with a slightly reduced cast, that traveled the country and often played in two cities a week. This company was still touring when the original Broadway production closed in January 1983, making Kathleen Sisk the final performer to play Annie from the original production team. This tour closed in late March 1983.

West End original edit

The musical premiered in the West End at the Victoria Palace Theatre on May 3, 1978. Andrea McArdle, the original Broadway Annie, played the title role for 40 performances. British 12-year-old Ann Marie Gwatkin was also cast in the title role and appeared on the original London cast recording. The opening night cast and the original cast album recording of children were Claire Hood, Jane Collins, Dawn Napier, Annette Mason, Helen Stephenson, Jackie Ekers and Linda Brewis. Ann Marie Gwatkin alternated with Christine Hyland, and four other Annies were cast at this point: Anne O'Rourke, Jacinta Whyte, Helen Thorne, Tracy Taylor, who were to play the role over the next year. Suzie Kemeys from South Wales also performed two shows in 1980/81. The first was as July and the second was Annie. ITV Wales commissioned two documentaries about this young Welsh girl and her rise from obscurity to a West End leading lady. Following this, Ann Marie Gwatkin and Jackie Ekers shared the title role, followed by many other casts of Annie. Miss Hannigan was originally played by Sheila Hancock, and later by Maria Charles and Stella Moray; Warbucks was played by Stratford Johns and later by Charles West, with Deborah Clarke playing Pepper in the first year and Melanie Grant playing Molly.

Annie closed on November 28, 1981, after 1,485 performances.

UK tour edit

The musical transferred to the Bristol Hippodrome for a special Christmas season before touring Britain. Because of strict British employment laws for juvenile actors, a succession of actresses took on the lead role every four months. One of the last girls to perform the role at the Victoria Palace before the show went on tour was 10-year-old Claudia Bradley from Leeds, who was featured on a 1981 BBC program called Fame. She went on to perform on the tour as well.[14][15]

Broadway revival (1997) edit

A 20th anniversary Broadway revival, which played at the Martin Beck Theatre (now called the Al Hirschfeld Theatre) in 1997, entitled Annie, the 20th Anniversary,[16] starred Nell Carter as Miss Hannigan, but controversy surrounded the casting of the titular character. The original actress cast in the role, Joanna Pacitti, was fired and replaced by Brittny Kissinger[17] (who had been playing orphan July) just two weeks before her Broadway debut, while battling bronchitis in Boston. The pre-Broadway tour was playing the Colonial Theatre, then moved on to the Oakdale in Connecticut. Public sentiment seemed to side with Pacitti as she was the winner of a highly publicized contest to find a new Annie, sponsored by the department store Macy's. This incident, coupled with the mixed reviews the new staging garnered, doomed it to a short run, although it was followed by a successful national tour. Kissinger, then 8, became the youngest actress to ever play Annie on Broadway.

More controversy surrounding the show involved Nell Carter. Carter reportedly was very upset when commercials promoting the show used a different actress, Marcia Lewis, a white actress, as Miss Hannigan. The producers claimed that the commercials, which were made during an earlier production, were too costly to reshoot. Carter felt that racism played a part in the decision. "Maybe they do not want audiences to know Nell Carter is black", she told the New York Post. However, the ads did mention that Carter was in the show. "It hurts a lot", Carter told the Post, "I've asked them nicely to stop it — it's insulting to me as a black woman."[18] Later reports stated that "Nell Carter of Broadway's 'Annie' denied Thursday that she called her show's producers racist because they chose to air commercials featuring a previous Miss Hannigan—who is white—instead of her."[19] Her statement, released by the Associated Press, read: "'Yes, it is true that I and my representatives have gone to management on more than one occasion about the commercial and were told that there was nothing they could do about it,' Carter said in a statement Thursday. 'Therefore, I have resigned myself to the fact that this is the way it is.' The statement also addressed the alleged charges of racism, first published in Thursday's New York Post. Carter is black. 'I, Nell Carter, never, ever, ever accused my producers or anyone in the show of racism,' she said. Producers have said it is too expensive to film a new commercial."[20] Carter was later replaced by another white actress, Sally Struthers. The revival closed on October 19, 1997, after 14 previews and 239 performances.[21]

West End revival (1998) edit

The show was revived at the Victoria Palace Theatre, running from September 30, 1998, to February 28, 1999. It starred Lesley Joseph and then Lily Savage (the female alter ego of comedian Paul O'Grady) as Miss Hannigan and Kevin Colson as Warbucks. The young girls who played Annie were Charlene Barton, Tasha Gold, Libby Gore and Sophie McShera.[22] Orphans included Dominique Moore as documented on Paddington Green.[23]

1999–2000 United States tour edit

Starting in August 1999, the post Broadway national tour continued with Meredith Anne Bull as Annie. In the spring of 2000, Ashley Wieronski, who had been playing Duffy, moved up to play Annie. In July 2000, Dana Benedict took over as Annie.

2000–2001 Australian tour edit

In 2000/2001, a tour was staged in Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane. Anthony Warlow starred as Warbucks with Amanda Muggleton as Miss Hannigan. A new song, "Why Should I Change a Thing", was written for Warlow.[24] Appearing as Annie in the Sydney production were Rachel Marley and Jodie McGaw. A publicist noted that "each time the show moves to a new city, two casts of seven orphans plus two Annies have to be found to join the adult cast."[25]

2001–2010 UK tours edit

Further UK tours of the show were also staged, including a one-month run at The Theatre Royal in Lincoln in 2001. Members of the original cast included Kate Winney and Jemma Carlisle as Annie, Louise English (Grace), Vicki Michelle (Miss Hannigan) and Simon Masterton-Smith (Warbucks). The show proved to be a success, and so for the first two tours and the Malaysian Genting Highlands Production, the role of Annie was then shared by Faye Spittlehouse and a young Lucy May Barker. Miss Hannigan was later performed by Su Pollard and Ruth Madoc and Daddy Warbucks by Mark Wynter. This particular production toured from 2001 to 2007 and resumed in September 2008. The last tour of this production ended in 2011 with the role of Miss Hannigan still being played by Pollard, David McAlister as Warbucks, Victoria Sian Lewis as Annie, and Simone Craddock as Grace Farrell.[26]

2005–10 US national tours edit

 
"Easy Street" from the 30th Anniversary National Tour performed by McKenzie Phillips (Lily St. Regis), Scott Willis (Rooster Hannigan) and Alene Robertson (Miss Hannigan)

Opening in August 2005, a 30th anniversary traveling production of Annie[27] by NETworks Tours embarked on a multi-city tour. This production was directed by Martin Charnin and choreographed by Liza Gennaro (daughter of the show's original choreographer, Peter Gennaro). This all-new production with new set designs by Ming Cho Lee, also featured the brand-new song "Why Should I Change A Thing?" (sung by Warbucks). For the first two years of the tour, Conrad John Schuck played Warbucks, reprising the role he played in the original run of Annie on Broadway, as well as the 15th Anniversary National Tour and 1997 Broadway revival. Chicago actress, Alene Robertson, was Miss Hannigan, Annie was played by Marissa O'Donnell, Scott Willis played Rooster Hannigan, Elizabeth Broadhurst was Grace Farrell and McKenzie Phillips performed the role of Lily St. Regis.[28] In December 2006, the tour briefly returned to New York City to play the Theater at Madison Square Garden for Christmas where it broke box office records during the five week stay. Kathie Lee Gifford played Miss Hannigan.[29] This original Equity tour closed on March 25, 2007, at the Hippodrome Theatre in Baltimore, Maryland.

The tour continued non-union for several more years and throughout the run of the show, there were replacements. The 2007-08 tour starred Amanda Balon as Annie, who took over as Molly during the second year.[30] The 2008-09 cast for the tour featured Tianna Stevens as Annie. Early in 2009, Amanda Balon returned temporarily to play the role of Annie until Madison Kerth was rehearsed to play the title role. Also returning were Barton, Andrews and Meisner. Other cast members included Mackenzie Aladjem (Molly). In the 2009-10 tour, Kerth returned as Annie along with most of the previous year's cast, adding Jordan Boezem (from Spotlight Kids in Sarasota, Florida) in the role of July.[31][32]

2nd Broadway revival (2012-14) edit

A 35th Anniversary production opened on Broadway in 2012. Thomas Meehan revised the musical, with James Lapine directing.[33] Lilla Crawford starred as Annie[34] with Katie Finneran as Miss Hannigan,[35] and Anthony Warlow making his long-awaited Broadway debut as Warbucks.[36] Featured cast included Brynn O'Malley, Clarke Thorell and J. Elaine Marcos as Grace Farrell, Rooster and Lily St. Regis, respectively.[37] The revival started previews at the Palace Theatre on October 3, 2012, and officially opened on November 8, 2012, receiving mixed reviews.[37] Notable replacements include Jane Lynch and Faith Prince as Miss Hannigan.[38][39] On July 30, Taylor Richardson and Sadie Sink both began alternating the role of Annie, replacing Crawford.[40] This production closed on January 5, 2014, after 38 previews and 487 regular performances.[41]

2014–25 United States tours edit

Starting in September 2014, a 40th anniversary traveling production of Annie was launched by TROIKA Entertainment. Directed by Martin Charnin, the tour kicked off in Detroit, Michigan. For the first year of the tour, Issie Swickle played the title character Annie with Faith Perez as her alternate, alongside Gilgamesh Taggett and Lynn Andrews as Warbucks and Miss Hannigan, respectively.[42] There were many replacements throughout the tour, and by the end of it, Gilgamesh Taggett was the only remaining original member. For most of the second year of the tour, Heidi Gray played Annie. For the third and final year of the tour, Tori Bates played Annie and became the first biracial Annie in a professional production.[43] The 40th Anniversary performance was celebrated in Baltimore, Maryland, on April 21, 2017, with Angelina Carballo as Annie.[44] The tour came to a close in Boston, Massachusetts, on May 21, 2017, after 745 performances.

Another tour directed by Jenn Thompson, who played Pepper in the original Broadway production, began October 4, 2022, and ended June 11, 2023, with Ellie Rose Pulsifer as the title role. Another leg of the tour will begin October 7, 2023, and is set to end May 19, 2024, with Rainier Trevino playing Annie. The tour will close in spring of 2025, after 3 legs of the tour.

UK and Ireland tours and West End revival (2015-23) edit

A new UK and Ireland tour opened at the Theatre Royal, Newcastle in July 2015 starring Craig Revel Horwood as Miss Hannigan, directed by Nikolai Foster and produced by Michael Harrison and David Ian, with new orchestrations by George Dyer. The production toured until 2016 with Lesley Joseph appearing at some venues and performances as Miss Hannigan.

The production opened in London's West End at the Piccadilly Theatre, opening on June 5, 2017 (previews beginning on May 23) for a limited run until January 6, 2018. This was Miranda Hart's musical debut as Miss Hannigan (until September 17).[45] The three girls who shared the main role were Madeleine Haynes (reprising her the role from the UK tour), Lola Moxom and Ruby Stokes. From September 19, for a limited 10 week run, Craig Revel Horwood returned to the role of Miss Hannigan, reprising his role from the 2015-16 UK and Ireland tour. The production extended its limited run, with Meera Syal as Miss Hannigan from November 27,[46] through to the show's conclusion on February 18, 2018, when it closed to make way for the musical adaptation of Strictly Ballroom.[47]

The production began another UK and Ireland tour in February 2019 at the Manchester Opera House starring Anita Dobson as Miss Hannigan, alternating venues with Craig Revel Horwood and Jodie Prenger.

Another UK and Ireland tour began at the Curve in Leicester in February 2023 starring Zoe Akinyosade, Harlie Barthram, and Sharangi Gnanavarathan sharing the title role, with Craig Revel Horwood, Paul O'Grady, Jodie Prenger and Elaine C. Smith alternating venues as Miss Hannigan, after previously performing the role in previous tours and West End runs. After performing the role in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne and Edinburgh, O'Grady died on March 28, 2023.

Hollywood Bowl production, 2018 edit

For its annual fully staged musical event, the Hollywood Bowl produced a limited run of Annie from July 27–29, 2018, directed by Michael Arden.[48] The cast included Kaylin Hedges as the title role, Roger Bart as Rooster, Ana Gasteyer as Miss Hannigan, David Alan Grier as Warbucks, Megan Hilty as Lily St. Regis, Lea Salonga as Grace, Ali Stroker as "Star to Be," and Steven Weber as Franklin D. Roosevelt.[49]

International productions edit

Annie has been produced professionally in Canada (1978, Quebec (French adaptation): 2022), Argentina (1982[a]), Australia (1978,[a] 2000, 2011,[a] 2012), Denmark (1982), Germany (1999), Hungary (1998), Ireland (2003, 2016[b]), Israel (2001,[a] 2010), Italy (1982, 2006), Japan (1979, 1986–present),[c] United Kingdom (1978,[a] 1983, 1998, tours from 2000 to 2010), Mexico (1979,[a] 1991, 2010, 2015), Netherlands (1997–1999,[a] 2005–2007,[a] 2012–2013[a]), Norway (1991,[a] 2004,[a] 2013), Philippines (1980, 1984, 1987, 1998, 2016), Portugal (1982,[a] 2010), Spain (1982,[a] 2000,[a] 2010,[a] 2019[a]), Sweden (1979 (Stockholm), 1999 (Stockholm), 2005–2006 (Malmö)[a]), Peru (1986, 1997, 2002), Zimbabwe (2003), Russia (2002–2009), Colombia (2006), South Korea (1984, 1996, 2006–2007, 2010–2011, 2018–2019), Hong Kong (2012), Belgium (1992, 2008–2009, 2012), Poland (1989), United Arab Emirates (2009), Denmark (2011), Puerto Rico (2012), Singapore (2012), Greece (1981–1982, 2005–2007, 2013–2015, 2018–2019 (Athens), 2007–2008 (Thessaloniki)) and Brazil (2018–2019).

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Indicates the production made an official cast recording.
  2. ^ In Ireland, in the 2016 production, the actresses playing Annie and Molly (Aoife McNamara & Simone McInerney) alternated between the roles.
  3. ^ In Japan, a special demo recording of selected songs is made each year, with the new actress playing Annie.

Stage sequels edit

The first attempt at a sequel, Annie 2: Miss Hannigan's Revenge, opened at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., in December 1989 to universally disastrous reviews. Extensive reworking of the script and score proved futile, and the project was abandoned.[50]

In 1993, a second attempt, with a different plot and score, titled Annie Warbucks was developed in a workshop at the Goodspeed Opera House (where the original Annie premiered in 1976) under the direction of Michael P. Price. It subsequently opened at the Off Broadway Variety Arts Theatre, where it ran for 200 performances.

Musical numbers edit

† This number was added as a showcase for Nell Carter in the 1997 Broadway revival. This number hasn't appeared in any subsequent productions.

‡ This number was added as a showcase for Anthony Warlow in a 2000 Australian production, and has since become an optional part of the show, as it notably did not appear in the 2012 Broadway revival.[51]

Recordings edit

The original Broadway cast recording was made on April 25, 1977, at the 30th Street Studio in New York City[52] and released that year by Columbia Records. A CD containing bonus tracks was released on September 15, 1998, by Sony (ASIN: B00000AG6Z). The 1995 London studio cast recording, featuring the National Symphony Orchestra, stars Sarah French as Annie, Kim Criswell as Miss Hannigan and Ron Raines as Warbucks.

A 30th anniversary cast recording was released in 2008 on Time–Life Records. An all-star cast of former Annie cast members includes Carol Burnett, Sally Struthers, Kathie Lee Gifford, Andrea McArdle, John Schuck, Harve Presnell, Gary Beach and Amanda Balon. The rest of the cast is made up of the members of the 30th Anniversary Tour. This recording is a double CD set and includes the entire show as it is performed now on the first disc. The second disc includes songs from the sequel, Annie 2: Miss Hannigan's Revenge, as well as songs that were cut from or added to the original production. There is also a song from the 1977 Annie Christmas special. The booklet is made up of original drawings by Philo Barnhart, who is the creator of Ariel and Ursula in "The Little Mermaid", and is presented in a comic book style.[53] The album was produced by music producer Robert Sher.

Novelizations edit

Thomas Meehan edit

In 1980, Macmillan Books published Meehan's novelization of his script for the musical, later reprinted by Puffin Books in 2014. Several of the lyrics from songs from the show were adapted into dialogue and monologue for the novelization. The main lyrics of "Tomorrow" are depicted as being Annie's personal mantra, while "Little Girls" becomes a self-pitying monologue by Miss Hannigan alone in her office moments before Annie is returned to her and then taken away by Grace Farrell. On the other hand "You're Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile" is replaced by the slogan "Smile, darn ya, smile" and others such as "It's the Hard Knock Life" are dispensed with entirely. Meehan used the novel to restore material cut from his original storyline and develop the Annie story into his original concept of what he considered to be a 20th-century female American version of Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist.[2]

The novel goes into greater depth regarding the backgrounds of many of the characters, and particularly about hardship at the orphanage, at which brutal beatings and emotional abuse from Miss Hannigan are everyday occurrences. Unlike the high camp portrayal of Miss Hannigan in most productions of the musical, the novelization – in the tradition of Dickens' Oliver Twist – emphatically depicts her as a truly sinister and malevolent villainess – "a skinny hatchet faced woman with short jet-black hair (who) reminded the orphans of a particularly unpleasant looking – and all too real – Halloween witch".[54]

A greater emphasis is placed on the sheer drudgery and illegality of the orphans' sewing labours in the orphanage basement. However, whereas in the musical the orphans are not enrolled in school until the final scene, in the novelization they attend a public school, PS62, where they suffer from snobbery from teachers and harassment from non-orphan pupils, particularly from a spoiled rich girl named Myrtle Vandenmeer. The legal name of Rooster's girlfriend Lily St. Regis is given in the book as being Muriel Jane Gumper.[54][55]

In the novel, Annie spends several months on the run from the orphanage, initially spending the winter as a resident staff in Bixby's Beanery, a low-grade café run by couple Fred and Gert Bixby, before escaping after she finds Sandy. She then spends several months living in Hooverville with Sophie and the Apple Seller (who is named as G. Randall "Randy" Whitworth Jr, a former stockbroker left destitute by the Depression) who, in the novelization, are adult characters and a couple. It is revealed at the end that Randy, Sophie and all the other Hoovervillites were released from prison and given jobs and homes by Warbucks as gratitude for taking care of Annie. Also reappearing at the end of the book is Sandy, previously written out of the book while fleeing police during the raid on the Hooverville, who it transpires was successfully traced by agents from Pinkerton hired by Warbucks.[54][55]

Leonore Fleischer edit

A second novelization of Annie, by Leonore Fleischer, was published by Random House in 1982. This was a tie-in with the first film and was adapted directly from the screenplay.[56][57]

Film and television edit

Columbia Pictures acquired the film rights in 1977 for $9.5 million, the most expensive at the time for a stage musical.[58] The film was released in 1982 directed by John Huston, starring Albert Finney as Warbucks, Carol Burnett as Miss Hannigan, Ann Reinking as Grace Farrell, Tim Curry as Rooster, Bernadette Peters as Lily, and newcomer Aileen Quinn as Annie.

A sequel, Annie: A Royal Adventure! was made for television in 1995. It starred Ashley Johnson, Joan Collins, George Hearn, and Ian McDiarmid. Aside from a reprise of "Tomorrow", there are no songs in it.

A made-for-TV Wonderful World of Disney movie version, produced by The Walt Disney Company and directed by Rob Marshall, was broadcast in 1999; it starred Victor Garber as Daddy Warbucks, Kathy Bates as Miss Hannigan, Audra McDonald as Grace Farrell, Alan Cumming as Rooster, Kristin Chenoweth as Lily, and newcomer Alicia Morton as Annie.

In January 2011, Will Smith announced plans for a remake of Annie set in the present day, produced with his wife Jada Pinkett Smith and rapper Jay-Z for release by Columbia Pictures.[59] This version was to star the Smiths' daughter, Willow, as Annie; but as she had aged out of the part before production began, she was replaced by Quvenzhané Wallis.[60] Directed by Will Gluck and released in 2014,[61][62] this version of Annie also stars Jamie Foxx as Will Stacks (an update of Warbucks),[63] Rose Byrne as Grace Farrell, and Cameron Diaz as Miss Hannigan.[64]

None of these films contain the songs "We'd Like To Thank You, Herbert Hoover", "You Won't Be an Orphan for Long", "Annie", or "A New Deal for Christmas". The 1982 film additionally omits "N.Y.C." and "Something was Missing" while adding four new songs. The 2014 film contains the songs common to both films, remixed to various degrees, while adding three new songs.

A documentary film, Life After Tomorrow, was directed and produced by one of the original Broadway and national tour orphans, Julie Stevens and partner, Gil Cates Jr. It reunites more than 40 women who played orphans in the show and reveals the highs and lows of their experiences as child actresses in a cultural phenomenon. The film premiered on Showtime and was released on DVD in 2008.

In May 2021, NBC announced a live television production of Annie with Robert Greenblatt and Neil Meron as executive producers as a "holiday event" in 2021. The production was aired on December 2 of that year.[65] It was directed by Lear deBessonet,[66] and starred Celina Smith as Annie, Taraji P. Henson as Miss Hannigan, Harry Connick Jr. as Oliver Warbucks, Nicole Scherzinger as Grace Farrell, Tituss Burgess as Rooster Hannigan and Megan Hilty as Lily St. Regis.[65][67][68][69][70][71]

Annie Jr. edit

Annie Jr. is a musical licensed by Music Theatre International's Broadway Junior collection, specially edited to be performed by children in a shortened form. It is performed internationally every year by acting academies, programs, schools, and theatre camps.[72][73] MTI also licenses another youth version of the show, called Annie KIDS, a 30-minute length version meant for elementary-aged performers.[74]

Stage differences (1977 musical) edit

The songs "We'd Like to Thank You Herbert Hoover", "A New Deal for Christmas", "Something Was Missing" and "Tomorrow (Cabinet Reprise)" were cut. There is only one version of "You're Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile", which is sung by the orphans. There are only two "Maybe" reprises. The song "You won't Be an Orphan For Long" only features Annie and Daddy Warbucks. The songs "Easy Street", "NYC", and "Little Girls" were also shortened. Many of the songs have been transposed down a few keys to make them easier for amateur child actors to sing. The last verses of “Little Girls” was removed and added again as a reprise later in the same scene.

Pop culture references edit

Annie's popularity is reflected in its numerous mentions in popular media. References to the show appear in films such as Austin Powers: Goldmember, where Dr. Evil and Mini-Me perform Jay-Z's version of the song 'Hard Knock Life'; and in the 1994 John Waters dark comedy Serial Mom, where a woman is bludgeoned to death with a leg of mutton by the titular serial killer while watching the 1982 film version and singing along. It is parodied in Reefer Madness, where President Franklin D. Roosevelt shows up as the deus ex machina at the end of the satirical musical to tell the assembled crowd, "A little orphan girl once told me that the sun would come out tomorrow. Her adopted father was a powerful billionaire, so I suppressed the urge to laugh in her face, but now, by gum, I think she may have been on to something!"

References in television series include:

  • In an episode[episode needed] of House, House references "little orphan Annie" and "Oliver Twist".
  • An episode of SCTV, features a spoof commercial of the "original" cast, now older adults still playing their kid roles, performing the 8,000th performance of Annie.
  • Stephanie Tanner of Full House sings songs from the musical in several episodes.
  • On 30 Rock, Liz Lemon is discovered in her office after-hours listening to music on her headset and singing "Maybe".
  • The stop-motion comedy show Robot Chicken parodied Annie in episodes, including "Maurice Was Caught".[75]
  • In "Makeover", an episode of Glee, Sarah Jessica Parker as Isabelle Wright with Kurt Hummel and Rachel Berry sing "You're Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile".
  • In the Netflix series Haters Back Off, Miranda Sings and her family attempt to mount a backyard production of Annie (with extensive book and score revisions) in the episode "Staring in a Musicall".
  • In the animated show, Hazbin Hotel, the character Alastor references Annie by telling another character “Smile, my dear. You know, you're never fully dressed without a smile.” Furthermore, “You're Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile” and the character Bert Healy were the inspirations for Alastor's character and singing voice.

The song "Tomorrow" is sung in many media references, including in Roseanne, by Darlene and Becky; by Chandler Bing (Matthew Perry) in Friends, by Reese Witherspoon in Just Like Heaven; by Donkey in the CGI movies Shrek II and Shrek Forever After; and in a commercial for Lowe's Hardware promoting their next-day delivery.

The climax of the animated film Igor involved a giant robot portraying Annie.

Other prominent media references include the following:

  • Producer The 45 King heavily sampled "It's the Hard-Knock Life" from the original Broadway cast recording on rapper Jay-Z's single "Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)" (1998).[76]
  • The NFL Network produced two Super Bowl ads in 2004 and 2005 featuring "Tomorrow". A series of football celebrities who were retired or did not make it to that year's Super Bowl would sing the song, ending with the caption "Tomorrow, we're all undefeated again."[77][78]
  • Comedian Zach Galifianakis lip-synced to a recording of "Tomorrow" during his monologue on the March 12, 2011, episode of Saturday Night Live while dressed as Annie.
  • In The Lego Ninjago Movie, a scene of the character Lloyd returning to his home while reflecting on his life plays "It's the Hard-Knock Life".

Awards and nominations edit

Original Broadway production edit

Year Award Category Nominee Result
1977 Tony Award Best Musical Won
Best Book of a Musical Thomas Meehan Won
Best Original Score Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin Won
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Reid Shelton Nominated
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Andrea McArdle Nominated
Dorothy Loudon Won
Best Direction of a Musical Martin Charnin Nominated
Best Choreography Peter Gennaro Won
Best Scenic Design David Mitchell Won
Best Costume Design Theoni V. Aldredge Won
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Musical Won
Outstanding Book of a Musical Thomas Meehan Won
Outstanding Actor in a Musical Reid Shelton Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Dorothy Loudon Won
Outstanding Director of a Musical Martin Charnin Won
Outstanding Choreography Peter Gennaro Won
Outstanding Music Charles Strouse Nominated
Outstanding Lyrics Martin Charnin Won
Outstanding Costume Design Theoni V. Aldredge Won
1978 Grammy Award Best Cast Show Album Won

1997 Broadway revival edit

Year Award Category Nominee Result
1997 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Nominated

1998 London revival edit

Year Award Category Nominee Result
1999 Laurence Olivier Award Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical Andrew Kennedy Nominated
Best Theatre Choreographer Peter Gennaro Nominated

2013 Broadway revival edit

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2013 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Nominated
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Actor in a Musical Anthony Warlow Nominated

See also edit

References edit

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  62. ^ Levine, Nick (February 28, 2013). "Jay-Z's 'Annie' remake gets Christmas Day 2014 release date". NME.
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  65. ^ a b Pedersen, Erik (June 8, 2021). "'Annie Live!': Taraji P. Henson To Play Miss Hannigan In NBC's Adaptation Of Tony-Winning Musical". Deadline Hollywood.
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  74. ^ "Annie KIDS". Music Theatre International. September 16, 2015.
  75. ^ "Robot Chicken: Maurice Was Caught". IMDB.
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External links edit

  • ​Annie​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  • Annie album; MasterWorks Broadway
  • Annie MTI Shows
  • Annie Jr. MTI Shows
  • Annie Kids MTI Shows

annie, musical, annie, musical, with, music, charles, strouse, lyrics, martin, charnin, book, thomas, meehan, based, 1924, comic, strip, little, orphan, annie, harold, gray, which, turn, inspired, from, poem, little, orphant, annie, james, whitcomb, riley, ori. Annie is a musical with music by Charles Strouse lyrics by Martin Charnin and a book by Thomas Meehan It is based on the 1924 comic strip Little Orphan Annie by Harold Gray which in turn was inspired from the poem Little Orphant Annie by James Whitcomb Riley The original Broadway production opened in 1977 and ran for nearly six years setting a record for the Alvin Theatre now the Neil Simon Theatre 1 It spawned numerous productions in many countries as well as national tours and won seven Tony Awards including for Best Musical The musical s songs Tomorrow and It s the Hard Knock Life are among its most popular musical numbers AnnieOriginal Broadway windowcardMusicCharles StrouseLyricsMartin CharninBookThomas MeehanBasisLittle Orphan Annieby Harold GrayProductions1976 Goodspeed Opera House1977 Broadway1978 West End1978 North American tour1978 US tour 1979 US tour1981 US tour1983 1st West End revival1997 1st Broadway revival1998 2nd West End revival2000 UK tour2005 US tour2006 UK tour2011 UK tour2012 2nd Broadway revival2014 US tour2015 UK tour2017 3rd West End revival 2019 UK tour2022 US tour2023 UK tour 2023 US tourAwardsTony Award for Best Musical Tony Award for Best Original Score Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical Contents 1 Background 2 Plot 2 1 Act 1 2 2 Act 2 3 Characters 4 Notable casts 4 1 Notable Broadway replacements 5 Production history 5 1 Pre Broadway tryout 5 2 Broadway original 5 3 United States national touring companies 5 4 West End original 5 5 UK tour 5 6 Broadway revival 1997 5 7 West End revival 1998 5 8 1999 2000 United States tour 5 9 2000 2001 Australian tour 5 10 2001 2010 UK tours 5 11 2005 10 US national tours 5 12 2nd Broadway revival 2012 14 5 13 2014 25 United States tours 5 14 UK and Ireland tours and West End revival 2015 23 5 15 Hollywood Bowl production 2018 5 16 International productions 6 Stage sequels 7 Musical numbers 8 Recordings 9 Novelizations 9 1 Thomas Meehan 9 2 Leonore Fleischer 10 Film and television 11 Annie Jr 11 1 Stage differences 1977 musical 12 Pop culture references 13 Awards and nominations 13 1 Original Broadway production 13 2 1997 Broadway revival 13 3 1998 London revival 13 4 2013 Broadway revival 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksBackground editCharnin first approached Meehan to write the book of a musical about Little Orphan Annie in 1972 Meehan researched by rereading prints of the comic strip but was unable to find any satisfactory material for a musical other than the characters of Annie Oliver Warbucks and Sandy so he decided to write his own story As Meehan Charnin and Strouse were all from New York and given what he saw as the downbeat mood of the then current Nixon era and Vietnam War Meehan set his story in New York during the similarly downbeat Great Depression Meehan saw the character of Annie as a 20th century American female version of the titular orphan characters created by Charles Dickens in works such as Oliver Twist and David Copperfield with the mystery of Annie s abandonment and unknown parenthood as consistent with a strand of mysteries in Dickens tales Meehan s book was accepted by Charnin and Strouse but considerable material had to be trimmed out material which Meehan would later restore for his novelization 2 Plot editAct 1 edit In 1933 in New York City eleven year old Annie sleeps in an orphanage with many other girls her age When six year old Molly wakes up from a bad dream Annie comforts her by singing about her own parents even though they abandoned her at the orphanage as a baby she holds on to the hope that they will come back for her Maybe Annie decides to escape to find her parents but is caught by Miss Hannigan the cruel keeper of the orphanage To punish Annie s behavior she forces all the girls to clean and they lament the terrible conditions of the orphanage It s the Hard Knock Life Later on Bundles the laundry man comes in to pick up the blankets allowing Annie to escape in his truck Miss Hannigan realizes she s gone and chases after the truck The other orphans cheer her on but await punishment when Hannigan returns Hard Knock Life Reprise Annie escapes running into a friendly stray dog She tells him of better days to come Tomorrow She fools a police officer into believing he is her dog named Sandy Later Annie and Sandy stumble upon a Hooverville a shanty town full of formerly well off people suddenly rendered homeless by the Great Depression They sarcastically toast the former president We d Like to Thank You Herbert Hoover The shanty town is broken up by the cops who take Annie back to the orphanage At the orphanage Miss Hannigan vents her frustration at being surrounded by children Little Girls Grace Farrell the assistant to the billionaire Oliver Warbucks comes to the orphanage asking for an orphan to spend Christmas at his mansion Seeing how poorly Miss Hannigan treats Annie Grace insists on taking her At Warbucks s mansion Grace introduces Annie to the staff and explains that she will have every luxury available I Think I m Gonna Like It Here Oliver Warbucks returns and isn t happy to have Annie in his mansion having assumed all orphans were boys Warbucks instructs Grace to take her to a movie while he works but when he realizes that Annie has never seen New York he decides to take her there himself walking the 45 blocks to the Roxy and seeing New York City in all of its glory N Y C Grace pays Miss Hannigan a visit to tell her that Warbucks wants to officially adopt Annie Hannigan becomes furiously envious that the orphan she hated so much will suddenly have everything Her ne er do well brother Rooster and his girlfriend Lily drop by in hopes of a handout When Miss Hannigan mentions that Annie is going to be adopted by Warbucks Rooster realizes they can use this situation to their advantage Easy Street Having noticed a broken locket around Annie s neck Warbucks buys her a new more expensive one from Tiffany s He wonders whether he is ready for such a big change in his life Why Should I Change A Thing When he offers Annie the locket and attempts to take off the old one Annie bursts into tears as the locket was the only thing left to her by her parents and she still holds out hope that they will return for her Warbucks pledges to find her parents no matter what it takes calling J Edgar Hoover to get the Federal Bureau of Investigation on the job You Won t Be An Orphan For Long Act 2 edit Annie appears on Bert Healy s radio show Maybe Reprise where Warbucks announces that he is offering 50 000 to the couple who can prove they are her parents Healy then sings a song with the Boylan Sisters You re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile At the orphanage the girls are listening to the show They joyously sing along You re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile Reprise A couple claiming to be Annie s parents Ralph and Shirley Mudge arrive at the orphanage In fact they are Rooster and Lily in disguise They believe they can pass themselves off as Annie s parents with Hannigan s help for which she demands half of the money Easy Street Reprise Warbucks brings Annie to Washington D C where she meets President Franklin D Roosevelt Roosevelt and his Cabinet are inspired by her optimism and decide to make it a cornerstone of their administration Tomorrow Cabinet Reprise Once back home Warbucks tells Annie how much he loves her Something Was Missing Because all the people claiming to be her parents were frauds he offers once again to adopt her and Annie gleefully accepts The delighted staff get Annie dressed for the formal adoption proceedings and tell of how her arrival has changed their lives Annie As Judge Louis Brandeis shows up to begin the adoption proceedings Warbucks and Annie dance together I Don t Need Anything But You They are interrupted by Rooster and Lily in disguise The two present forged documents as well as the other half of Annie s locket seemingly confirming their story Warbucks requests that she be allowed to stay one more night and they can take her away on Christmas morning The next morning Annie wonders if her life with her parents will really be as good as her life with Warbucks could have been Maybe Second Reprise Warbucks receives a surprise visit from Roosevelt and his Secret Service The FBI has learned that Annie s parents are actually David and Margaret Bennett who died some time ago Annie truly is an orphan Mr and Mrs Mudge show up to take Annie and the money but are quickly exposed They are arrested by the Secret Service along with Miss Hannigan Annie is adopted by Warbucks who notes that this Christmas is the beginning of a new life for them for the orphans all of whom are adopted by wealthy friends of Warbucks and for the rest of the country thanks to Roosevelt s New Deal A New Deal for Christmas Tomorrow Second Reprise Characters editSource MTI Shows 3 Characters DescriptionOliver Daddy Warbucks Billionaire businessman who opens his home and his heart to Annie Annie Bennett The title character The spunky and optimistic 11 year old orphan who is looking for her birth parents She ends up getting adopted by Oliver Warbucks Grace Farrell Oliver Warbucks faithful secretary who loves Annie from the start Miss Agatha Hannigan The disillusioned orphanage matron She hates children but is fond of alcoholic beverages Daniel Rooster Hannigan Miss Hannigan s younger brother a convict who escaped jail so he could rob his sister and plot to abduct Annie Lily St Regis Rooster s girlfriend an egotistical gold digger She and Rooster pose as Annie s parents so they can fool Warbucks and get their hands on a 50 000 reward Drake The butler at the Warbucks Mansion a good friend to Grace Annie and Warbucks Franklin D Roosevelt President of the United States he aids Warbucks in the search for Annie s parents Upon meeting Annie he is inspired to make a new deal and restore America s economy Molly The youngest orphan Annie s best friend Pepper The bossiest orphan who likes to take control and is rivals with Annie Duffy The oldest orphan who often hangs around with Pepper July The quietest orphan who is mother like to all the other orphans Tessie The crybaby orphan who is known for the line Oh my goodness Kate The shyest orphan who rarely speaks Louis Brandeis Associate Justice of the U S Supreme Court He is called upon to assist in Annie s adoption Bert Healy Radio announcer who agrees to broadcast Annie s search for her parents The Boylan Sisters Singers on the Bert Healy Show who hope to be famous someday Fred McCracken and Wacky A ventriloquist and his dummy who are guests on Bert Healy s Oxydent Hour of Smiles Lt Ward A policeman sent after Annie he finds her in the local Shantytown Hooverville Sandy An abandoned mixed breed dog that once Annie rescues him becomes her companion and pet Bundles The laundry man who initially helps Annie escape Cordell Hull Frances Perkins Louis Howe Harold Ickes and Henry Morgenthau Jr Franklin Roosevelt s Cabinet members who sing Tomorrow Cabinet Reprise with Warbucks and Annie Star To Be An upcoming Broadway star who sings a solo in N Y C Mrs Greer Mrs Pugh Cecile and Annette Warbucks s servants They do a lot of housekeeping and are often supervised by Drake and Grace Dog Catcher and Assistant Dog Catcher Characters who try to catch Sandy Sophie and the Apple Seller Child citizens of Hooverville Kaltenborn and Radio Announcers Announcers on the radio Usherette A female usher who seats Annie Grace and Warbucks in the movie theater Jimmy Johnson A guest on Bert Healy s Oxydent Hour of Smiles who calls himself radio s only masked announcer SFX Man A member of Bert Healy s radio show who controls the sound effects for the show and encourages crowd participation Men and Women of Hooverville Men and women who are homeless and live in shanties in the town of Hooverville Notable casts editCharacter Original Broadway 4 1977 Original West End 5 1978 First US Tour 6 1978 First Broadway Revival 7 1997 Second West End Revival 8 1998 Second Broadway Revival 9 2012 Hollywood Bowl 2018Annie Bennett Andrea McArdle Kathy Jo Kelly Brittny Kissinger Charlene Barton Tasha GoldLibby GoreSophie McShera Lilla Crawford Kaylin HedgesOliver Daddy Warbucks Reid Shelton Stratford Johns Norwood Smith Conrad John Schuck Kevin Colson Anthony Warlow David Alan GrierMiss Agatha Hannigan Dorothy Loudon Sheila Hancock Jane Connell Nell Carter Lesley Joseph Katie Finneran Ana GasteyerGrace Farrell Sandy Faison Judith Paris Kathryn Boule Colleen Dunn Kate Normington Brynn O Malley Lea SalongaDaniel Francis Rooster Hannigan Robert Fitch Kenneth Nelson Gary Beach Jim Ryan Andrew Kennedy Clarke Thorell Roger BartLily St Regis Barbara Erwin Clovissa Newcombe Lisa Raggio Karen Byers Blackwell Gail Marie Sharpter J Elaine Marcos Megan HiltyNotable Broadway replacements edit Original Broadway Annie Shelly Bruce Sarah Jessica Parker Allison Smith Warbucks Keene Curtis Harve Presnell Rhodes Reason Conrad John Schuck 10 Miss Hannigan Alice Ghostley Betty Hutton Ruth Kobart Marcia Lewis Dolores Wilson June Havoc Grace Anne Kerry Rooster Gary Beach Lily Rita RudnerSecond Broadway Revival Annie Taylor Richardson Sadie Sink Warbucks Ron Raines Miss Hannigan Jane Lynch Faith Prince Grace Jenni Barber Lily Kirsten WyattProduction history editThe New York Times estimates that Annie is performed 700 to 900 times each year in the United States 11 Pre Broadway tryout edit Annie had its world premiere on August 10 1976 at the Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam Connecticut under the direction of Michael P Price Kristen Vigard was the first actress to play the title role However the producers soon decided that Vigard s genuinely sweet interpretation was not tough enough for the street smart orphan After a week of performances Vigard was replaced by Andrea McArdle who had been playing one of the other orphans Pepper Vigard went on to become McArdle s Broadway alternate Broadway original edit nbsp Andrea McArdle Reid Shelton and Sandy 1977The original Broadway production opened at the Alvin Theatre on April 21 1977 and starred Andrea McArdle as Annie Reid Shelton as Warbucks Dorothy Loudon as Miss Hannigan and Sandy Faison as Grace Farrell with Danielle Brisebois as Molly the youngest and smallest orphan It was nominated for eleven Tony Awards and won seven including the Best Musical Best Score and Best Book Replacements in the title role on Broadway included Shelley Bruce Sarah Jessica Parker Allison Smith and Alyson Kirk Replacements in the role of Miss Hannigan included Alice Ghostley Dolores Wilson Betty Hutton Marcia Lewis and June Havoc Ann Ungar understudied and played for Dorothy Loudon in the role of Miss Hannigan She also understudied Alice Ghostley and Dolores Wilson 12 Annie was evicted from the Alvin Theatre in September 1981 to make way for Merrily We Roll Along which began its months long journey to finding a new permanent home 13 On September 16 the show moved to ANTA now the August Wilson knowing the production would need to move again due to contractual obligations to the new musical Oh Brother On October 29 Annie moved to the Eugene O Neill Theatre and finally moved to its final home at the Uris now the Gershwin on December 12 to make room for a revised Little Me This move was made possible partly because of the early closing of the revival of My Fair Lady had originally been scheduled to run through the end of that year 13 The show closed on January 2 1983 after a total of 2 377 performances setting a record for the longest running show at the Alvin Theatre now the Neil Simon Theatre until it was surpassed by Hairspray in 2009 1 United States national touring companies edit During the Broadway run of Annie there were four touring companies that were launched from the original production to tour to major North American cities The first national touring company opened in Toronto in March 1978 with Kathy Jo Kelly as Annie Norwood Smith as Daddy Warbucks Jane Connell Ruth Kobart as Miss Hannigan and Gary Beach as Rooster It played in Miami from April 12 to May 13 1978 then continued for a few more cities until it landed in Chicago where it played for 32 weeks In April 1979 it continued on the road in with Mary K Lombardi now in the lead as Annie In the fall of 1980 Theda Stemler took over the part and was replaced in Boston when she grew too old On May 15 1981 Louanne Sirota who had played Annie in the long running Los Angeles production took over the role for four months In August 1981 Becky Snyder became the company s last Annie closing the tour on September 6 1981 The second national touring company sometimes referred to as the West Coast or Los Angeles production opened in San Francisco on June 22 1978 with Patricia Ann Patts starring as Annie Jennifer Cihi as Pepper and the then unknown Molly Ringwald as one of the orphans The show landed in Los Angeles on October 15 1978 for an open ended run at the Shubert Theatre Children s television host Tom Hatten played Franklin D Roosevelt On June 12 1979 Sirota just 9 years old up until that time all Annies had been 11 or older took over the role from Patts Marisa Morell took the role in December 1979 closing the Los Angeles run and continuing on tour with the show through December 1980 Kristi Coombs who played the youngest orphan Molly in the first national touring company then played Annie until this touring company closed in Hawaii on August 22 1982 Alyssa Milano played orphan Kate in 1981 The third national touring company opened in Dallas on October 3 1979 with Rosanne Sorrentino who would later go on to portray Pepper in the 1982 film version in the title role This company toured to 23 cities playing mostly shorter runs of a month or less On March 27 1981 Bridget Walsh took over as Annie Becky Snyder who had closed the first national tour joined this company in the summer of 1982 and stayed with it until it closed in September of that year The fourth national touring company opened on September 11 1981 with Mollie Hall playing Annie This production was a bus and truck tour with a slightly reduced cast that traveled the country and often played in two cities a week This company was still touring when the original Broadway production closed in January 1983 making Kathleen Sisk the final performer to play Annie from the original production team This tour closed in late March 1983 West End original edit The musical premiered in the West End at the Victoria Palace Theatre on May 3 1978 Andrea McArdle the original Broadway Annie played the title role for 40 performances British 12 year old Ann Marie Gwatkin was also cast in the title role and appeared on the original London cast recording The opening night cast and the original cast album recording of children were Claire Hood Jane Collins Dawn Napier Annette Mason Helen Stephenson Jackie Ekers and Linda Brewis Ann Marie Gwatkin alternated with Christine Hyland and four other Annies were cast at this point Anne O Rourke Jacinta Whyte Helen Thorne Tracy Taylor who were to play the role over the next year Suzie Kemeys from South Wales also performed two shows in 1980 81 The first was as July and the second was Annie ITV Wales commissioned two documentaries about this young Welsh girl and her rise from obscurity to a West End leading lady Following this Ann Marie Gwatkin and Jackie Ekers shared the title role followed by many other casts of Annie Miss Hannigan was originally played by Sheila Hancock and later by Maria Charles and Stella Moray Warbucks was played by Stratford Johns and later by Charles West with Deborah Clarke playing Pepper in the first year and Melanie Grant playing Molly Annie closed on November 28 1981 after 1 485 performances UK tour edit The musical transferred to the Bristol Hippodrome for a special Christmas season before touring Britain Because of strict British employment laws for juvenile actors a succession of actresses took on the lead role every four months One of the last girls to perform the role at the Victoria Palace before the show went on tour was 10 year old Claudia Bradley from Leeds who was featured on a 1981 BBC program called Fame She went on to perform on the tour as well 14 15 Broadway revival 1997 edit A 20th anniversary Broadway revival which played at the Martin Beck Theatre now called the Al Hirschfeld Theatre in 1997 entitled Annie the 20th Anniversary 16 starred Nell Carter as Miss Hannigan but controversy surrounded the casting of the titular character The original actress cast in the role Joanna Pacitti was fired and replaced by Brittny Kissinger 17 who had been playing orphan July just two weeks before her Broadway debut while battling bronchitis in Boston The pre Broadway tour was playing the Colonial Theatre then moved on to the Oakdale in Connecticut Public sentiment seemed to side with Pacitti as she was the winner of a highly publicized contest to find a new Annie sponsored by the department store Macy s This incident coupled with the mixed reviews the new staging garnered doomed it to a short run although it was followed by a successful national tour Kissinger then 8 became the youngest actress to ever play Annie on Broadway More controversy surrounding the show involved Nell Carter Carter reportedly was very upset when commercials promoting the show used a different actress Marcia Lewis a white actress as Miss Hannigan The producers claimed that the commercials which were made during an earlier production were too costly to reshoot Carter felt that racism played a part in the decision Maybe they do not want audiences to know Nell Carter is black she told the New York Post However the ads did mention that Carter was in the show It hurts a lot Carter told the Post I ve asked them nicely to stop it it s insulting to me as a black woman 18 Later reports stated that Nell Carter of Broadway s Annie denied Thursday that she called her show s producers racist because they chose to air commercials featuring a previous Miss Hannigan who is white instead of her 19 Her statement released by the Associated Press read Yes it is true that I and my representatives have gone to management on more than one occasion about the commercial and were told that there was nothing they could do about it Carter said in a statement Thursday Therefore I have resigned myself to the fact that this is the way it is The statement also addressed the alleged charges of racism first published in Thursday s New York Post Carter is black I Nell Carter never ever ever accused my producers or anyone in the show of racism she said Producers have said it is too expensive to film a new commercial 20 Carter was later replaced by another white actress Sally Struthers The revival closed on October 19 1997 after 14 previews and 239 performances 21 West End revival 1998 edit The show was revived at the Victoria Palace Theatre running from September 30 1998 to February 28 1999 It starred Lesley Joseph and then Lily Savage the female alter ego of comedian Paul O Grady as Miss Hannigan and Kevin Colson as Warbucks The young girls who played Annie were Charlene Barton Tasha Gold Libby Gore and Sophie McShera 22 Orphans included Dominique Moore as documented on Paddington Green 23 1999 2000 United States tour edit Starting in August 1999 the post Broadway national tour continued with Meredith Anne Bull as Annie In the spring of 2000 Ashley Wieronski who had been playing Duffy moved up to play Annie In July 2000 Dana Benedict took over as Annie 2000 2001 Australian tour edit In 2000 2001 a tour was staged in Sydney Melbourne and Brisbane Anthony Warlow starred as Warbucks with Amanda Muggleton as Miss Hannigan A new song Why Should I Change a Thing was written for Warlow 24 Appearing as Annie in the Sydney production were Rachel Marley and Jodie McGaw A publicist noted that each time the show moves to a new city two casts of seven orphans plus two Annies have to be found to join the adult cast 25 2001 2010 UK tours edit Further UK tours of the show were also staged including a one month run at The Theatre Royal in Lincoln in 2001 Members of the original cast included Kate Winney and Jemma Carlisle as Annie Louise English Grace Vicki Michelle Miss Hannigan and Simon Masterton Smith Warbucks The show proved to be a success and so for the first two tours and the Malaysian Genting Highlands Production the role of Annie was then shared by Faye Spittlehouse and a young Lucy May Barker Miss Hannigan was later performed by Su Pollard and Ruth Madoc and Daddy Warbucks by Mark Wynter This particular production toured from 2001 to 2007 and resumed in September 2008 The last tour of this production ended in 2011 with the role of Miss Hannigan still being played by Pollard David McAlister as Warbucks Victoria Sian Lewis as Annie and Simone Craddock as Grace Farrell 26 2005 10 US national tours edit nbsp Easy Street from the 30th Anniversary National Tour performed by McKenzie Phillips Lily St Regis Scott Willis Rooster Hannigan and Alene Robertson Miss Hannigan Opening in August 2005 a 30th anniversary traveling production of Annie 27 by NETworks Tours embarked on a multi city tour This production was directed by Martin Charnin and choreographed by Liza Gennaro daughter of the show s original choreographer Peter Gennaro This all new production with new set designs by Ming Cho Lee also featured the brand new song Why Should I Change A Thing sung by Warbucks For the first two years of the tour Conrad John Schuck played Warbucks reprising the role he played in the original run of Annie on Broadway as well as the 15th Anniversary National Tour and 1997 Broadway revival Chicago actress Alene Robertson was Miss Hannigan Annie was played by Marissa O Donnell Scott Willis played Rooster Hannigan Elizabeth Broadhurst was Grace Farrell and McKenzie Phillips performed the role of Lily St Regis 28 In December 2006 the tour briefly returned to New York City to play the Theater at Madison Square Garden for Christmas where it broke box office records during the five week stay Kathie Lee Gifford played Miss Hannigan 29 This original Equity tour closed on March 25 2007 at the Hippodrome Theatre in Baltimore Maryland The tour continued non union for several more years and throughout the run of the show there were replacements The 2007 08 tour starred Amanda Balon as Annie who took over as Molly during the second year 30 The 2008 09 cast for the tour featured Tianna Stevens as Annie Early in 2009 Amanda Balon returned temporarily to play the role of Annie until Madison Kerth was rehearsed to play the title role Also returning were Barton Andrews and Meisner Other cast members included Mackenzie Aladjem Molly In the 2009 10 tour Kerth returned as Annie along with most of the previous year s cast adding Jordan Boezem from Spotlight Kids in Sarasota Florida in the role of July 31 32 2nd Broadway revival 2012 14 edit A 35th Anniversary production opened on Broadway in 2012 Thomas Meehan revised the musical with James Lapine directing 33 Lilla Crawford starred as Annie 34 with Katie Finneran as Miss Hannigan 35 and Anthony Warlow making his long awaited Broadway debut as Warbucks 36 Featured cast included Brynn O Malley Clarke Thorell and J Elaine Marcos as Grace Farrell Rooster and Lily St Regis respectively 37 The revival started previews at the Palace Theatre on October 3 2012 and officially opened on November 8 2012 receiving mixed reviews 37 Notable replacements include Jane Lynch and Faith Prince as Miss Hannigan 38 39 On July 30 Taylor Richardson and Sadie Sink both began alternating the role of Annie replacing Crawford 40 This production closed on January 5 2014 after 38 previews and 487 regular performances 41 2014 25 United States tours edit Starting in September 2014 a 40th anniversary traveling production of Annie was launched by TROIKA Entertainment Directed by Martin Charnin the tour kicked off in Detroit Michigan For the first year of the tour Issie Swickle played the title character Annie with Faith Perez as her alternate alongside Gilgamesh Taggett and Lynn Andrews as Warbucks and Miss Hannigan respectively 42 There were many replacements throughout the tour and by the end of it Gilgamesh Taggett was the only remaining original member For most of the second year of the tour Heidi Gray played Annie For the third and final year of the tour Tori Bates played Annie and became the first biracial Annie in a professional production 43 The 40th Anniversary performance was celebrated in Baltimore Maryland on April 21 2017 with Angelina Carballo as Annie 44 The tour came to a close in Boston Massachusetts on May 21 2017 after 745 performances Another tour directed by Jenn Thompson who played Pepper in the original Broadway production began October 4 2022 and ended June 11 2023 with Ellie Rose Pulsifer as the title role Another leg of the tour will begin October 7 2023 and is set to end May 19 2024 with Rainier Trevino playing Annie The tour will close in spring of 2025 after 3 legs of the tour UK and Ireland tours and West End revival 2015 23 edit A new UK and Ireland tour opened at the Theatre Royal Newcastle in July 2015 starring Craig Revel Horwood as Miss Hannigan directed by Nikolai Foster and produced by Michael Harrison and David Ian with new orchestrations by George Dyer The production toured until 2016 with Lesley Joseph appearing at some venues and performances as Miss Hannigan The production opened in London s West End at the Piccadilly Theatre opening on June 5 2017 previews beginning on May 23 for a limited run until January 6 2018 This was Miranda Hart s musical debut as Miss Hannigan until September 17 45 The three girls who shared the main role were Madeleine Haynes reprising her the role from the UK tour Lola Moxom and Ruby Stokes From September 19 for a limited 10 week run Craig Revel Horwood returned to the role of Miss Hannigan reprising his role from the 2015 16 UK and Ireland tour The production extended its limited run with Meera Syal as Miss Hannigan from November 27 46 through to the show s conclusion on February 18 2018 when it closed to make way for the musical adaptation of Strictly Ballroom 47 The production began another UK and Ireland tour in February 2019 at the Manchester Opera House starring Anita Dobson as Miss Hannigan alternating venues with Craig Revel Horwood and Jodie Prenger Another UK and Ireland tour began at the Curve in Leicester in February 2023 starring Zoe Akinyosade Harlie Barthram and Sharangi Gnanavarathan sharing the title role with Craig Revel Horwood Paul O Grady Jodie Prenger and Elaine C Smith alternating venues as Miss Hannigan after previously performing the role in previous tours and West End runs After performing the role in Newcastle Upon Tyne and Edinburgh O Grady died on March 28 2023 Hollywood Bowl production 2018 edit For its annual fully staged musical event the Hollywood Bowl produced a limited run of Annie from July 27 29 2018 directed by Michael Arden 48 The cast included Kaylin Hedges as the title role Roger Bart as Rooster Ana Gasteyer as Miss Hannigan David Alan Grier as Warbucks Megan Hilty as Lily St Regis Lea Salonga as Grace Ali Stroker as Star to Be and Steven Weber as Franklin D Roosevelt 49 International productions edit Annie has been produced professionally in Canada 1978 Quebec French adaptation 2022 Argentina 1982 a Australia 1978 a 2000 2011 a 2012 Denmark 1982 Germany 1999 Hungary 1998 Ireland 2003 2016 b Israel 2001 a 2010 Italy 1982 2006 Japan 1979 1986 present c United Kingdom 1978 a 1983 1998 tours from 2000 to 2010 Mexico 1979 a 1991 2010 2015 Netherlands 1997 1999 a 2005 2007 a 2012 2013 a Norway 1991 a 2004 a 2013 Philippines 1980 1984 1987 1998 2016 Portugal 1982 a 2010 Spain 1982 a 2000 a 2010 a 2019 a Sweden 1979 Stockholm 1999 Stockholm 2005 2006 Malmo a Peru 1986 1997 2002 Zimbabwe 2003 Russia 2002 2009 Colombia 2006 South Korea 1984 1996 2006 2007 2010 2011 2018 2019 Hong Kong 2012 Belgium 1992 2008 2009 2012 Poland 1989 United Arab Emirates 2009 Denmark 2011 Puerto Rico 2012 Singapore 2012 Greece 1981 1982 2005 2007 2013 2015 2018 2019 Athens 2007 2008 Thessaloniki and Brazil 2018 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Indicates the production made an official cast recording In Ireland in the 2016 production the actresses playing Annie and Molly Aoife McNamara amp Simone McInerney alternated between the roles In Japan a special demo recording of selected songs is made each year with the new actress playing Annie Stage sequels editThe first attempt at a sequel Annie 2 Miss Hannigan s Revenge opened at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D C in December 1989 to universally disastrous reviews Extensive reworking of the script and score proved futile and the project was abandoned 50 In 1993 a second attempt with a different plot and score titled Annie Warbucks was developed in a workshop at the Goodspeed Opera House where the original Annie premiered in 1976 under the direction of Michael P Price It subsequently opened at the Off Broadway Variety Arts Theatre where it ran for 200 performances Musical numbers editAct IOverture Orchestra Maybe Annie and Orphans It s the Hard Knock Life Annie and Orphans It s the Hard Knock Life Reprise Orphans Tomorrow Annie We d Like to Thank You Herbert Hoover Ensemble Little Girls Miss Hannigan Little Girls Reprise Miss Hannigan I Think I m Gonna Like It Here Grace Annie Ensemble N Y C Warbucks Grace Annie Star to Be Ensemble N Y C Reprise Lullaby Warbucks You Make Me Happy Miss Hannigan Grace Easy Street Rooster Miss Hannigan and Lily You Won t Be an Orphan for Long Grace and Warbucks Why Should I Change a Thing Warbucks Maybe Reprise Annie Act II Maybe Reprise II Annie You re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile Bert Healy and the Boylan Sisters You re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile Children Reprise Orphans Easy Street Reprise Rooster Miss Hannigan and Lily Tomorrow Cabinet Reprise Annie Roosevelt Warbucks and Cabinet Tomorrow Cabinet Reprise II Roosevelt and the Cabinet Something Was Missing Warbucks Annie Grace Drake and Staff I Don t Need Anything But You Warbucks and Annie Maybe Reprise III Annie New Deal for Christmas Warbucks Grace Annie Roosevelt Orphans and staff Tomorrow Finale Company This number was added as a showcase for Nell Carter in the 1997 Broadway revival This number hasn t appeared in any subsequent productions This number was added as a showcase for Anthony Warlow in a 2000 Australian production and has since become an optional part of the show as it notably did not appear in the 2012 Broadway revival 51 Recordings editThe original Broadway cast recording was made on April 25 1977 at the 30th Street Studio in New York City 52 and released that year by Columbia Records A CD containing bonus tracks was released on September 15 1998 by Sony ASIN B00000AG6Z The 1995 London studio cast recording featuring the National Symphony Orchestra stars Sarah French as Annie Kim Criswell as Miss Hannigan and Ron Raines as Warbucks A 30th anniversary cast recording was released in 2008 on Time Life Records An all star cast of former Annie cast members includes Carol Burnett Sally Struthers Kathie Lee Gifford Andrea McArdle John Schuck Harve Presnell Gary Beach and Amanda Balon The rest of the cast is made up of the members of the 30th Anniversary Tour This recording is a double CD set and includes the entire show as it is performed now on the first disc The second disc includes songs from the sequel Annie 2 Miss Hannigan s Revenge as well as songs that were cut from or added to the original production There is also a song from the 1977 Annie Christmas special The booklet is made up of original drawings by Philo Barnhart who is the creator of Ariel and Ursula in The Little Mermaid and is presented in a comic book style 53 The album was produced by music producer Robert Sher Novelizations editThomas Meehan edit In 1980 Macmillan Books published Meehan s novelization of his script for the musical later reprinted by Puffin Books in 2014 Several of the lyrics from songs from the show were adapted into dialogue and monologue for the novelization The main lyrics of Tomorrow are depicted as being Annie s personal mantra while Little Girls becomes a self pitying monologue by Miss Hannigan alone in her office moments before Annie is returned to her and then taken away by Grace Farrell On the other hand You re Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile is replaced by the slogan Smile darn ya smile and others such as It s the Hard Knock Life are dispensed with entirely Meehan used the novel to restore material cut from his original storyline and develop the Annie story into his original concept of what he considered to be a 20th century female American version of Charles Dickens Oliver Twist 2 The novel goes into greater depth regarding the backgrounds of many of the characters and particularly about hardship at the orphanage at which brutal beatings and emotional abuse from Miss Hannigan are everyday occurrences Unlike the high camp portrayal of Miss Hannigan in most productions of the musical the novelization in the tradition of Dickens Oliver Twist emphatically depicts her as a truly sinister and malevolent villainess a skinny hatchet faced woman with short jet black hair who reminded the orphans of a particularly unpleasant looking and all too real Halloween witch 54 A greater emphasis is placed on the sheer drudgery and illegality of the orphans sewing labours in the orphanage basement However whereas in the musical the orphans are not enrolled in school until the final scene in the novelization they attend a public school PS62 where they suffer from snobbery from teachers and harassment from non orphan pupils particularly from a spoiled rich girl named Myrtle Vandenmeer The legal name of Rooster s girlfriend Lily St Regis is given in the book as being Muriel Jane Gumper 54 55 In the novel Annie spends several months on the run from the orphanage initially spending the winter as a resident staff in Bixby s Beanery a low grade cafe run by couple Fred and Gert Bixby before escaping after she finds Sandy She then spends several months living in Hooverville with Sophie and the Apple Seller who is named as G Randall Randy Whitworth Jr a former stockbroker left destitute by the Depression who in the novelization are adult characters and a couple It is revealed at the end that Randy Sophie and all the other Hoovervillites were released from prison and given jobs and homes by Warbucks as gratitude for taking care of Annie Also reappearing at the end of the book is Sandy previously written out of the book while fleeing police during the raid on the Hooverville who it transpires was successfully traced by agents from Pinkerton hired by Warbucks 54 55 Leonore Fleischer edit A second novelization of Annie by Leonore Fleischer was published by Random House in 1982 This was a tie in with the first film and was adapted directly from the screenplay 56 57 Film and television editMain articles Annie 1982 film Annie 1999 film Annie 2014 film and Annie Live Columbia Pictures acquired the film rights in 1977 for 9 5 million the most expensive at the time for a stage musical 58 The film was released in 1982 directed by John Huston starring Albert Finney as Warbucks Carol Burnett as Miss Hannigan Ann Reinking as Grace Farrell Tim Curry as Rooster Bernadette Peters as Lily and newcomer Aileen Quinn as Annie A sequel Annie A Royal Adventure was made for television in 1995 It starred Ashley Johnson Joan Collins George Hearn and Ian McDiarmid Aside from a reprise of Tomorrow there are no songs in it A made for TV Wonderful World of Disney movie version produced by The Walt Disney Company and directed by Rob Marshall was broadcast in 1999 it starred Victor Garber as Daddy Warbucks Kathy Bates as Miss Hannigan Audra McDonald as Grace Farrell Alan Cumming as Rooster Kristin Chenoweth as Lily and newcomer Alicia Morton as Annie In January 2011 Will Smith announced plans for a remake of Annie set in the present day produced with his wife Jada Pinkett Smith and rapper Jay Z for release by Columbia Pictures 59 This version was to star the Smiths daughter Willow as Annie but as she had aged out of the part before production began she was replaced by Quvenzhane Wallis 60 Directed by Will Gluck and released in 2014 61 62 this version of Annie also stars Jamie Foxx as Will Stacks an update of Warbucks 63 Rose Byrne as Grace Farrell and Cameron Diaz as Miss Hannigan 64 None of these films contain the songs We d Like To Thank You Herbert Hoover You Won t Be an Orphan for Long Annie or A New Deal for Christmas The 1982 film additionally omits N Y C and Something was Missing while adding four new songs The 2014 film contains the songs common to both films remixed to various degrees while adding three new songs A documentary film Life After Tomorrow was directed and produced by one of the original Broadway and national tour orphans Julie Stevens and partner Gil Cates Jr It reunites more than 40 women who played orphans in the show and reveals the highs and lows of their experiences as child actresses in a cultural phenomenon The film premiered on Showtime and was released on DVD in 2008 In May 2021 NBC announced a live television production of Annie with Robert Greenblatt and Neil Meron as executive producers as a holiday event in 2021 The production was aired on December 2 of that year 65 It was directed by Lear deBessonet 66 and starred Celina Smith as Annie Taraji P Henson as Miss Hannigan Harry Connick Jr as Oliver Warbucks Nicole Scherzinger as Grace Farrell Tituss Burgess as Rooster Hannigan and Megan Hilty as Lily St Regis 65 67 68 69 70 71 Annie Jr editAnnie Jr is a musical licensed by Music Theatre International s Broadway Junior collection specially edited to be performed by children in a shortened form It is performed internationally every year by acting academies programs schools and theatre camps 72 73 MTI also licenses another youth version of the show called Annie KIDS a 30 minute length version meant for elementary aged performers 74 Stage differences 1977 musical edit The songs We d Like to Thank You Herbert Hoover A New Deal for Christmas Something Was Missing and Tomorrow Cabinet Reprise were cut There is only one version of You re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile which is sung by the orphans There are only two Maybe reprises The song You won t Be an Orphan For Long only features Annie and Daddy Warbucks The songs Easy Street NYC and Little Girls were also shortened Many of the songs have been transposed down a few keys to make them easier for amateur child actors to sing The last verses of Little Girls was removed and added again as a reprise later in the same scene Pop culture references editAnnie s popularity is reflected in its numerous mentions in popular media References to the show appear in films such as Austin Powers Goldmember where Dr Evil and Mini Me perform Jay Z s version of the song Hard Knock Life and in the 1994 John Waters dark comedy Serial Mom where a woman is bludgeoned to death with a leg of mutton by the titular serial killer while watching the 1982 film version and singing along It is parodied in Reefer Madness where President Franklin D Roosevelt shows up as the deus ex machina at the end of the satirical musical to tell the assembled crowd A little orphan girl once told me that the sun would come out tomorrow Her adopted father was a powerful billionaire so I suppressed the urge to laugh in her face but now by gum I think she may have been on to something References in television series include In an episode episode needed of House House references little orphan Annie and Oliver Twist An episode of SCTV features a spoof commercial of the original cast now older adults still playing their kid roles performing the 8 000th performance of Annie Stephanie Tanner of Full House sings songs from the musical in several episodes On 30 Rock Liz Lemon is discovered in her office after hours listening to music on her headset and singing Maybe The stop motion comedy show Robot Chicken parodied Annie in episodes including Maurice Was Caught 75 In Makeover an episode of Glee Sarah Jessica Parker as Isabelle Wright with Kurt Hummel and Rachel Berry sing You re Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile In the Netflix series Haters Back Off Miranda Sings and her family attempt to mount a backyard production of Annie with extensive book and score revisions in the episode Staring in a Musicall In the animated show Hazbin Hotel the character Alastor references Annie by telling another character Smile my dear You know you re never fully dressed without a smile Furthermore You re Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile and the character Bert Healy were the inspirations for Alastor s character and singing voice The song Tomorrow is sung in many media references including in Roseanne by Darlene and Becky by Chandler Bing Matthew Perry in Friends by Reese Witherspoon in Just Like Heaven by Donkey in the CGI movies Shrek II and Shrek Forever After and in a commercial for Lowe s Hardware promoting their next day delivery The climax of the animated film Igor involved a giant robot portraying Annie Other prominent media references include the following Producer The 45 King heavily sampled It s the Hard Knock Life from the original Broadway cast recording on rapper Jay Z s single Hard Knock Life Ghetto Anthem 1998 76 The NFL Network produced two Super Bowl ads in 2004 and 2005 featuring Tomorrow A series of football celebrities who were retired or did not make it to that year s Super Bowl would sing the song ending with the caption Tomorrow we re all undefeated again 77 78 Comedian Zach Galifianakis lip synced to a recording of Tomorrow during his monologue on the March 12 2011 episode of Saturday Night Live while dressed as Annie In The Lego Ninjago Movie a scene of the character Lloyd returning to his home while reflecting on his life plays It s the Hard Knock Life Awards and nominations editOriginal Broadway production edit Year Award Category Nominee Result1977 Tony Award Best Musical WonBest Book of a Musical Thomas Meehan WonBest Original Score Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin WonBest Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Reid Shelton NominatedBest Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Andrea McArdle NominatedDorothy Loudon WonBest Direction of a Musical Martin Charnin NominatedBest Choreography Peter Gennaro WonBest Scenic Design David Mitchell WonBest Costume Design Theoni V Aldredge WonDrama Desk Award Outstanding Musical WonOutstanding Book of a Musical Thomas Meehan WonOutstanding Actor in a Musical Reid Shelton NominatedOutstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Dorothy Loudon WonOutstanding Director of a Musical Martin Charnin WonOutstanding Choreography Peter Gennaro WonOutstanding Music Charles Strouse NominatedOutstanding Lyrics Martin Charnin WonOutstanding Costume Design Theoni V Aldredge Won1978 Grammy Award Best Cast Show Album Won1997 Broadway revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result1997 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Nominated1998 London revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result1999 Laurence Olivier Award Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical Andrew Kennedy NominatedBest Theatre Choreographer Peter Gennaro Nominated2013 Broadway revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result2013 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical NominatedDrama Desk Award Outstanding Actor in a Musical Anthony Warlow NominatedSee also edit nbsp Theatre portal nbsp New York City portalReferences edit a b Morrison William 1999 Broadway Theatres History and Architecture trade paperback Dover Books on Architecture Mineola New York Dover Publications pp 154 55 ISBN 0 486 40244 4 a b Meehan Thomas 2013 Annie Penguin Young Readers Group ISBN 978 0 698 13947 3 Annie Cast Information mtishows com accessed September 2 2019 Annie Broadway Musical Original IBDB www ibdb com Retrieved January 18 2021 Annie Original West End Cast 1978 West End www broadwayworld com Retrieved January 18 2021 Annie Broadway Musical First National Tour IBDB www ibdb com Retrieved January 18 2021 Annie Broadway Musical 1997 Revival IBDB www ibdb com Retrieved January 18 2021 Credits for Annie London Revival 1998 Ovrtur Retrieved January 18 2021 Annie Broadway Musical 2012 Revival IBDB www ibdb com Retrieved January 18 2021 1 Healy Patrick September 6 2012 Annie Cinderella and Matilda Come to Broadway The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 25 2019 Ann Ungar Broadway Cast amp Staff IBDB com a b Annie at Last Finds a Home at Uris Annie Finds A Home at Uris The New York Times November 19 1981 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 22 2023 Added by Julie Stevens on November 23 2008 at 12 58am London Claudia Bradley annieorphans com Retrieved March 8 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link BBC Programme Index genome ch bbc co uk Retrieved March 8 2022 Ippolito Caren January 22 1998 Girl Adopts Acting as Current Role The Tampa Tribune p 1 Good Times Home BrittnyKissinger com May 14 2010 Archived from the original on September 13 2019 Retrieved August 25 2019 Annie Yesterday Today and Tomorrow All About Broadway s Favorite Little Orphan broadway com Retrieved November 10 2012 Nell Carter Denies Charges of Racism May 16 2013 Archived from the original on May 16 2013 Retrieved August 25 2019 Names in the News Associated Press Domestic News Dateline New York May 23 1997 Annie 1997 Revival Playbill Vault Archived from the original on November 17 2015 Annie Albemarle Archive Archived from the original on August 21 2006 Retrieved August 25 2019 Moore Dominique December 26 2008 Paddington Green Ep1 Dominique Moore and Lia Saville archived from the original on December 21 2021 retrieved July 11 2019 Anthony Warlow australiannetworkentertainment com 2006 Archived from the original on April 1 2008 Retrieved August 25 2019 Orphan Annie set to run Gold Coast Bulletin Australia November 30 2000 Annie 2005 Tour theatre4u co uk 2005 Archived from the original on December 15 2005 Retrieved August 25 2019 Sunny Annie Opens Sunday At The Paramount The Seattle Post Intelligencer August 19 2005 p 29 Morgan Terry Legit Reviews Road Annie Pantages Theater Hollywood Variety October 17 2005 October 23 2005 p 55 Annie Returns to NYC Kathie Lee Gifford Seeks Easy Street December 6 2006 Welcome to Next Generation Kids nextgenkids com Jones Chris January 21 2010 Heartfelt Tomorrow is here today at Auditorium chicagotribune com Retrieved August 25 2019 Annie The Broadway Musical on National Tour annieontour com 2009 Archived from the original on April 27 2009 Retrieved August 25 2019 Jones Kenneth October 13 2010 James Lapine Will Direct Annie on Broadway in 2012 Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 Gans Andrew April 27 2012 Lilla Crawford Will Be Annie On Broadway Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 Breaking News Two Time Tony Award Winner Katie Finneran is Miss Hannigan in ANNIE BroadwayWorld com May 25 2012 Retrieved August 25 2019 Jones Kenneth June 3 2012 G day Daddy Australian Star Anthony Warlow Lands Role of Annie s Warbucks Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 a b Jones Kenneth June 6 2012 Annie Gets Its Grace Rooster and Lily Clarke Thorell and J Elaine Marcos Will Be on Easy Street Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 BREAKING NEWS Jane Lynch to Replace Katie Finneran as Miss Hannigan in ANNIE Beginning May 16 BroadwayWorld com February 20 2013 Retrieved August 25 2019 Faith Prince to Take Over for Jane Lynch as Miss Hannigan in ANNIE on July 19 BroadwayWorld com June 19 2013 Retrieved August 25 2019 Gioia Michael July 30 2013 Taylor Richardson and Sadie Sink Share the Role of Broadway s Annie Beginning July 30 Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 Hetrick Adam January 5 2014 Broadway Revival of Annie Closes Jan 5 at the Palace Theatre Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 Gans Andrew August 12 2014 Complete Casting Announced for National Tour of Annie Itinerary Revealed Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 Clement Olivia September 20 2016 An Unexpected Dream Come True For The New History Making Annie Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 Smith Tim April 19 2017 Annie tour to play Baltimore on 40th anniversary of show s Broadway opening baltimoresun com Retrieved August 25 2019 Miranda Hart to make West End debut in Annie musical The Guardian February 16 2017 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved February 16 2017 Meera Syal to play Miss Hannigan in Annie October 27 2017 Retrieved December 2 2017 Craig Revel Horwood to replace Miranda Hart in Annie WhatsOnStage com August 4 2017 Gans Andrew February 21 2018 Michael Arden Will Direct Annie at the Hollywood Bowl Playbill com Gans Andrew Hollywood Bowl Annie With Ana Gasteyer David Alan Grier and Megan Hilty Begins July 27 playbill July 27 2018 Rothstein Mervyn January 16 1990 Troubled Annie 2 Closing Out of Town Revisions Planned The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 25 2019 Annie Broadway Musical 2012 Revival IBDB com Annie Cast Album castalbums org accessed November 13 2010 Jones Kenneth May 30 2008 Two CD Annie Package Includes New Recording of Complete Score Plus Obscurities Playbill Retrieved August 25 2019 a b c Annie An Old Fashioned Story by Thomas Meehan Macmillan Books 1980 ISBN 0025838504 a b Meehan Thomas October 2 2014 Annie Penguin Books Limited p 5 ISBN 978 0 14 136054 6 Fleischer Leonore 1982 Annie Random House ISBN 978 0 345 30451 3 Annie www goodreads com Annie at the American Film Institute Catalog Stewart Andrew January 19 2011 Will Smith Sony exploring Annie Redux Variety Retrieved January 20 2011 Rottenberg Josh February 24 2013 Beasts of the Southern Wild breakout Quvenzhane Wallis to star in new big screen Annie Entertainment Weekly Retrieved February 24 2013 Highfill Samantha February 27 2013 Quvenzhane Wallis Annie to be released Christmas 2014 Entertainment Weekly Retrieved February 27 2013 Levine Nick February 28 2013 Jay Z s Annie remake gets Christmas Day 2014 release date NME Kit Borys April 29 2013 Jamie Foxx in Talks to Star in Sony s Annie Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved August 25 2019 Finke Nikki June 27 2013 Cameron Diaz Signed For Annie To Play Miss Hannigan After Sandra Bullock Passes Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 25 2019 a b Pedersen Erik June 8 2021 Annie Live Taraji P Henson To Play Miss Hannigan In NBC s Adaptation Of Tony Winning Musical Deadline Hollywood Evans Greg May 12 2021 Annie Live Musical Event Gets 2021 Holiday Season Broadcast On NBC Deadline Hollywood Retrieved May 12 2021 NBC s Annie Live Scores Big with Harry Connick Jr as Oliver Daddy Warbucks in Dec 2 Live Musical Extravaganza Press release NBC June 28 2021 via The Futon Critic Evans Greg August 5 2021 Nicole Scherzinger Joins Cast Of NBC s Annie Live Deadline Hollywood Del Rosario Alexandra August 11 2021 Tituss Burgess Joins Cast Of NBC s Annie Live Musical Event Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 11 2021 Bjornson Greta August 24 2021 Annie Live Casts Celina Smith in Title Role So Excited for This Journey to Start PEOPLE com Retrieved August 25 2021 Evans Greg November 12 2021 Megan Hilty Steps In As Replacement For Covid Struck Jane Krakowski In Annie Live Deadline Retrieved December 1 2021 Annie JR Music Theatre International September 16 2015 Annie comics Tribune Content Agency February 6 2019 Retrieved August 25 2019 Annie KIDS Music Theatre International September 16 2015 Robot Chicken Maurice Was Caught IMDB Hard Knock Life Ghetto Anthem by Jay Z Songfacts Cowboys Jones Parcells sing in Super Bowl XXXVIII commercial NFL News April 2 2007 Archived from the original on April 2 2007 Retrieved August 25 2019 NFL Network Tomorrow commercial on YouTubeExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Annie musical nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Annie musical Annie at the Internet Broadway Database Annie album MasterWorks Broadway Annie MTI Shows Annie Jr MTI Shows Annie Kids MTI Shows Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Annie musical amp oldid 1186322663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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