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Cabaret (musical)

Cabaret is an American musical with music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb, and a book by Joe Masteroff. It is based on the 1951 play I Am a Camera by John Van Druten, which in turn was based on the 1939 novel Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood.

Cabaret
Original Broadway promotional poster by Tom Morrow
MusicJohn Kander
LyricsFred Ebb
BookJoe Masteroff
Basis
PremiereOctober 10, 1966: Shubert Theatre, Boston
Productions
See list
  • 1966 Boston
  • 1966 Broadway
  • 1967 US tour
  • 1968 West End
  • 1969 US tour
  • 1986 West End revival
  • 1987 US tour
  • 1987 Broadway revival
  • 1989 US tour
  • 1998 Broadway revival
  • 1999 North American tour
  • 2006 West End revival
  • 2008 UK tour
  • 2012 UK tour
  • 2012 West End revival
  • 2013 UK Tour
  • 2014 Broadway revival
  • 2016 North American tour
  • 2017 UK tour
  • 2019 UK tour
  • 2021 West End revival
  • 2024 Broadway revival
Awards

Set in 1929–1930 Berlin during the twilight of the Jazz Age as the Nazis rise to power, the musical focuses on the hedonistic nightlife at the seedy Kit Kat Klub and revolves around American writer Clifford Bradshaw's relations with English cabaret performer Sally Bowles. A subplot involves the doomed romance between German boarding house owner Fräulein Schneider and her elderly suitor Herr Schultz, a Jewish fruit vendor. Overseeing the action is the Master of Ceremonies at the Kit Kat Klub, and the club itself serves as a metaphor for ominous political developments in late Weimar Germany.

The original Broadway production opened on November 20, 1966, at the Broadhurst Theatre in New York City and became a box office hit that ran for 1,166 performances. The award-winning musical inspired numerous subsequent productions as well as the 1972 film of the same name.

Background edit

Historical basis edit

 
 
Writer Christopher Isherwood (left) and chanteuse Jean Ross (right) photographed in the 1930s.

The events depicted in the 1966 musical are derived from Anglo-American writer Christopher Isherwood's autobiographical tales of his colorful escapades in the Weimar Republic.[1][2] In 1929, Isherwood visited Weimar-era Berlin during the final months of the Golden Twenties.[3] He relocated to Berlin to avail himself of boy prostitutes and to enjoy the city's orgiastic Jazz Age cabarets.[4][5] He socialized with a coterie of gay writers that included Stephen Spender, Paul Bowles,[a] and W.H. Auden.[8] At the time, Isherwood viewed the rise of fascism in Germany with political indifference[b] and instead focused on writing his first novel.[11][12]

In Berlin, Isherwood shared modest lodgings with 19-year-old British flapper Jean Ross,[c] an aspiring film actress who earned her living as a chanteuse in lesbian bars and second-rate cabarets.[14][15] While room-mates at Nollendorfstrasse 17 in Schöneberg,[16] a 27-year-old Isherwood settled into a sexual relationship with a 16-year-old German boy,[17][18] and Ross became pregnant after engaging in a series of sexual liaisons.[19][20] She believed the father of the child to be jazz pianist and later film actor Peter van Eyck.[20]

As a personal favor to Ross, Isherwood pretended to be her heterosexual impregnator in order to facilitate an abortion procedure.[21] Ross nearly died as a result of the botched abortion due to the doctor's incompetence.[20][22] Following the procedure, Isherwood visited an ailing Ross in a Berlin hospital. Wrongly assuming the shy gay author to be her heterosexual partner, the hospital staff despised him for forcing Ross to undergo a near-fatal abortion. These tragicomic events later inspired Isherwood to write his 1937 novella Sally Bowles and serves as its narrative climax.[23][24]

While Ross recovered from the botched abortion procedure, the political situation rapidly deteriorated in Weimar Germany as the incipient Nazi Party grew stronger day by day.[25] "There was a sensation of doom to be felt in the Berlin streets," Spender recalled.[25][26] As Berlin's daily scenes increasingly featured "poverty, unemployment, political demonstrations and street fighting between the forces of the extreme left and the extreme right,"[27] Isherwood, Ross, Spender, and other British nationals realized that they must leave the politically volatile country as soon as possible.[28]

Two weeks after Adolf Hitler implemented the Enabling Act which cemented his dictatorship, Isherwood fled Germany and returned to England on April 5, 1933.[29][30] Afterwards, the Nazis shuttered most of Berlin's seedy cabarets,[d] and many of Isherwood's cabaret acquaintances fled abroad or perished in concentration camps.[32] These events served as the genesis for Isherwood's Berlin stories. In 1951, playwright John Van Druten adapted Isherwood's 1939 novel Goodbye to Berlin into the Broadway play I Am a Camera which in turn became a 1955 film starring Laurence Harvey and Julie Harris.[33]

Musical development edit

 
Julie Andrews was offered the role of Sally Bowles, but her manager refused due to the character's immorality.

In early 1963, producer David Black commissioned English composer and lyricist Sandy Wilson to undertake a musical adaptation of Van Druten's 1951 play I Am a Camera.[34] Black hoped that singer Julie Andrews would agree to star in the adaptation, but Andrews' manager refused to allow her to accept the role of Sally Bowles due to the character's immorality.[35] By the time Wilson completed his work, however, Black's option on both the 1951 Van Druten play and its source material by Isherwood had lapsed and been acquired by rival Broadway producer Harold Prince.[36] Prince wished to create a gritty adaptation of Isherwood's stories that drew parallels between the spiritual bankruptcy of Germany in the 1920s and contemporary social problems in the United States at a time "when the struggle for civil rights for black Americans was heating up as a result of nonviolent but bold demonstrations being held in the Deep South."[37]

Prince hired playwright Joe Masteroff to work on the adaptation.[38] Both men believed that Wilson's score failed to capture the carefree hedonism of the Jazz Age in late 1920s Berlin.[36] They wanted a score that "evoked the Berlin of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya."[36] Consequently, Prince invited the songwriting team of John Kander and Fred Ebb to join the project.[36] Kander and Ebb envisioned the work as a dramatic play preceded by a prologue of songs describing the Berlin atmosphere from various points of view. As the composers distributed the songs between scenes, they realized the story could be told in the structure of a more traditional book musical, and they replaced several songs with tunes more relevant to the plot.[36]

For the musical adaptation, playwright Joe Masteroff significantly altered Isherwood's original characters.[39] He transformed the English protagonist into an American writer named Clifford Bradshaw; the antisemitic landlady became a tolerant woman with a Jewish beau who owned a fruit store; they cut various supporting characters and added new characters such as the Nazi smuggler Ernst Ludwig[e] for dramatic purposes.[41][42] The musical ultimately expressed two stories in one: the first, a revue centered on the decadence of the Kit Kat Klub, for which Hal Prince created the Master of Ceremonies (Emcee) character played by Joel Grey; the second, a story set in the society outside the club, thus juxtaposing the lives of the characters based on Isherwood's real-life associates and acquaintances with the seedy club.[43][44]

In fall 1966, the musical entered rehearsals.[45] After viewing one of the last rehearsals before the company headed to Boston for the pre-Broadway run, Prince's friend Jerome Robbins suggested cutting the songs outside the cabaret, but Prince ignored his advice.[45] In Boston, lead actress Jill Haworth struggled with her characterization of Sally Bowles.[46][47] Critics thought Sally's blonde hair and white dress suggested a debutante at a senior prom instead of a cabaret singer, so Sally became a brunette before the show opened on Broadway.[46][47]

Prince staged the show in an unusual way for the time.[48] As the audience entered the theater, they saw the curtain raised, exposing a stage with only a large mirror that reflected the auditorium.[49][50] Instead of an overture, a drum roll and cymbal crash introduced the opening number. The show mixed dialogue scenes with expository songs and standalone cabaret numbers that provided social commentary. This innovative concept initially surprised audiences.[51] Over time, they discerned the distinction between the two and appreciated the rationale behind them.[51]

Synopsis edit

Act I edit

 

{{{annotations}}}

 
The Kit Kat Klub is intended to evoke the many Weimar-era cabarets in Berlin.

At the twilight of the Jazz Age in Berlin, the incipient Nazi Party is growing stronger. The Kit Kat Klub is a seedy cabaret—a place of decadent celebration. The club's Master of Ceremonies, or Emcee,[f] together with the cabaret girls and waiters, warm up the audience ("Willkommen"). Meanwhile, a young American writer named Clifford Bradshaw arrives via a railway train in Berlin. He has journeyed to the city to work on a new novel. Cliff encounters Ernst Ludwig,[e] a German smuggler who offers him black market work and recommends a boarding house. At the boarding house, the proprietress Fräulein Schneider offers Cliff a room for one hundred reichsmarks, but he can only pay fifty. After a brief debate, she relents and allows Cliff to live there for fifty marks. Fräulein Schneider observes that she has learned to take whatever life offers ("So What?").

When Cliff visits the Kit Kat Klub, the Emcee introduces an English chanteuse, Sally Bowles, who performs a flirtatious number ("Don't Tell Mama").[g] Afterward, she asks Cliff to recite poetry for her, and he recites Ernest Thayer's mock-heroic poem "Casey at the Bat". Cliff offers to escort Sally home, but she says that her boyfriend Max, the club's owner, is too jealous.[h] Sally performs her final number at the Kit Kat Klub aided by a female ensemble of jazz babies ("Mein Herr"). The cabaret ensemble performs a song and dance, calling each other on inter-table phones and inviting each other for dances and drinks ("The Telephone Song").[i]

The next day at the boarding house, Cliff has just finished giving an English lesson to Ernst when Sally arrives. Max has fired her and thrown her out, and now she has no place to live. Sally asks Cliff if she can live in his room. At first he resists, but she convinces him to take her in ("Perfectly Marvelous"). The Emcee and two female companions sing a song ("Two Ladies") that comments on Cliff and Sally's new living arrangement. Herr Schultz, an elderly Jewish fruit-shop owner who lives in the boarding house, gives a pineapple to Fräulein Schneider as a romantic gesture ("It Couldn't Please Me More"). In the Kit Kat Klub, a young waiter starts to sing a song—a patriotic anthem to the Fatherland that slowly descends into a darker, Nazi-inspired marching song ("Tomorrow Belongs to Me"). He initially sings a cappella, before the customers and the band join in.[j]

Months later, Cliff and Sally are still living together and have grown intimate.[c] Cliff knows that he is in a "dream", but he enjoys living with Sally too much to come to his senses ("Why Should I Wake Up?"). Sally reveals that she is pregnant, but she does not know who is the father and decides to obtain an abortion. Cliff reminds her that it could be his child and tries to convince her to have the baby ("Maybe This Time").[k] Ernst enters and offers Cliff a chance to earn easy money—picking up a suitcase in Paris and delivering it to a client in Berlin. The Emcee comments on this with the song "Sitting Pretty" (or, in later versions, "Money").

Meanwhile, Fräulein Schneider has caught one of her boarders, the prostitute Fräulein Kost, bringing sailors into her room. Fräulein Schneider forbids her from doing so again, but Kost threatens to leave. Kost reveals that she has seen Fräulein Schneider with Herr Schultz in her room. Herr Schultz saves Fräulein Schneider's reputation by telling Fräulein Kost that he and Fräulein Schneider are to be married in three weeks. After Fräulein Kost departs, Fräulein Schneider thanks Herr Schultz for lying to Fräulein Kost. Herr Schultz says that he still wishes to marry Fräulein Schneider ("Married").

At Fräulein Schneider and Herr Schultz's engagement party, Cliff arrives and delivers the suitcase of contraband to Ernst. Sally and Cliff gift the couple a crystal fruit bowl. A tipsy Schultz sings "Meeskite" ("meeskite", he explains, is Yiddish for ugly or funny-looking), a song with a moral ("Anyone responsible for loveliness, large or small/Is not a meeskite at all").[l] Afterward, seeking revenge on Fräulein Schneider, Kost tells Ernst, who now sports a Nazi armband, that Schultz is a Jew. Ernst warns Schneider that marrying a Jew is unwise. Kost and company reprise "Tomorrow Belongs to Me", with more overtly Nazi overtones, as Cliff, Sally, Schneider, Schultz, and the Emcee look on.

Act II edit

 

{{{annotations}}}

 
The musical is set against the backdrop of fascism's rise in Germany which reaches a climax at the end of the second act.

The cabaret girls—along with the Emcee in drag—perform a kickline routine which eventually becomes a goose-step. Fräulein Schneider expresses her concerns about her impending nuptials to Herr Schultz, who assures her that everything will be all right ("Married" Reprise).[m] They are interrupted by the crash of a brick being thrown through the glass window of Herr Schultz's fruit shop. Schultz tries to reassure her that it is merely rowdy children making trouble, but Fräulein Schneider is now afraid.

Back at the Kit Kat Klub, the Emcee performs a song-and-dance routine with a woman in a gorilla suit, singing that their love has been met with universal disapproval ("If You Could See Her"). Encouraging the audience to be more open-minded, he defends his ape-woman, concluding with, "if you could see her through my eyes... she wouldn't look Jewish at all."[n][44] Fräulein Schneider goes to Cliff and Sally's room and returns their engagement present, explaining that her marriage has been called off. When Cliff protests and states that she can't just give up this way, she asks him what other choice she has ("What Would You Do?").

Cliff begs Sally to leave Germany with him so that they can raise their child together in America. Sally protests and claims that their life in Berlin is wonderful. Cliff urges her to "wake up" and to notice the growing social upheaval around them.[b] Sally retorts that politics have nothing to do with them and returns to the Kit Kat Klub ("I Don't Care Much").[o] At the club, after another heated argument with Sally, Cliff is accosted by Ernst, who has another delivery job for him. Cliff tries to brush him off. When Ernst inquires if Cliff's attitude towards him is because of "that Jew at the party", Cliff attacks him—only to be beaten by Ernst's bodyguards and ejected from the club.[p] On stage, the Emcee introduces Sally, who enters to perform again, singing that "life is a cabaret, old chum," cementing her decision to live in carefree ignorance ("Cabaret").

The next morning, a bruised Cliff is packing his clothes in his room when Herr Schultz visits. He informs Cliff that he is moving to another boarding house, but he is confident that these difficult times will soon pass. He understands the German people, he declares, because he is a German too. When Sally returns, she announces that she has had an abortion, and Cliff slaps her. She chides him for his previous insistence on keeping the baby, pointing out it would be a "terrible burden" for a child knowing it was the only reason the parents were together. Cliff still hopes that she will join him in France, but Sally retorts that she has "always hated Paris." She hopes that, when Cliff finally writes his novel, he will dedicate the work to her. Cliff leaves, heartbroken.

There was a cabaret, and there was a master of ceremonies and there was a city called Berlin, in a country called Germany—and it was the end of the world...

—Cliff Bradshaw, Cabaret, Act II[56]

On the railway train to Paris, Cliff begins to compose his novel, reflecting on his experiences: "There was a cabaret, and there was a master of ceremonies ... and there was a city called Berlin, in a country called Germany—and it was the end of the world and I was dancing with Sally Bowles—and we were both fast asleep" ("Willkommen" Reprise). In the Kit Kat Klub, the Emcee welcomes the audience once again as the ensemble reprises "Willkommen" but the song is now harsh and discordant.[q] The Emcee sings, "Auf Wiedersehen... à bientôt..."[r] followed by a crescendo-ing drum roll and a cymbal crash.[s]

Characters edit

 
Micaela Diamond as Sally Bowles in Project Broadway and Broadway Workshop's 2016 Production.[59]
  • Emcee[f] – the Master of Ceremonies at the Kit Kat Klub, a leering, ghoulish, flamboyant figure
  • Sally Bowles – a British flapper who is the headlining chanteuse at the seedy Kit Kat Klub
  • Clifford Bradshaw – an American writer who has come to Berlin in order to write a novel
  • Fräulein Schneider – an older German woman who runs a boarding house where Cliff and Sally reside
  • Herr Schultz – an elderly Jewish fruit shop owner who falls in love with Fräulein Schneider
  • Ernst Ludwig – a German smuggler who befriends Cliff when he arrives in Berlin
  • Fräulein Kost – a German prostitute who rents a room in Fräulein Schneider's boarding house
  • Maria, Lulu, Rosie, Fritzie, Texas, and Frenchie[t] – cabaret girls who perform at the Kit Kat Klub
  • Bobby, Victor, Hans, and Herman – cabaret boys who perform at the Kit Kat Klub
  • Max – the proprietor of the Kit Kat Klub and Sally's boyfriend

Musical numbers edit

Every production of Cabaret has modified the original score, with songs being changed, cut, or added from the film version. This is a collective list featuring all songs from every major production.

Song modifications edit

Many songs planned for the 1966 production were cut.[65] Three excised songs—"Good Time Charlie", "It'll All Blow Over", and "Roommates"—were recorded by Kander and Ebb, and the sheet music published in a collector's book.[62] Sally sang "Good Time Charlie" to Cliff as they walked to Fräulein Schneider and Herr Schultz's engagement party, mocking Cliff for his gloominess.[64] At the end of the first act, Fräulein Schneider sang "It'll All Blow Over," expressing her concerns about marrying a Jew, while Cliff voiced his worries about Germany's emerging Nazism.[66][67] In the song, Sally declares that all will turn out well in the end.[66] "Perfectly Marvelous" replaced "Roommates" and serves the same plot function of Sally convincing Cliff to let her move in with him.[64][68]

The 1972 film added several songs, notably "Mein Herr" and "Maybe This Time" which were included in later productions.[65] The latter song had been written by Kander and Ebb for the unproduced musical Golden Gate.[69] The later 1987 and 1998 Broadway revivals also added new songs such as "I Don't Care Much".[70] In the 1987 revival, Kander and Ebb wrote a new song for Cliff titled "Don't Go".[71] In the 1998 revival, "Mein Herr" replaced "The Telephone Song", and "Maybe This Time" replaced "Why Should I Wake Up?".

Originally, the Emcee sang "Sitting Pretty" accompanied by the cabaret girls in international costumes with their units of currency representing Russian rubles, Japanese yen, French francs, American dollars, and German reichsmarks.[71] In the 1972 film, the Emcee and Sally Bowles sang "Money, Money" instead of "Sitting Pretty." The film soundtrack briefly played "Sitting Pretty" as orchestral background music. In the 1987 revival, they presented a special version that combined a medley of both money songs, and they incorporated motifs from the later song into the "international" dance that featured "Sitting Pretty." In the 1998 revival, they used only the later song written for the film. This version included the cabaret girls and carried a darker undertone.

Productions edit

Original Broadway production edit

 
 
 
The original production featured Jill Haworth (left) as Sally Bowles, Joel Grey (center) as the Emcee, and Lotte Lenya (right) as Fräulein Schneider.

The musical opened on Broadway on November 20, 1966,[47] at the Broadhurst Theatre, transferred to the Imperial Theatre and then the Broadway Theatre before closing on September 6, 1969, after 1,166 performances and 21 previews.[72] Directed by Harold Prince and choreographed by Ron Field, the cast featured Jill Haworth as Sally, Bert Convy as Cliff, Lotte Lenya as Fräulein Schneider, Jack Gilford as Herr Schultz, Joel Grey as the Emcee, Edward Winter as Ernst, and Peg Murray as Fräulein Kost.[73][74] Replacements later in the run included Anita Gillette and Melissa Hart as Sally, Ken Kercheval and Larry Kert as Cliff, and Martin Ross as the Emcee.[47] In addition, John Serry Sr. performed as the orchestral accordionist.

The original Broadway production was not an instant success according to playwright Joe Masteroff due to its perceived immoral content.[49] "When the show opened in Boston," Masteroff recalled, "there were a lot of walkouts. Once the reviews came out, the public came back."[49] At the time, actor Joel Grey was merely fifth-billed in the show. Nevertheless, audiences were hypnotized by Grey's sinister performance as the Emcee.[75]

In contrast, Jill Haworth's performance as Sally was less well-received and was criticized for its blandness.[76] Emory Lewis, the reviewer for The Morning Call, wrote that "Jill Haworth, the lovely English actress who played Sally Bowles on opening night, was personable, but she was not sufficiently trained for so pivotal a role. And her voice was small and undramatic. Her performance threw 'Cabaret' out of kilter."[47]

The 1967–68 US national tour featured Melissa Hart as Sally, Signe Hasso as Fräulein Schneider, and Leo Fuchs as Herr Schultz.[77] The tour included the Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut in December 1967, the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles in May 1968, the Curran Theatre in San Francisco in September 1968, and many others.[78]

Original West End production edit

The musical premiered in the West End on February 28, 1968, at the Palace Theatre with Judi Dench as Sally, Kevin Colson as Cliff, Barry Dennen as the Emcee, Lila Kedrova as Fräulein Schneider and Peter Sallis as Herr Schultz. It ran for 336 performances.[79] Critics such as Ken Mandelbaum have asserted that "Judi Dench was the finest of all the Sallys that appeared in Hal Prince's original staging, and if she's obviously not much of a singer, her Sally is a perfect example of how one can give a thrilling musical theatre performance without a great singing voice."[80]

1986 West End revival edit

 
Kelly Hunter as Sally Bowles.

In 1986, the show was revived in London at the Strand Theatre starring Kelly Hunter as Sally, Peter Land as Cliff and Wayne Sleep as the Emcee, directed and choreographed by Gillian Lynne.[80]

1987 Broadway revival edit

The first Broadway revival opened on October 22, 1987, with direction and choreography by Prince and Field. The revival opened at the Imperial Theatre, and then transferred to the Minskoff Theatre to complete its 261-performance run.[81] Joel Grey received star billing as the Emcee, with Alyson Reed as Sally, Gregg Edelman as Cliff, Regina Resnik as Fräulein Schneider, Werner Klemperer as Herr Schultz, and David Staller as Ernst Ludwig. The song "Don't Go" was added for Cliff's character.

1993 London revival edit

 
 
Sam Mendes (left) directed the 1993 London revival of Cabaret with Alan Cumming (right) as the Emcee. Cumming would return as the Emcee for the 1998 and 2014 Broadway Revivals.

In 1993, Sam Mendes directed a new production for the Donmar Warehouse in London.[82][83] The revival starred Jane Horrocks as Sally, Adam Godley as Cliff, Alan Cumming as the Emcee and Sara Kestelman as Fräulein Schneider. Cumming received an Olivier Award nomination for his performance and Kestelman won the Olivier for Best Supporting Performance in a Musical.

Mendes' conception was very different from either the original production or the conventional first revival.[44][82] The most significant change was the character of the Emcee. The role, as played by Joel Grey in both prior incarnations, was an asexual, edgy character with rouged cheeks dressed in a tuxedo. Alan Cumming's portrayal was highly sexualized, as he wore suspenders around his crotch and red paint on his nipples.[84]

Staging details differed significantly. Mendes transformed his theater into a nightclub, with the audience sitting at little tables with red lamps. The Kit Kat Club became even more run-down and seedy, with the actresses playing the chorus girls told not to shave their legs or underarms. There was no room for an orchestra, and some musical instruments were played by actors who were not always certain of hitting the right notes. Cummings would occasionally interact with the audience members, including picking a man out of the crowd to dance with him.[44]

Instead of "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" being performed by a male choir of waiting staff, the Emcee plays a recording of a boy soprano singing it. In the final scene, the Emcee removes his outer clothes to reveal a striped uniform of the type worn by the internees in concentration camps; on it are pinned a yellow badge (identifying Jews), a red star (marking Communists and socialists), and a pink triangle (denoting homosexuals). Other changes included added references to Cliff's bisexuality, including a brief scene where he kisses one of the Cabaret boys.[85] "I Don't Care Much," which was added for the 1987 Broadway revival, was maintained for this production, and "Mein Herr" was added from the film.

This production was filmed by Channel Four Film for airing on UK television.[86]

1998 Broadway revival edit

 
 
Natasha Richardson portrayed Sally Bowles in the 1998 revival, and Neil Patrick Harris later starred as the Emcee after Alan Cumming departed the role.

The second Broadway revival, by the Roundabout Theatre Company, was based on the 1993 Mendes-Donmar Warehouse production. For the Broadway transfer, Rob Marshall was co-director and choreographer.[49][87][44] The production opened after 37 previews on March 19, 1998, at the Kit Kat Klub, housed in what previously had been known as Henry Miller's Theatre.[87] Later that year it transferred to Studio 54,[49] where it remained for the rest of its 2,377-performance run,[81] becoming the third longest-running revival in Broadway musical history, third only to Oh! Calcutta! and Chicago. For the Broadway production, Cumming reprised his role as the Emcee, opposite newcomers Natasha Richardson as Sally, John Benjamin Hickey as Cliff, Ron Rifkin as Herr Schultz, Denis O'Hare as Ernst Ludwig, Michele Pawk as Fräulein Kost, and Mary Louise Wilson as Fräulein Schneider.[87]

The Broadway production was nominated for ten Tony Awards, winning four for Cumming, Richardson and Rifkin, as well as the Tony for Best Revival of a Musical. This production featured a number of notable replacements later in the run: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Susan Egan, Joely Fisher, Gina Gershon, Debbie Gibson, Melina Kanakaredes, Jane Leeves, Molly Ringwald, Brooke Shields, and Lea Thompson as Sally; Michael C. Hall, Raúl Esparza, Neil Patrick Harris, Adam Pascal, Jon Secada, and John Stamos as the Emcee; Boyd Gaines, Michael Hayden, and Rick Holmes as Cliff; Tom Bosley, Dick Latessa, Hal Linden, Laurence Luckinbill, and Tony Roberts as Herr Schultz; and Blair Brown, Carole Shelley, Polly Bergen, Alma Cuervo, and Mariette Hartley as Fräulein Schneider.

There were a number of changes made between the 1993 and 1998 revivals, despite the similarities in creative team. The cabaret number "Two Ladies" was staged with the Emcee, a cabaret girl, and a cabaret boy in drag and included a shadow play simulating various sexual positions.[85] The score was re-orchestrated using synthesizer effects and expanding the stage band, with all the instruments now being played by the cabaret girls and boys. The satiric "Sitting Pretty", with its mocking references to deprivation, despair and hunger, was eliminated, as it had been in the film version, and where in the 1993 revival it had been combined with "Money" (as it had been in 1987 London production), "Money" was now performed on its own. "Maybe This Time", from the film adaptation, was added to the score.[85]

2006 West End revival edit

In September 2006, a new production of the show opened at the Lyric Theatre, directed by Rufus Norris,[88] and starring Anna Maxwell Martin as Sally, James Dreyfus as the Emcee, Harriet Thorpe as Fräulein Kost, Michael Hayden as Cliff, and Sheila Hancock as Fräulein Schneider. Hancock won the Olivier Award for Best Supporting Performance in a Musical. Replacements later in the run included Kim Medcalf and Amy Nuttall as Sally, Honor Blackman and Angela Richards as Fräulein Schneider, and Julian Clary and Alistair McGowan as the Emcee. This production closed in June 2008 and toured nationally for two years opening at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre with a cast that included Wayne Sleep as the Emcee and Samantha Barks as Sally, before Siobhan Dillon took over the role.

2012 West End revival edit

A revival opened in the West End at the Savoy Theatre on October 3, 2012, following a four-week tour of the UK, including Bromley, Southampton, Nottingham, Norwich and Salford.[89] Will Young played the Emcee and Michelle Ryan portrayed Sally Bowles.[90] It was announced on August 10, 2012, that Siân Phillips, Harriet Thorpe and Matt Rawle would also be joining the cast. The production was made by the creative team behind the 2006 London revival, but they created a different set, lighting, costumes, choreography and direction. In August 2013 the show went on tour, again with Young as The Emcee, Siobhan Dillon reprising her role of Sally and Lyn Paul joining the cast as Fräulein Schneider.[91]

The production toured the UK in autumn 2017 with Young reprising his role as the Emcee and Louise Redknapp as Sally Bowles.[92] Another UK tour began in autumn 2019 starring John Partridge as the Emcee, Kara Lily Hayworth as Sally Bowles and Anita Harris as Fräulein Schneider.[93]

2014 Broadway revival edit

 
 
 
Michelle Williams, Emma Stone, and Sienna Miller each portrayed Sally Bowles in the 2014 Broadway revival.

In September 2013 Roundabout Theatre Company announced plans to return the company's acclaimed 1998 production to Studio 54 in New York.[94][49] For this, the show's third Broadway revival, Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall reprised their respective roles as director and co-director/choreographer to recreate their work from the earlier production. Alan Cumming starred again as the Emcee while Academy Award-nominee Michelle Williams made her Broadway debut as Sally Bowles.[95] On October 7, 2013, Tony Award nominees Danny Burstein and Linda Emond joined the cast as Herr Schultz and Fräulein Schneider.[96] The production began a 24-week limited engagement with previews from March 21, 2014, with opening night on April 24, 2014. This engagement was later extended to a 36-week run concluding on January 4, 2015.[97]

Emma Stone replaced Michelle Williams as Sally from November 11, 2014, until February 15, 2015.[98] Critics praised Stone's performance for her interpretation of the hard-drinking sybarite Sally Bowles "as a flaming flapper, the kind hymned by F. Scott Fitzgerald and embodied by the young Joan Crawford in silent movies."[99] Alan Cumming continued in the role of the Emcee until the show's final curtain in March 2015.[100][101] On February 17, Sienna Miller replaced Stone as Sally through to the show's closing on March 29, 2015.[102][103]

The production later toured the US from January 2016 with Randy Harrison as the Emcee and Andrea Goss (following her appearance as Frenchie in the Broadway production). They were later replaced by Jon Peterson and Leigh Ann Larkin.

2021 West End revival edit

 
Kit Kat Club (Playhouse Theatre) Marquee in London

In May 2021, it was announced that Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley would star as the Emcee and Sally Bowles in a new production directed by Rebecca Frecknall, designed by Tom Scutt, choreographed by Julia Cheng with musical supervision and direction by Jennifer Whyte, lighting design by Isabella Byrd, sound design by Nick Lidster, casting by Stuart Burt and fight direction by Jonathan Holby.[104] The production also features Omari Douglas as Cliff Bradshaw, Liza Sadovy as Fraulein Schneider, Elliot Levey as Herr Schultz, Stewart Clarke as Ernst Ludwig and Anna-Jane Casey as Fraulein Kost.[105][106]

Produced by Underbelly and Ambassador Theatre Group,[107] the production entitled Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club began previews at the Playhouse Theatre on November 15, 2021, which has been refurbished as the "Kit Kat Club" which includes an intimate in-the-round stage reduced to a 550-seat capacity with tables that audience members can dine at as well as a refurbished foyer, in effect transforming the entire theater into a Weimar-era nightclub.[108][44] On December 14, 2021, it was announced that the production's run would be extended to October 2022. The production led the 2022 Olivier Award nominations with 11 nods,[109] including Best Musical Revival, Best Actor in a Musical for Redmayne and Best Actress in a Musical for Buckley.[109] The production won 7 awards and set a record for being the most award-winning revival in Olivier history, as well for being the first production to obtain awards in all 4 eligible acting categories.

Following the departure of Redmayne and Buckley, the Emcee and Sally Bowles have since been played by Fra Fee and Amy Lennox,[110] Callum Scott Howells and Madeline Brewer, Matthew Gent and Emily Benjamin, Aimee Lou Wood and John McCrea, Maude Apatow and Mason Alexander Park, Jake Shears and Rebecca Lucy Taylor (aka Self Esteem)[111] and currently Luke Treadaway and Cara Delevingne.[112]

2024 Broadway revival edit

On July 11, 2023, it was announced that the 2021 West End production would transfer to the August Wilson Theatre on Broadway in spring 2024. Similarly to the West End production, the August Wilson Theatre was also refurbished as the "Kit Kat Club" with an intimate in-the-round staging.[113] Eddie Redmayne reprised his performance from London as the Emcee with Gayle Rankin and Ato Blankson-Wood costarring as Sally Bowles and Cliff Bradshaw.[114] Additionally, Bebe Neuwirth, Steven Skybell, Natascia Diaz, and Henry Gottfried play Fraulein Schneider, Herr Schultz, Fraulein Kost, and Ernst Ludwig, respectively.[115][116] Previews began April 1, 2024 ahead of a gala night on April 20 and press night on April 21.[117]

Other productions edit

 
Anne Beate Odland as Sally Bowles in a 1975 production of Cabaret.

In 1993 a production of Cabaret debuted at the Octagon Theatre in Bolton, England.[118] This version was directed by Ian Forest, designed by Ashley Sharp, and starred Ashley Artus as the Emcee.[118] Critic Natalia Anglesey of The Stage opined that "undoubtedly the star of this particular production of Cabaret is the physically flexible Ashley Artus as the sinister Emcee who adroitly controls the cast and members of his club whilst leading us into the nightmarish world of pre-war Berlin."[118] Artus would later garner the Manchester Evening News Drama Award Nomination for his performance.

A BBC Radio 2 radio broadcast in 1996 at the Golders Green Hippodrome starred Clare Burt as Sally Bowles, Steven Berkoff as the Emcee, Alexander Hanson as Clifford Bradshaw, Keith Michell as Herr Schultz, and Rosemary Leach as Fräulein Schneider.

Since 2003, there have been successful international stagings of the show—many of which have been influenced by Mendes' concept—including productions in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, France, Portugal, Greece, Israel, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico, Serbia, South Africa, Spain, and Venezuela. In 2008, the Stratford Shakespeare Festival performed a well-received production at the Avon Theatre designed by Douglas Paraschuk and directed by Amanda Dehnert, featuring Bruce Dow as the Emcee, Trish Lindström as Sally, Sean Arbuckle as Cliff, Nora McClellan as Fräulein Schneider and Frank Moore as Herr Schultz.[119]

The Shaw Festival at Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, included Cabaret in its 2014 season.[120] The production, which ran from April 10 – October 26, 2014 at the Festival Theatre, was directed by Peter Hinton with choreography by Denise Clarke. The production featured Juan Chioran as the Emcee, Deborah Hay as Sally, Gray Powell as Cliff, Benedict Campbell as Herr Schultz, and Corrine Koslo as Fräulein Schneider. Hinton's version was influenced by Mendes' 1993 revival.

In 2016, Project Broadway and Broadway Workshop presented Cabaret as their main stage production.[121] The cast, made of over 50 teenage actors divided into two casts, played to the sold-out Baruch Performing Arts Center in New York City.[59] The production was the first in New York City since the Roundabout Theatre Company revival in 2014. The production was directed by Broadway Workshop founder Marc Tumminelli. Among the cast were Michael Nigro and Micaela Diamond.[122]

A 2017 revival production with new direction played Sydney and Melbourne, Australia. The production starred Paul Capsis as the Emcee and Chelsea Gibb as Sally. The production mixed elements of the Mendes production, such as its version of "Two Ladies" and its portrayal of a gay Cliff, with the colorful art design of the original (the Emcee is in full makeup and clothed) and most of the additional songs from the 1972 film (with the exception of "Mein Herr").[123]

Notable casts edit

Role Broadway West End First West End Revival First Broadway Revival Second London Revival Second Broadway Revival Third West End Revival Fourth West End Revival Third Broadway Revival Fifth West End Revival Fourth Broadway Revival[124]
1966 1968 1986 1987 1993 1998 2006 2012 2014 2021 2024
The Emcee Joel Grey Barry Dennen Wayne Sleep Joel Grey Alan Cumming James Dreyfus Will Young Alan Cumming Eddie Redmayne
Sally Bowles Jill Haworth Judi Dench Kelly Hunter Alyson Reed Jane Horrocks Natasha Richardson Anna Maxwell Martin Michelle Ryan Michelle Williams Jessie Buckley Gayle Rankin
Cliff Bradshaw Bert Convy Kevin Colson Peter Land Gregg Edelman Adam Godley John Benjamin Hickey Michael Hayden Matt Rawle Bill Heck Omari Douglas Ato Blankson-Wood
Fräulein Schneider Lotte Lenya Lila Kedrova Vivienne Martin Regina Resnik Sara Kestelman Mary Louise Wilson Sheila Hancock Siân Phillips Linda Emond Liza Sadovy Bebe Neuwirth
Herr Schultz Jack Gilford Peter Sallis Oscar Quitak Werner Klemperer George Raistrick Ron Rifkin Geoffrey Hutchings Linal Haft Danny Burstein Elliot Levey Steven Skybell
Ernst Ludwig Edward Winter Richard Owens Rodney Cottam David Staller Michael Gardiner Denis O'Hare Andrew Maud Nicholas Tizzard Aaron Krohn Stewart Clarke Henry Gottfried
Fräulein Kost Peg Murray Pamela Strong Grazine Frame Nora Mae Lyng Charlotte Medcalf Michele Pawk Harriet Thorpe Gayle Rankin Anna-Jane Casey Natascia Diaz

Notable replacements edit

Broadway (1966–1969)
West End revival (1986–1987)
Broadway revival (1987–1988)
Broadway revival (1998–2004)
West End revival (2006–2008)
Broadway revival (2014–2015)
West End revival (2021– )

Recordings edit

 
Original Broadway cast recording (1967) cover

The first recording of Cabaret was the original cast album with a number of the songs either truncated (e.g., "Sitting Pretty"/"The Money Song") or outright cut to conserve disk space.[80] When this album was released on compact disc, Kander and Ebb's voice-and-piano recordings of songs cut from the musical were added as bonus material.[80]

The 1968 London cast recording purportedly features "a more accurate rendering of the score" and includes "the Act One finale 'Tomorrow Belongs To Me' reprise, the second-act finale as performed in the theatre, and a number of other previously unrecorded bits and pieces."[80] It was released in the UK and reissued on the CBS Embassy label in 1973.

The 1972 movie soundtrack with Liza Minnelli is perhaps the best-known of the recordings, although the movie is much re-written and eliminates all but six of the original songs from the stage production.[80]

Both the 1986 London and 1998 Broadway revival casts were recorded.[80] A 1993 two-CD studio recording contains more or less the entire score, including songs written for the movie or for later productions, and many incidentals and instrumentals not usually recorded. This recording features Jonathan Pryce as the Emcee, Maria Friedman as Sally, Gregg Edelman as Cliff, Judi Dench as Fräulein Schneider, and Fred Ebb as Herr Schultz.

The cast recording of the 2006 London revival at the Lyric Theatre includes James Dreyfus as the Emcee and Anna Maxwell Martin as Sally Bowles. The recording peaked number 107 on the French Albums Chart,[125] and number 49 on the Dutch Albums Chart.[126]

The 2021 London cast recording featuring Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley was recorded live at the Kit Kat Club (Playhouse Theatre, London) and released on January 20, 2023.

Cabaret: The Maida Vale Session is an EP that was released on March 8, 2024 with four songs from the 2021 revival at the Kit Kat Club ("Willkommen", "Don't Tell Mama", "I Don't Care Much" & "Cabaret"). It was recorded for a BBC Radio 2 show with Jo Whiley at the BBC's Maida Vale Studios with Jake Shears (from the Scissor Sisters) as Emcee, Rebecca Lucy Taylor (also known by her stage name of Self Esteem) as Sally Bowles and the 2023 London Cast and Orchestra of Cabaret at The Kit Kat Club.

In addition to these recordings, cast albums for the French, Spanish, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Austrian, Dutch, Mexican, and two German productions have been released.[80]

Awards and nominations edit

Original Broadway production edit

1987 Broadway revival edit

1993 London revival edit

1998 Broadway revival edit

Year Award Category Nominee Result
1998 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Won
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Alan Cumming Won
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Natasha Richardson Won
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Ron Rifkin Won
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Mary Louise Wilson Nominated
Best Direction of a Musical Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall Nominated
Best Choreography Rob Marshall Nominated
Best Orchestrations Michael Gibson Nominated
Best Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated
Best Lighting Design Peggy Eisenhauer and Mike Baldassari Nominated
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Won
Outstanding Actor in a Musical Alan Cumming Won
Outstanding Actress in a Musical Natasha Richardson Won
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Michele Pawk Nominated
Outstanding Director Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall Nominated
Outstanding Choreography Rob Marshall Nominated
Outstanding Orchestrations Michael Gibson Nominated
Outstanding Set Design Robert Brill Nominated
Outstanding Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated
Outstanding Lighting Design Peggy Eisenhauer and Mike Baldassari Nominated
Drama League Award Distinguished Production of a Revival Won
New York Drama Critics Circle Special Citation Won
Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Won
Outstanding Actor in a Musical Alan Cumming Won
Outstanding Actress in a Musical Natasha Richardson Won
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Ron Rifkin Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Michele Pawk Nominated
Outstanding Choreography Rob Marshall Nominated
Outstanding Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated
Outstanding Director of a Musical Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall Nominated
Outstanding Lighting Design Peggy Eisenhauer and Mike Baldassari Nominated
Theatre World Award Outstanding Broadway Debut Alan Cumming Won

2006 West End revival edit

2012 West End revival edit

2014 Broadway revival edit

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2014 Tony Award
Best Featured Actor in a Musical Danny Burstein Nominated
Best Featured Actress in a Musical Linda Emond Nominated
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Danny Burstein Nominated
Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Nominated
Outstanding Actress in a Musical Michelle Williams Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Danny Burstein Nominated
Fred and Adele Astaire Award Outstanding Choreographer in a Broadway Show Rob Marshall Nominated
Outstanding Female Dancer in a Broadway Show Gayle Rankin Nominated

2021 West End revival edit

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2022 Laurence Olivier Award Best Musical Revival Won
Best Actor in a Musical Eddie Redmayne Won
Best Actress in a Musical Jessie Buckley Won
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical Liza Sadovy Won
Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical Elliot Levey Won
Best Director Rebecca Frecknall Won
Best Costume Design Tom Scutt Nominated
Best Set Design Nominated
Best Sound Design Nick Lidster Won
Best Theatre Choreographer Julia Cheng Nominated
Best Lighting Design Isabella Byrd Nominated
Critics' Circle Theatre Award Best Actress Jessie Buckley Won
Best Director Rebecca Frecknall Won
Best Designer Tom Scutt Won
WhatsOnStage Awards Best Musical Revival Nominated
Best Performer in a Male Identifying Role in a Musical Eddie Redmayne Won
Best Performer in a Female Identifying Role in a Musical Jessie Buckley Nominated
Best Direction Rebecca Frecknall Nominated
Best Set Design Tom Scutt Nominated
Best Costume Design Nominated
Best Lighting Design Isabella Byrd Nominated
West End Wilma Awards Best Performer in a West End Show Anna-Jane Casey Nominated
Best West End Ensemble Performer B Terry (as Helga) Nominated
Best Understudy Emily Benjamin (as Sally) Nominated
Best Takeover in a Role Fra Fee (as Emcee) Nominated
Amy Lennox (as Sally) Nominated
2024 WhatsOnStageAwards Best West End Show Won
Best Takeover Performance Mason Alexander Park (as Emcee) Nominated
Rebecca Lucy Taylor (as Sally) Nominated
Aimee Lou Wood (as Sally) Won

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Paul Bowles was an American writer who wrote the novel The Sheltering Sky.[6] After meeting the author in Berlin, Isherwood appropriated his surname for the character of Sally Bowles.[7]
  2. ^ a b Jean Ross later claimed the political indifference of the Sally Bowles character more closely resembled Isherwood and his hedonistic friends,[9] many of whom "fluttered around town exclaiming how sexy the storm troopers looked in their uniforms."[10]
  3. ^ a b Isherwood claimed he and Ross "had a relationship which was asexual but more truly intimate than the relationships between Sally and her various partners in the novel, the plays and the films."[13]
  4. ^ Many of Berlin's seedy cabarets located along the Kurfürstendamm avenue, an entertainment-vice district, had been marked for future destruction by Joseph Goebbels as early as 1928.[31]
  5. ^ a b The character of Ernst Ludwig shares similarities with Isherwood's acquaintance, Gerald Hamilton, an unscrupulous smuggler who inspired the fictional character of Arthur Norris.[40] Like the fictional character which he inspired, Hamilton was a "nefarious, amoral, sociopathic, manipulative conniver" who "did not hesitate to use or abuse friends and enemies alike."[40]
  6. ^ a b The phonetic term "Emcee" is specifically used by playwright Joe Masteroff in the musical's script.[60]
  7. ^ Isherwood insisted Sally be depicted as a mediocre singer to reflect Jean Ross' lack of vocal talent: "She sang badly, without any expression, her hands hanging down at her sides—yet her performance was... effective because of her startling appearance and her air of not caring a curse of what people thought of her."[52]
  8. ^ According to Isherwood, Sally Bowles should not be interpreted as a tart.[53] Sally "is a little girl who has listened to what the grown-ups had said about tarts, and who was trying to copy those things".[53]
  9. ^ a b "Telephone Song" was cut in the 1993, 1998, 2012, 2014 and 2021 revivals, replaced by "Mein Herr".
  10. ^ a b For the 1998 and 2014 revivals, "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" was changed from an ensemble number by the cabaret waiters to a gramophone recording of a boy soprano singing the song, with the leading player speaking the last words.[63]
  11. ^ a b "Maybe This Time", a song from the film, was added in the 1998, 2012, 2014 and 2021 revivals.
  12. ^ a b "Meeskite" was cut in the 1993 1987, 1998, 2012, 2014 and 2021 revivals.
  13. ^ a b "Married (Reprise)" was cut in the 2012 revival. For the 1998 revival, Fräulein Kost sang the film's German translation of "Married" after two English verses.
  14. ^ The line—"if you could see her through my eyes... she wouldn't look Jewish at all"—was intended to illustrate how easily prejudice is accepted. However, boycott threats from Jewish leaders in Boston led Ebb to write an alternate line, "She isn't a Meeskite at all."[54]
  15. ^ a b "I Don't Care Much" was added for the 1987, 1993, 1998, 2012, 2014 and 2021 revivals.[64]
  16. ^ Although the musical depicts Clifford Bradshaw as staunchly anti-racism, Christopher Isherwood was alleged to be an antisemite.[55] According to biographers, Isherwood was "fairly anti-Semitic to a degree that required some emendations of the Berlin novels when they were republished after the war".[55]
  17. ^ In some versions of the show, Herr Schultz, Fräulein Schneider, and Sally repeat lines from earlier in the show espousing their views: Schultz's belief that he will survive, Schneider choosing safety in the face of oppression, and Sally choosing to ignore politics as she sings a brief reprise of "Cabaret".
  18. ^ In the 1998 revival, the Emcee strips off his overcoat to reveal a concentration camp prisoner's uniform marked with a yellow Star of David and a pink triangle, and the backdrop raises to reveal a white space with the ensemble standing within.[57]
  19. ^ Several productions feature a finale with a white space flashing with a strobe effect, implying the cabaret performers—except for Sally who is not standing in the white space—will fall victim to Nazi atrocities towards the Jews and gays.[58]
  20. ^ The original 1966 script by playwright Joe Masteroff specifies "Maria," "Lulu," "Rosie," "Fritzie," "Texas," and "Frenchie" as the names of the Cabaret girls.[60] Later revivals often alter these names. "Maria" is most commonly changed to "Helga".
  21. ^ The character Bobby replaced one of the ladies in "Two Ladies" for the 1998 and 2014 revivals.
  22. ^ Typically they are "Rosie" and "Frenchie".
  23. ^ "Don't Go" replaced "Why Should I Wake Up?" in the 1987 revival but was removed from the score afterwards.
  24. ^ "Money, Money", a song from the film, was blended with "Sitting Pretty" in the 1987 revival. It replaced "Sitting Pretty" in the 1998, 2014 and 2021 revivals.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 3; Gray 2016.
  2. ^ Bloom & Vlastnik 2004, p. 46.
  3. ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 3–8: In March 1929, Isherwood joined W. H. Auden in Berlin. Impressed by the city, Isherwood returned again soon after and stayed for several years until the rise of the Nazis.
  4. ^ Moss 1979: Isherwood frequented "the boy-bars in Berlin in the late years of the Weimar Republic.... [He] discovered a world utterly different from the repressive English one he disliked, and with it, the excitements of sex and new subject matter."
  5. ^ Isherwood 1976, Chapter 1: "To Christopher, Berlin meant Boys... Christopher was suffering from an inhibition, then not unusual among upper-class homosexuals; he couldn't relax sexually with a member of his own class or nation. He needed a working-class foreigner. He had become clearly aware of this when he went to Germany in May 1928."
  6. ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 6–7.
  7. ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "Isherwood himself admitted that he named the character of [Sally Bowles] for Paul Bowles, whose 'looks' he liked."
  8. ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 6–7; Spender 1977; Spender 1966, pp. 125–130.
  9. ^ Firchow 2008, p. 120; Caudwell 1986, pp. 28–29.
  10. ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 124–125; Doyle 2013.
  11. ^ Allen 2004: "The real Isherwood... [was] the least political of the so-called Auden group, [and] Isherwood was always guided by his personal motivations rather than by abstract ideas."
  12. ^ Stansky 1976: Isherwood was a "self-indulgent upper middle-class foreign tourist" who was "a good deal less dedicated to political passion than the legend has had it."
  13. ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 63.
  14. ^ Parker 2004; Parker 2005, p. 205.
  15. ^ Lehmann 1987, p. 18: "Jean Ross, whom [Isherwood] had met in Berlin as one of his fellow-lodgers in the Nollendorfstrasse for a time, when she was earning her living as a (not very remarkable) singer in a second-rate cabaret."
  16. ^ Isherwood 1976, p. 63: "Jean moved into a room in the Nollendorfstrasse flat after she met Christopher, early in 1931."
  17. ^ Parker 2005, pp. 205–206: "...a sixteen-year-old Berliner named Heinz Neddermeyer... Isherwood realized that he 'had found someone emotionally innocent, entirely vulnerable and uncritical, whom he could protect and cherish as his very own.' In other words, he had found the person for whom he had been looking in all his relationships with adolescents."
  18. ^ Izzo 2005, p. 6; Vidal 1976.
  19. ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 244–245; Parker 2005, p. 205.
  20. ^ a b c Parker 2004: "An affair with a Jewish musician called Götz von Eick, who subsequently became an actor in Hollywood under the name Peter van Eyck, led to her becoming pregnant, and she nearly died after an abortion."
  21. ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 244–245; Spender 1966, p. 127; Spender 1974, pp. 138–139; Thomson 2005.
  22. ^ Parker 2005, p. 220.
  23. ^ Lehmann 1987, pp. 28–9; Gallagher 2014; Spender 1974, pp. 138–139; Thomson 2005.
  24. ^ Izzo 2005, p. 144: "The abortion is a turning point in the narrator's relationship with Sally and also in his relationship to Berlin and to his writing".
  25. ^ a b Spender 1966, p. 129.
  26. ^ Parker 2005, p. 219: In contrast to Stephen Spender's prescient realization of impending doom, Isherwood near the end of January 1933 "was complaining somewhat unpresciently to Spender that situation in Germany seemed 'very dull.'"
  27. ^ Spender 1977.
  28. ^ Spender 1966, p. 129; Parker 2005, p. 254.
  29. ^ Parker 2005, p. 221: "Isherwood recognized that he could not remain in Berlin much longer and on April 5, the day measures were brought in to ban Jews from the teaching professions and the Civil Service, he arrived back in London, bringing with him many of his possessions."
  30. ^ Parker 2005, p. 220: Commenting on these dramatic change of events in Germany, Isherwood wrote to a friend that roving Nazi gangs could now murder anyone with impunity, and "it is illegal to offer any resistance."
  31. ^ Farina 2013, p. 79.
  32. ^ Isherwood 1976, pp. 164–166; Isherwood 1976, pp. 150, 297; Farina 2013, pp. 74–81.
  33. ^ Lehmann 1987, pp. 28–29; Izzo 2001, pp. 97, 144.
  34. ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 15–16.
  35. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 16: "David Black, a producer, had commissioned the show and sparked the interest of Julie Andrews, but the star's manager refused Andrews... to play such a part as Sally Bowles".
  36. ^ a b c d e Garebian 2011, p. 16.
  37. ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 15–16, 25, 28.
  38. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 24.
  39. ^ Mordden 2001, p. 154.
  40. ^ a b Izzo 2001, pp. 115–116.
  41. ^ Mordden 2001, p. 154; Masteroff 1967, p. 7.
  42. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 26.
  43. ^ Mordden 2001, pp. 152–54.
  44. ^ a b c d e f Riedel, Michael (March 26, 2024). "The Untold History of Cabaret: Revived and Kicking". No. April 2024. Vanity Fair. Retrieved April 7, 2024.
  45. ^ a b Garebian 2011, p. 111.
  46. ^ a b Bloom & Vlastnik 2004, pp. 47–49.
  47. ^ a b c d e Lewis 1969.
  48. ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 39–42.
  49. ^ a b c d e f Gray 2016.
  50. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 49: "There was no question that the single greatest element in the design was the giant mirror."
  51. ^ a b Mordden 2001, pp. 156–57.
  52. ^ Isherwood 1963, p. 25; Parker 2005, p. 220; Lehmann 1987, p. 18.
  53. ^ a b Van Druten 1983, p. 6.
  54. ^ Jones 2003, p. 243; Garebian 2011, pp. 85, 126.
  55. ^ a b Hensher 2005.
  56. ^ Masteroff 1967, p. 113.
  57. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 175.
  58. ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 174–175.
  59. ^ a b Broadway Workshop: Photo Flash 2021.
  60. ^ a b Masteroff 1967, pp. 1–10, 44–42.
  61. ^ a b Bloom & Vlastnik 2004, p. 48.
  62. ^ a b c Kander & Ebb 1999, pp. 3–4.
  63. ^ Garebian 2011, pp. 167, 200.
  64. ^ a b c Garebian 2011, p. 71.
  65. ^ a b Kander & Ebb 1999, pp. 3–4, 136–8.
  66. ^ a b Garebian 2011, p. 29.
  67. ^ Kander & Ebb 1999, p. 150.
  68. ^ Kander & Ebb 1999, pp. 50, 162.
  69. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 141.
  70. ^ Kander & Ebb 1999, pp. 3–4, 129, 136–8.
  71. ^ a b Garebian 2011, p. 187.
  72. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 197; Gray 2016.
  73. ^ Garebian 2011, p. 197.
  74. ^ Bloom & Vlastnik 2004, p. 49.
  75. ^ Royce 2014.
  76. ^ Kerr 1966.
  77. ^ Hart 1967; Leonard 1968.
  78. ^ Leonard 1968; Smith 1968; Oakland Tribune 1968.
  79. ^ Green 1980, p. 53.
  80. ^ a b c d e f g h Mandelbaum 1998.
  81. ^ a b Garebian 2011, p. 199.
  82. ^ a b Bloom & Vlastnik 2004, p. 47.
  83. ^ Royce 2014; Lyman 1997.
  84. ^ Reice 1998; Gray 2016.
  85. ^ a b c Brantley 1998.
  86. ^ Mendes 1993.
  87. ^ a b c Lyman 1997.
  88. ^ Simonson 2006.
  89. ^ BBC News 2012.
  90. ^ Michelle Ryan 2012.
  91. ^ Bannister 2013.
  92. ^ Bowie-Sell 2017.
  93. ^ Darvill 2019.
  94. ^ Gioia 2013.
  95. ^ Healy 2013.
  96. ^ BroadwayWorld 2013.
  97. ^ BroadwayWorld 2014.
  98. ^ Feldberg 2014; Jue 2015; Dziemianowicz 2014; Holcomb-Holland 2015.
  99. ^ Brantley 2014.
  100. ^ Dziemianowicz 2014.
  101. ^ Holcomb-Holland 2015.
  102. ^ Healy 2015.
  103. ^ Snetiker 2015.
  104. ^ Brethauer-Hamling 2021.
  105. ^ Franklin 2021.
  106. ^ "Life Is a Cabaret! The Shimmering Kander and Ebb Classic Heads Back to Broadway Starring Eddie Redmayne". Vogue. March 5, 2024. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  107. ^ Kit Kat Club 2022.
  108. ^ Wiegand 2021.
  109. ^ a b Yossman 2022.
  110. ^ Wood 2022.
  111. ^ Wiegand 2023.
  112. ^ Wiegand, Chris (February 5, 2024). "Cara Delevingne to star as Sally Bowles in hit West End show Cabaret". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved February 6, 2024.
  113. ^ Paulson 2023; Culwell-Block 2023.
  114. ^ Ato Blankson-Wood Joins Upcoming Broadway Cabaret
  115. ^ Bebe Neuwirth and Steven Skybell Join Upcoming Broadway Cabaret Revival
  116. ^ Natascia Diaz and Henry Gottfried Board Upcoming Broadway Cabaret
  117. ^ Wild, Stephi. "Eddie Redmayne Will Reprise Role in CABARET on Broadway Alongside Gayle Rankin". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved October 23, 2023.
  118. ^ a b c Anglesey 1993.
  119. ^ Godfrey 2008.
  120. ^ Shaw Festival 2014.
  121. ^ Broadway Workshop: Main Stage 2021.
  122. ^ Playbill: Micaela Diamond.
  123. ^ 2017 Australian Production.
  124. ^ "Cabaret – Broadway Musical – 2024 Revival | IBDB". www.ibdb.com. Retrieved April 1, 2024.
  125. ^ Les Chart 2007.
  126. ^ Dutch Charts 2007.

Works cited edit

Print sources edit

Online sources edit

  • Allen, Brooke (December 19, 2004). "Isherwood: The Uses of Narcissism". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved February 1, 2021.
  • Bannister, Rosie (June 26, 2013). "Will Young returns to emcee Cabaret tour". WhatsOnStage. London. Retrieved September 9, 2013. Will Young is set to reprise his role of Emcee in a UK tour of Rufus Norris's production of Cabaret, which will open at the New Wimbledon Theatre on 28 August 2013.
  • Bowie-Sell, Daisy (June 5, 2017). "Louise Redknapp to join Will Young in new tour of Cabaret". WhatsOnStage. London. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
  • Brantley, Ben (December 4, 2014). "Saucy Sally, Desperately Imbibing Your Gaze". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved February 2, 2021.
  • Brethauer-Hamling, Taylor (December 8, 2021). "Photos: First Look at Eddie Redmayne, Jessie Buckley & More in Cabaret". BroadwayWorld. New York City. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
  • BWW News Desk (May 6, 2016). "Photo Flash: Broadway Workshop and Project Broadway Present Cabaret". BroadwayWorld. New York City. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  • . Sydney, Australia: Hayes Theatre. November 6, 2016. Archived from the original on November 6, 2016.
  • . Ontario, Canada: Shaw Festival. 2014. Archived from the original on November 19, 2013.
  • Culwell-Block, Logan (July 11, 2023). "Olivier-Winning London Cabaret Revival is Officially Broadway Bound". Playbill. Retrieved July 11, 2023.
  • Darvill, Josh (August 24, 2019). "Cabaret UK tour cast confirmed in full for new production". Stagechat. London. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
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External links edit

  • ​Cabaret​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  • Cabaret (1993 UK TV production starring Alan Cumming) at IMDb  
  • Plot and production information at the Guide to Musical Theatre
  • The Making of Cabaret by Keith Garebian. OUP 2011 2nd edition.

cabaret, musical, 1972, film, cabaret, 1972, film, cabaret, american, musical, with, music, john, kander, lyrics, fred, book, masteroff, based, 1951, play, camera, john, druten, which, turn, based, 1939, novel, goodbye, berlin, christopher, isherwood, cabareto. For the 1972 film see Cabaret 1972 film Cabaret is an American musical with music by John Kander lyrics by Fred Ebb and a book by Joe Masteroff It is based on the 1951 play I Am a Camera by John Van Druten which in turn was based on the 1939 novel Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood CabaretOriginal Broadway promotional poster by Tom MorrowMusicJohn KanderLyricsFred EbbBookJoe MasteroffBasisI Am a Cameraby John Van Druten Goodbye to Berlinby Christopher IsherwoodPremiereOctober 10 1966 Shubert Theatre BostonProductionsSee list1966 Boston1966 Broadway1967 US tour1968 West End1969 US tour1986 West End revival1987 US tour1987 Broadway revival1989 US tour1998 Broadway revival1999 North American tour2006 West End revival2008 UK tour2012 UK tour2012 West End revival2013 UK Tour2014 Broadway revival2016 North American tour2017 UK tour2019 UK tour2021 West End revival2024 Broadway revivalAwards1967 Tony Award for Best Musical 1967 Tony Award for Best Original Score 1998 Tony Award for Best Musical Revival Set in 1929 1930 Berlin during the twilight of the Jazz Age as the Nazis rise to power the musical focuses on the hedonistic nightlife at the seedy Kit Kat Klub and revolves around American writer Clifford Bradshaw s relations with English cabaret performer Sally Bowles A subplot involves the doomed romance between German boarding house owner Fraulein Schneider and her elderly suitor Herr Schultz a Jewish fruit vendor Overseeing the action is the Master of Ceremonies at the Kit Kat Klub and the club itself serves as a metaphor for ominous political developments in late Weimar Germany The original Broadway production opened on November 20 1966 at the Broadhurst Theatre in New York City and became a box office hit that ran for 1 166 performances The award winning musical inspired numerous subsequent productions as well as the 1972 film of the same name Contents 1 Background 1 1 Historical basis 1 2 Musical development 2 Synopsis 2 1 Act I 2 2 Act II 3 Characters 4 Musical numbers 4 1 Song modifications 5 Productions 5 1 Original Broadway production 5 2 Original West End production 5 3 1986 West End revival 5 4 1987 Broadway revival 5 5 1993 London revival 5 6 1998 Broadway revival 5 7 2006 West End revival 5 8 2012 West End revival 5 9 2014 Broadway revival 5 10 2021 West End revival 5 11 2024 Broadway revival 5 12 Other productions 6 Notable casts 6 1 Notable replacements 7 Recordings 8 Awards and nominations 8 1 Original Broadway production 8 2 1987 Broadway revival 8 3 1993 London revival 8 4 1998 Broadway revival 8 5 2006 West End revival 8 6 2012 West End revival 8 7 2014 Broadway revival 8 8 2021 West End revival 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Works cited 9 3 1 Print sources 9 3 2 Online sources 10 External linksBackground editHistorical basis edit Further information Christopher Isherwood and Jean Ross nbsp nbsp Writer Christopher Isherwood left and chanteuse Jean Ross right photographed in the 1930s The events depicted in the 1966 musical are derived from Anglo American writer Christopher Isherwood s autobiographical tales of his colorful escapades in the Weimar Republic 1 2 In 1929 Isherwood visited Weimar era Berlin during the final months of the Golden Twenties 3 He relocated to Berlin to avail himself of boy prostitutes and to enjoy the city s orgiastic Jazz Age cabarets 4 5 He socialized with a coterie of gay writers that included Stephen Spender Paul Bowles a and W H Auden 8 At the time Isherwood viewed the rise of fascism in Germany with political indifference b and instead focused on writing his first novel 11 12 In Berlin Isherwood shared modest lodgings with 19 year old British flapper Jean Ross c an aspiring film actress who earned her living as a chanteuse in lesbian bars and second rate cabarets 14 15 While room mates at Nollendorfstrasse 17 in Schoneberg 16 a 27 year old Isherwood settled into a sexual relationship with a 16 year old German boy 17 18 and Ross became pregnant after engaging in a series of sexual liaisons 19 20 She believed the father of the child to be jazz pianist and later film actor Peter van Eyck 20 As a personal favor to Ross Isherwood pretended to be her heterosexual impregnator in order to facilitate an abortion procedure 21 Ross nearly died as a result of the botched abortion due to the doctor s incompetence 20 22 Following the procedure Isherwood visited an ailing Ross in a Berlin hospital Wrongly assuming the shy gay author to be her heterosexual partner the hospital staff despised him for forcing Ross to undergo a near fatal abortion These tragicomic events later inspired Isherwood to write his 1937 novella Sally Bowles and serves as its narrative climax 23 24 While Ross recovered from the botched abortion procedure the political situation rapidly deteriorated in Weimar Germany as the incipient Nazi Party grew stronger day by day 25 There was a sensation of doom to be felt in the Berlin streets Spender recalled 25 26 As Berlin s daily scenes increasingly featured poverty unemployment political demonstrations and street fighting between the forces of the extreme left and the extreme right 27 Isherwood Ross Spender and other British nationals realized that they must leave the politically volatile country as soon as possible 28 Two weeks after Adolf Hitler implemented the Enabling Act which cemented his dictatorship Isherwood fled Germany and returned to England on April 5 1933 29 30 Afterwards the Nazis shuttered most of Berlin s seedy cabarets d and many of Isherwood s cabaret acquaintances fled abroad or perished in concentration camps 32 These events served as the genesis for Isherwood s Berlin stories In 1951 playwright John Van Druten adapted Isherwood s 1939 novel Goodbye to Berlin into the Broadway play I Am a Camera which in turn became a 1955 film starring Laurence Harvey and Julie Harris 33 Musical development edit Further information Harold Prince and Kander and Ebb nbsp Julie Andrews was offered the role of Sally Bowles but her manager refused due to the character s immorality In early 1963 producer David Black commissioned English composer and lyricist Sandy Wilson to undertake a musical adaptation of Van Druten s 1951 play I Am a Camera 34 Black hoped that singer Julie Andrews would agree to star in the adaptation but Andrews manager refused to allow her to accept the role of Sally Bowles due to the character s immorality 35 By the time Wilson completed his work however Black s option on both the 1951 Van Druten play and its source material by Isherwood had lapsed and been acquired by rival Broadway producer Harold Prince 36 Prince wished to create a gritty adaptation of Isherwood s stories that drew parallels between the spiritual bankruptcy of Germany in the 1920s and contemporary social problems in the United States at a time when the struggle for civil rights for black Americans was heating up as a result of nonviolent but bold demonstrations being held in the Deep South 37 Prince hired playwright Joe Masteroff to work on the adaptation 38 Both men believed that Wilson s score failed to capture the carefree hedonism of the Jazz Age in late 1920s Berlin 36 They wanted a score that evoked the Berlin of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya 36 Consequently Prince invited the songwriting team of John Kander and Fred Ebb to join the project 36 Kander and Ebb envisioned the work as a dramatic play preceded by a prologue of songs describing the Berlin atmosphere from various points of view As the composers distributed the songs between scenes they realized the story could be told in the structure of a more traditional book musical and they replaced several songs with tunes more relevant to the plot 36 For the musical adaptation playwright Joe Masteroff significantly altered Isherwood s original characters 39 He transformed the English protagonist into an American writer named Clifford Bradshaw the antisemitic landlady became a tolerant woman with a Jewish beau who owned a fruit store they cut various supporting characters and added new characters such as the Nazi smuggler Ernst Ludwig e for dramatic purposes 41 42 The musical ultimately expressed two stories in one the first a revue centered on the decadence of the Kit Kat Klub for which Hal Prince created the Master of Ceremonies Emcee character played by Joel Grey the second a story set in the society outside the club thus juxtaposing the lives of the characters based on Isherwood s real life associates and acquaintances with the seedy club 43 44 In fall 1966 the musical entered rehearsals 45 After viewing one of the last rehearsals before the company headed to Boston for the pre Broadway run Prince s friend Jerome Robbins suggested cutting the songs outside the cabaret but Prince ignored his advice 45 In Boston lead actress Jill Haworth struggled with her characterization of Sally Bowles 46 47 Critics thought Sally s blonde hair and white dress suggested a debutante at a senior prom instead of a cabaret singer so Sally became a brunette before the show opened on Broadway 46 47 Prince staged the show in an unusual way for the time 48 As the audience entered the theater they saw the curtain raised exposing a stage with only a large mirror that reflected the auditorium 49 50 Instead of an overture a drum roll and cymbal crash introduced the opening number The show mixed dialogue scenes with expository songs and standalone cabaret numbers that provided social commentary This innovative concept initially surprised audiences 51 Over time they discerned the distinction between the two and appreciated the rationale behind them 51 Synopsis editAct I edit nbsp annotations nbsp The Kit Kat Klub is intended to evoke the many Weimar era cabarets in Berlin At the twilight of the Jazz Age in Berlin the incipient Nazi Party is growing stronger The Kit Kat Klub is a seedy cabaret a place of decadent celebration The club s Master of Ceremonies or Emcee f together with the cabaret girls and waiters warm up the audience Willkommen Meanwhile a young American writer named Clifford Bradshaw arrives via a railway train in Berlin He has journeyed to the city to work on a new novel Cliff encounters Ernst Ludwig e a German smuggler who offers him black market work and recommends a boarding house At the boarding house the proprietress Fraulein Schneider offers Cliff a room for one hundred reichsmarks but he can only pay fifty After a brief debate she relents and allows Cliff to live there for fifty marks Fraulein Schneider observes that she has learned to take whatever life offers So What When Cliff visits the Kit Kat Klub the Emcee introduces an English chanteuse Sally Bowles who performs a flirtatious number Don t Tell Mama g Afterward she asks Cliff to recite poetry for her and he recites Ernest Thayer s mock heroic poem Casey at the Bat Cliff offers to escort Sally home but she says that her boyfriend Max the club s owner is too jealous h Sally performs her final number at the Kit Kat Klub aided by a female ensemble of jazz babies Mein Herr The cabaret ensemble performs a song and dance calling each other on inter table phones and inviting each other for dances and drinks The Telephone Song i The next day at the boarding house Cliff has just finished giving an English lesson to Ernst when Sally arrives Max has fired her and thrown her out and now she has no place to live Sally asks Cliff if she can live in his room At first he resists but she convinces him to take her in Perfectly Marvelous The Emcee and two female companions sing a song Two Ladies that comments on Cliff and Sally s new living arrangement Herr Schultz an elderly Jewish fruit shop owner who lives in the boarding house gives a pineapple to Fraulein Schneider as a romantic gesture It Couldn t Please Me More In the Kit Kat Klub a young waiter starts to sing a song a patriotic anthem to the Fatherland that slowly descends into a darker Nazi inspired marching song Tomorrow Belongs to Me He initially sings a cappella before the customers and the band join in j Months later Cliff and Sally are still living together and have grown intimate c Cliff knows that he is in a dream but he enjoys living with Sally too much to come to his senses Why Should I Wake Up Sally reveals that she is pregnant but she does not know who is the father and decides to obtain an abortion Cliff reminds her that it could be his child and tries to convince her to have the baby Maybe This Time k Ernst enters and offers Cliff a chance to earn easy money picking up a suitcase in Paris and delivering it to a client in Berlin The Emcee comments on this with the song Sitting Pretty or in later versions Money Meanwhile Fraulein Schneider has caught one of her boarders the prostitute Fraulein Kost bringing sailors into her room Fraulein Schneider forbids her from doing so again but Kost threatens to leave Kost reveals that she has seen Fraulein Schneider with Herr Schultz in her room Herr Schultz saves Fraulein Schneider s reputation by telling Fraulein Kost that he and Fraulein Schneider are to be married in three weeks After Fraulein Kost departs Fraulein Schneider thanks Herr Schultz for lying to Fraulein Kost Herr Schultz says that he still wishes to marry Fraulein Schneider Married At Fraulein Schneider and Herr Schultz s engagement party Cliff arrives and delivers the suitcase of contraband to Ernst Sally and Cliff gift the couple a crystal fruit bowl A tipsy Schultz sings Meeskite meeskite he explains is Yiddish for ugly or funny looking a song with a moral Anyone responsible for loveliness large or small Is not a meeskite at all l Afterward seeking revenge on Fraulein Schneider Kost tells Ernst who now sports a Nazi armband that Schultz is a Jew Ernst warns Schneider that marrying a Jew is unwise Kost and company reprise Tomorrow Belongs to Me with more overtly Nazi overtones as Cliff Sally Schneider Schultz and the Emcee look on Act II edit nbsp annotations nbsp The musical is set against the backdrop of fascism s rise in Germany which reaches a climax at the end of the second act The cabaret girls along with the Emcee in drag perform a kickline routine which eventually becomes a goose step Fraulein Schneider expresses her concerns about her impending nuptials to Herr Schultz who assures her that everything will be all right Married Reprise m They are interrupted by the crash of a brick being thrown through the glass window of Herr Schultz s fruit shop Schultz tries to reassure her that it is merely rowdy children making trouble but Fraulein Schneider is now afraid Back at the Kit Kat Klub the Emcee performs a song and dance routine with a woman in a gorilla suit singing that their love has been met with universal disapproval If You Could See Her Encouraging the audience to be more open minded he defends his ape woman concluding with if you could see her through my eyes she wouldn t look Jewish at all n 44 Fraulein Schneider goes to Cliff and Sally s room and returns their engagement present explaining that her marriage has been called off When Cliff protests and states that she can t just give up this way she asks him what other choice she has What Would You Do Cliff begs Sally to leave Germany with him so that they can raise their child together in America Sally protests and claims that their life in Berlin is wonderful Cliff urges her to wake up and to notice the growing social upheaval around them b Sally retorts that politics have nothing to do with them and returns to the Kit Kat Klub I Don t Care Much o At the club after another heated argument with Sally Cliff is accosted by Ernst who has another delivery job for him Cliff tries to brush him off When Ernst inquires if Cliff s attitude towards him is because of that Jew at the party Cliff attacks him only to be beaten by Ernst s bodyguards and ejected from the club p On stage the Emcee introduces Sally who enters to perform again singing that life is a cabaret old chum cementing her decision to live in carefree ignorance Cabaret The next morning a bruised Cliff is packing his clothes in his room when Herr Schultz visits He informs Cliff that he is moving to another boarding house but he is confident that these difficult times will soon pass He understands the German people he declares because he is a German too When Sally returns she announces that she has had an abortion and Cliff slaps her She chides him for his previous insistence on keeping the baby pointing out it would be a terrible burden for a child knowing it was the only reason the parents were together Cliff still hopes that she will join him in France but Sally retorts that she has always hated Paris She hopes that when Cliff finally writes his novel he will dedicate the work to her Cliff leaves heartbroken There was a cabaret and there was a master of ceremonies and there was a city called Berlin in a country called Germany and it was the end of the world Cliff Bradshaw Cabaret Act II 56 On the railway train to Paris Cliff begins to compose his novel reflecting on his experiences There was a cabaret and there was a master of ceremonies and there was a city called Berlin in a country called Germany and it was the end of the world and I was dancing with Sally Bowles and we were both fast asleep Willkommen Reprise In the Kit Kat Klub the Emcee welcomes the audience once again as the ensemble reprises Willkommen but the song is now harsh and discordant q The Emcee sings Auf Wiedersehen a bientot r followed by a crescendo ing drum roll and a cymbal crash s Characters edit nbsp Micaela Diamond as Sally Bowles in Project Broadway and Broadway Workshop s 2016 Production 59 Emcee f the Master of Ceremonies at the Kit Kat Klub a leering ghoulish flamboyant figure Sally Bowles a British flapper who is the headlining chanteuse at the seedy Kit Kat Klub Clifford Bradshaw an American writer who has come to Berlin in order to write a novel Fraulein Schneider an older German woman who runs a boarding house where Cliff and Sally reside Herr Schultz an elderly Jewish fruit shop owner who falls in love with Fraulein Schneider Ernst Ludwig a German smuggler who befriends Cliff when he arrives in Berlin Fraulein Kost a German prostitute who rents a room in Fraulein Schneider s boarding house Maria Lulu Rosie Fritzie Texas and Frenchie t cabaret girls who perform at the Kit Kat Klub Bobby Victor Hans and Herman cabaret boys who perform at the Kit Kat Klub Max the proprietor of the Kit Kat Klub and Sally s boyfriendMusical numbers editEvery production of Cabaret has modified the original score with songs being changed cut or added from the film version This is a collective list featuring all songs from every major production Act I 61 62 Willkommen Emcee and Kit Kats So What Fraulein Schneider Telephone Song Telephone Dance i Cliff and Kit Kats Don t Tell Mama Sally and Kit Kats Mein Herr Sally and Kit Kats Perfectly Marvelous Sally and Cliff Two Ladies u Emcee and Two Ladies v It Couldn t Please Me More A Pineapple Fraulein Schneider and Herr Schultz Tomorrow Belongs to Me j Nazi Youth Waiters Emcee Why Should I Wake Up Cliff Don t Go w Cliff Maybe This Time k Sally Sitting Pretty x Emcee and Kit Kats Money Emcee and Kit Kats Married Herr Schultz and Fraulein Schneider Meeskite l Herr Schultz and Sally Tomorrow Belongs to Me Reprise Fraulein Kost Ernst Ludwig and Company Act II 61 62 Entr acte Kickline Emcee and Kit Kats Married Reprise m Herr Schultz If You Could See Her The Gorilla Song Emcee What Would You Do Fraulein Schneider I Don t Care Much o Emcee Cabaret Sally Willkommen Reprise Finale Ultimo Emcee Cliff and Company Song modifications edit Many songs planned for the 1966 production were cut 65 Three excised songs Good Time Charlie It ll All Blow Over and Roommates were recorded by Kander and Ebb and the sheet music published in a collector s book 62 Sally sang Good Time Charlie to Cliff as they walked to Fraulein Schneider and Herr Schultz s engagement party mocking Cliff for his gloominess 64 At the end of the first act Fraulein Schneider sang It ll All Blow Over expressing her concerns about marrying a Jew while Cliff voiced his worries about Germany s emerging Nazism 66 67 In the song Sally declares that all will turn out well in the end 66 Perfectly Marvelous replaced Roommates and serves the same plot function of Sally convincing Cliff to let her move in with him 64 68 The 1972 film added several songs notably Mein Herr and Maybe This Time which were included in later productions 65 The latter song had been written by Kander and Ebb for the unproduced musical Golden Gate 69 The later 1987 and 1998 Broadway revivals also added new songs such as I Don t Care Much 70 In the 1987 revival Kander and Ebb wrote a new song for Cliff titled Don t Go 71 In the 1998 revival Mein Herr replaced The Telephone Song and Maybe This Time replaced Why Should I Wake Up Originally the Emcee sang Sitting Pretty accompanied by the cabaret girls in international costumes with their units of currency representing Russian rubles Japanese yen French francs American dollars and German reichsmarks 71 In the 1972 film the Emcee and Sally Bowles sang Money Money instead of Sitting Pretty The film soundtrack briefly played Sitting Pretty as orchestral background music In the 1987 revival they presented a special version that combined a medley of both money songs and they incorporated motifs from the later song into the international dance that featured Sitting Pretty In the 1998 revival they used only the later song written for the film This version included the cabaret girls and carried a darker undertone Productions editOriginal Broadway production edit nbsp nbsp nbsp The original production featured Jill Haworth left as Sally Bowles Joel Grey center as the Emcee and Lotte Lenya right as Fraulein Schneider The musical opened on Broadway on November 20 1966 47 at the Broadhurst Theatre transferred to the Imperial Theatre and then the Broadway Theatre before closing on September 6 1969 after 1 166 performances and 21 previews 72 Directed by Harold Prince and choreographed by Ron Field the cast featured Jill Haworth as Sally Bert Convy as Cliff Lotte Lenya as Fraulein Schneider Jack Gilford as Herr Schultz Joel Grey as the Emcee Edward Winter as Ernst and Peg Murray as Fraulein Kost 73 74 Replacements later in the run included Anita Gillette and Melissa Hart as Sally Ken Kercheval and Larry Kert as Cliff and Martin Ross as the Emcee 47 In addition John Serry Sr performed as the orchestral accordionist The original Broadway production was not an instant success according to playwright Joe Masteroff due to its perceived immoral content 49 When the show opened in Boston Masteroff recalled there were a lot of walkouts Once the reviews came out the public came back 49 At the time actor Joel Grey was merely fifth billed in the show Nevertheless audiences were hypnotized by Grey s sinister performance as the Emcee 75 In contrast Jill Haworth s performance as Sally was less well received and was criticized for its blandness 76 Emory Lewis the reviewer for The Morning Call wrote that Jill Haworth the lovely English actress who played Sally Bowles on opening night was personable but she was not sufficiently trained for so pivotal a role And her voice was small and undramatic Her performance threw Cabaret out of kilter 47 The 1967 68 US national tour featured Melissa Hart as Sally Signe Hasso as Fraulein Schneider and Leo Fuchs as Herr Schultz 77 The tour included the Shubert Theatre in New Haven Connecticut in December 1967 the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles in May 1968 the Curran Theatre in San Francisco in September 1968 and many others 78 Original West End production edit The musical premiered in the West End on February 28 1968 at the Palace Theatre with Judi Dench as Sally Kevin Colson as Cliff Barry Dennen as the Emcee Lila Kedrova as Fraulein Schneider and Peter Sallis as Herr Schultz It ran for 336 performances 79 Critics such as Ken Mandelbaum have asserted that Judi Dench was the finest of all the Sallys that appeared in Hal Prince s original staging and if she s obviously not much of a singer her Sally is a perfect example of how one can give a thrilling musical theatre performance without a great singing voice 80 1986 West End revival edit nbsp Kelly Hunter as Sally Bowles In 1986 the show was revived in London at the Strand Theatre starring Kelly Hunter as Sally Peter Land as Cliff and Wayne Sleep as the Emcee directed and choreographed by Gillian Lynne 80 1987 Broadway revival edit The first Broadway revival opened on October 22 1987 with direction and choreography by Prince and Field The revival opened at the Imperial Theatre and then transferred to the Minskoff Theatre to complete its 261 performance run 81 Joel Grey received star billing as the Emcee with Alyson Reed as Sally Gregg Edelman as Cliff Regina Resnik as Fraulein Schneider Werner Klemperer as Herr Schultz and David Staller as Ernst Ludwig The song Don t Go was added for Cliff s character 1993 London revival edit nbsp nbsp Sam Mendes left directed the 1993 London revival of Cabaret with Alan Cumming right as the Emcee Cumming would return as the Emcee for the 1998 and 2014 Broadway Revivals In 1993 Sam Mendes directed a new production for the Donmar Warehouse in London 82 83 The revival starred Jane Horrocks as Sally Adam Godley as Cliff Alan Cumming as the Emcee and Sara Kestelman as Fraulein Schneider Cumming received an Olivier Award nomination for his performance and Kestelman won the Olivier for Best Supporting Performance in a Musical Mendes conception was very different from either the original production or the conventional first revival 44 82 The most significant change was the character of the Emcee The role as played by Joel Grey in both prior incarnations was an asexual edgy character with rouged cheeks dressed in a tuxedo Alan Cumming s portrayal was highly sexualized as he wore suspenders around his crotch and red paint on his nipples 84 Staging details differed significantly Mendes transformed his theater into a nightclub with the audience sitting at little tables with red lamps The Kit Kat Club became even more run down and seedy with the actresses playing the chorus girls told not to shave their legs or underarms There was no room for an orchestra and some musical instruments were played by actors who were not always certain of hitting the right notes Cummings would occasionally interact with the audience members including picking a man out of the crowd to dance with him 44 Instead of Tomorrow Belongs to Me being performed by a male choir of waiting staff the Emcee plays a recording of a boy soprano singing it In the final scene the Emcee removes his outer clothes to reveal a striped uniform of the type worn by the internees in concentration camps on it are pinned a yellow badge identifying Jews a red star marking Communists and socialists and a pink triangle denoting homosexuals Other changes included added references to Cliff s bisexuality including a brief scene where he kisses one of the Cabaret boys 85 I Don t Care Much which was added for the 1987 Broadway revival was maintained for this production and Mein Herr was added from the film This production was filmed by Channel Four Film for airing on UK television 86 1998 Broadway revival edit nbsp nbsp Natasha Richardson portrayed Sally Bowles in the 1998 revival and Neil Patrick Harris later starred as the Emcee after Alan Cumming departed the role The second Broadway revival by the Roundabout Theatre Company was based on the 1993 Mendes Donmar Warehouse production For the Broadway transfer Rob Marshall was co director and choreographer 49 87 44 The production opened after 37 previews on March 19 1998 at the Kit Kat Klub housed in what previously had been known as Henry Miller s Theatre 87 Later that year it transferred to Studio 54 49 where it remained for the rest of its 2 377 performance run 81 becoming the third longest running revival in Broadway musical history third only to Oh Calcutta and Chicago For the Broadway production Cumming reprised his role as the Emcee opposite newcomers Natasha Richardson as Sally John Benjamin Hickey as Cliff Ron Rifkin as Herr Schultz Denis O Hare as Ernst Ludwig Michele Pawk as Fraulein Kost and Mary Louise Wilson as Fraulein Schneider 87 The Broadway production was nominated for ten Tony Awards winning four for Cumming Richardson and Rifkin as well as the Tony for Best Revival of a Musical This production featured a number of notable replacements later in the run Jennifer Jason Leigh Susan Egan Joely Fisher Gina Gershon Debbie Gibson Melina Kanakaredes Jane Leeves Molly Ringwald Brooke Shields and Lea Thompson as Sally Michael C Hall Raul Esparza Neil Patrick Harris Adam Pascal Jon Secada and John Stamos as the Emcee Boyd Gaines Michael Hayden and Rick Holmes as Cliff Tom Bosley Dick Latessa Hal Linden Laurence Luckinbill and Tony Roberts as Herr Schultz and Blair Brown Carole Shelley Polly Bergen Alma Cuervo and Mariette Hartley as Fraulein Schneider There were a number of changes made between the 1993 and 1998 revivals despite the similarities in creative team The cabaret number Two Ladies was staged with the Emcee a cabaret girl and a cabaret boy in drag and included a shadow play simulating various sexual positions 85 The score was re orchestrated using synthesizer effects and expanding the stage band with all the instruments now being played by the cabaret girls and boys The satiric Sitting Pretty with its mocking references to deprivation despair and hunger was eliminated as it had been in the film version and where in the 1993 revival it had been combined with Money as it had been in 1987 London production Money was now performed on its own Maybe This Time from the film adaptation was added to the score 85 2006 West End revival edit In September 2006 a new production of the show opened at the Lyric Theatre directed by Rufus Norris 88 and starring Anna Maxwell Martin as Sally James Dreyfus as the Emcee Harriet Thorpe as Fraulein Kost Michael Hayden as Cliff and Sheila Hancock as Fraulein Schneider Hancock won the Olivier Award for Best Supporting Performance in a Musical Replacements later in the run included Kim Medcalf and Amy Nuttall as Sally Honor Blackman and Angela Richards as Fraulein Schneider and Julian Clary and Alistair McGowan as the Emcee This production closed in June 2008 and toured nationally for two years opening at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre with a cast that included Wayne Sleep as the Emcee and Samantha Barks as Sally before Siobhan Dillon took over the role 2012 West End revival edit A revival opened in the West End at the Savoy Theatre on October 3 2012 following a four week tour of the UK including Bromley Southampton Nottingham Norwich and Salford 89 Will Young played the Emcee and Michelle Ryan portrayed Sally Bowles 90 It was announced on August 10 2012 that Sian Phillips Harriet Thorpe and Matt Rawle would also be joining the cast The production was made by the creative team behind the 2006 London revival but they created a different set lighting costumes choreography and direction In August 2013 the show went on tour again with Young as The Emcee Siobhan Dillon reprising her role of Sally and Lyn Paul joining the cast as Fraulein Schneider 91 The production toured the UK in autumn 2017 with Young reprising his role as the Emcee and Louise Redknapp as Sally Bowles 92 Another UK tour began in autumn 2019 starring John Partridge as the Emcee Kara Lily Hayworth as Sally Bowles and Anita Harris as Fraulein Schneider 93 2014 Broadway revival edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Michelle Williams Emma Stone and Sienna Miller each portrayed Sally Bowles in the 2014 Broadway revival In September 2013 Roundabout Theatre Company announced plans to return the company s acclaimed 1998 production to Studio 54 in New York 94 49 For this the show s third Broadway revival Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall reprised their respective roles as director and co director choreographer to recreate their work from the earlier production Alan Cumming starred again as the Emcee while Academy Award nominee Michelle Williams made her Broadway debut as Sally Bowles 95 On October 7 2013 Tony Award nominees Danny Burstein and Linda Emond joined the cast as Herr Schultz and Fraulein Schneider 96 The production began a 24 week limited engagement with previews from March 21 2014 with opening night on April 24 2014 This engagement was later extended to a 36 week run concluding on January 4 2015 97 Emma Stone replaced Michelle Williams as Sally from November 11 2014 until February 15 2015 98 Critics praised Stone s performance for her interpretation of the hard drinking sybarite Sally Bowles as a flaming flapper the kind hymned by F Scott Fitzgerald and embodied by the young Joan Crawford in silent movies 99 Alan Cumming continued in the role of the Emcee until the show s final curtain in March 2015 100 101 On February 17 Sienna Miller replaced Stone as Sally through to the show s closing on March 29 2015 102 103 The production later toured the US from January 2016 with Randy Harrison as the Emcee and Andrea Goss following her appearance as Frenchie in the Broadway production They were later replaced by Jon Peterson and Leigh Ann Larkin 2021 West End revival edit nbsp Kit Kat Club Playhouse Theatre Marquee in London In May 2021 it was announced that Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley would star as the Emcee and Sally Bowles in a new production directed by Rebecca Frecknall designed by Tom Scutt choreographed by Julia Cheng with musical supervision and direction by Jennifer Whyte lighting design by Isabella Byrd sound design by Nick Lidster casting by Stuart Burt and fight direction by Jonathan Holby 104 The production also features Omari Douglas as Cliff Bradshaw Liza Sadovy as Fraulein Schneider Elliot Levey as Herr Schultz Stewart Clarke as Ernst Ludwig and Anna Jane Casey as Fraulein Kost 105 106 Produced by Underbelly and Ambassador Theatre Group 107 the production entitled Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club began previews at the Playhouse Theatre on November 15 2021 which has been refurbished as the Kit Kat Club which includes an intimate in the round stage reduced to a 550 seat capacity with tables that audience members can dine at as well as a refurbished foyer in effect transforming the entire theater into a Weimar era nightclub 108 44 On December 14 2021 it was announced that the production s run would be extended to October 2022 The production led the 2022 Olivier Award nominations with 11 nods 109 including Best Musical Revival Best Actor in a Musical for Redmayne and Best Actress in a Musical for Buckley 109 The production won 7 awards and set a record for being the most award winning revival in Olivier history as well for being the first production to obtain awards in all 4 eligible acting categories Following the departure of Redmayne and Buckley the Emcee and Sally Bowles have since been played by Fra Fee and Amy Lennox 110 Callum Scott Howells and Madeline Brewer Matthew Gent and Emily Benjamin Aimee Lou Wood and John McCrea Maude Apatow and Mason Alexander Park Jake Shears and Rebecca Lucy Taylor aka Self Esteem 111 and currently Luke Treadaway and Cara Delevingne 112 2024 Broadway revival edit On July 11 2023 it was announced that the 2021 West End production would transfer to the August Wilson Theatre on Broadway in spring 2024 Similarly to the West End production the August Wilson Theatre was also refurbished as the Kit Kat Club with an intimate in the round staging 113 Eddie Redmayne reprised his performance from London as the Emcee with Gayle Rankin and Ato Blankson Wood costarring as Sally Bowles and Cliff Bradshaw 114 Additionally Bebe Neuwirth Steven Skybell Natascia Diaz and Henry Gottfried play Fraulein Schneider Herr Schultz Fraulein Kost and Ernst Ludwig respectively 115 116 Previews began April 1 2024 ahead of a gala night on April 20 and press night on April 21 117 Other productions edit nbsp Anne Beate Odland as Sally Bowles in a 1975 production of Cabaret In 1993 a production of Cabaret debuted at the Octagon Theatre in Bolton England 118 This version was directed by Ian Forest designed by Ashley Sharp and starred Ashley Artus as the Emcee 118 Critic Natalia Anglesey of The Stage opined that undoubtedly the star of this particular production of Cabaret is the physically flexible Ashley Artus as the sinister Emcee who adroitly controls the cast and members of his club whilst leading us into the nightmarish world of pre war Berlin 118 Artus would later garner the Manchester Evening News Drama Award Nomination for his performance A BBC Radio 2 radio broadcast in 1996 at the Golders Green Hippodrome starred Clare Burt as Sally Bowles Steven Berkoff as the Emcee Alexander Hanson as Clifford Bradshaw Keith Michell as Herr Schultz and Rosemary Leach as Fraulein Schneider Since 2003 there have been successful international stagings of the show many of which have been influenced by Mendes concept including productions in Argentina Australia Brazil Canada Colombia Costa Rica France Portugal Greece Israel Malaysia Mexico Peru Puerto Rico Serbia South Africa Spain and Venezuela In 2008 the Stratford Shakespeare Festival performed a well received production at the Avon Theatre designed by Douglas Paraschuk and directed by Amanda Dehnert featuring Bruce Dow as the Emcee Trish Lindstrom as Sally Sean Arbuckle as Cliff Nora McClellan as Fraulein Schneider and Frank Moore as Herr Schultz 119 The Shaw Festival at Niagara on the Lake Ontario included Cabaret in its 2014 season 120 The production which ran from April 10 October 26 2014 at the Festival Theatre was directed by Peter Hinton with choreography by Denise Clarke The production featured Juan Chioran as the Emcee Deborah Hay as Sally Gray Powell as Cliff Benedict Campbell as Herr Schultz and Corrine Koslo as Fraulein Schneider Hinton s version was influenced by Mendes 1993 revival In 2016 Project Broadway and Broadway Workshop presented Cabaret as their main stage production 121 The cast made of over 50 teenage actors divided into two casts played to the sold out Baruch Performing Arts Center in New York City 59 The production was the first in New York City since the Roundabout Theatre Company revival in 2014 The production was directed by Broadway Workshop founder Marc Tumminelli Among the cast were Michael Nigro and Micaela Diamond 122 A 2017 revival production with new direction played Sydney and Melbourne Australia The production starred Paul Capsis as the Emcee and Chelsea Gibb as Sally The production mixed elements of the Mendes production such as its version of Two Ladies and its portrayal of a gay Cliff with the colorful art design of the original the Emcee is in full makeup and clothed and most of the additional songs from the 1972 film with the exception of Mein Herr 123 Notable casts editRole Broadway West End First West End Revival First Broadway Revival Second London Revival Second Broadway Revival Third West End Revival Fourth West End Revival Third Broadway Revival Fifth West End Revival Fourth Broadway Revival 124 1966 1968 1986 1987 1993 1998 2006 2012 2014 2021 2024 The Emcee Joel Grey Barry Dennen Wayne Sleep Joel Grey Alan Cumming James Dreyfus Will Young Alan Cumming Eddie Redmayne Sally Bowles Jill Haworth Judi Dench Kelly Hunter Alyson Reed Jane Horrocks Natasha Richardson Anna Maxwell Martin Michelle Ryan Michelle Williams Jessie Buckley Gayle Rankin Cliff Bradshaw Bert Convy Kevin Colson Peter Land Gregg Edelman Adam Godley John Benjamin Hickey Michael Hayden Matt Rawle Bill Heck Omari Douglas Ato Blankson Wood Fraulein Schneider Lotte Lenya Lila Kedrova Vivienne Martin Regina Resnik Sara Kestelman Mary Louise Wilson Sheila Hancock Sian Phillips Linda Emond Liza Sadovy Bebe Neuwirth Herr Schultz Jack Gilford Peter Sallis Oscar Quitak Werner Klemperer George Raistrick Ron Rifkin Geoffrey Hutchings Linal Haft Danny Burstein Elliot Levey Steven Skybell Ernst Ludwig Edward Winter Richard Owens Rodney Cottam David Staller Michael Gardiner Denis O Hare Andrew Maud Nicholas Tizzard Aaron Krohn Stewart Clarke Henry Gottfried Fraulein Kost Peg Murray Pamela Strong Grazine Frame Nora Mae Lyng Charlotte Medcalf Michele Pawk Harriet Thorpe Gayle Rankin Anna Jane Casey Natascia Diaz Notable replacements edit Broadway 1966 1969 Sally Bowles Penny Fuller Anita Gillette Melissa Hart Cliff Bradshaw Ken Kercheval Larry Kert Herr Schultz George Voskovec Herr Ludwig George Reinholt Fraulein Schneider Susan Willis Fraulein Kost Rhoda Gemignani West End revival 1986 1987 Sally Bowles Toyah Willcox Broadway revival 1987 1988 The Emcee Michelan Sisti Fraulein Schneider Peg Murray Fraulein Kost Sharon Lawrence Broadway revival 1998 2004 The Emcee Michael C Hall Matt McGrath Raul Esparza John Stamos Neil Patrick Harris Jon Secada Adam Pascal Sally Bowles Jennifer Jason Leigh Mary McCormack Susan Egan Joely Fisher Lea Thompson Gina Gershon Brooke Shields Molly Ringwald Jane Leeves Debbie Gibson Melina Kanakaredes Katherine Shindle Katie Finneran Cliff Bradshaw Boyd Gaines Michael Hayden Rick Holmes Fraulein Schneider Blair Brown Carole Shelley Polly Bergen Alma Cuervo Mariette Hartley Taina Elg Maureen Moore Herr Schultz Laurence Luckinbill Dick Latessa Larry Keith Hal Linden Tom Bosley Tony Roberts Gordon Stanley Herr Ludwig Michael Stuhlbarg Martin Moran Fraulein Kost Victoria Clark Jane Summerhays West End revival 2006 2008 The Emcee Julian Clary Alistair McGowan Sally Bowles Kim Medcalf Amy Nuttall Fraulein Schneider Honor Blackman Angela Richards Herr Schultz Francis Matthews Barry James Broadway revival 2014 2015 Sally Bowles Emma Stone Sienna Miller Fraulein Kost Hani Furstenberg West End revival 2021 The Emcee Fra Fee Callum Scott Howells John McCrea Mason Alexander Park Jake Shears Luke Treadaway Sally Bowles Amy Lennox Madeline Brewer Aimee Lou Wood Maude Apatow Rebecca Lucy Taylor Cara Delevingne Clifford Bradshaw Omar Baroud Michael Ahomka LindsayRecordings edit nbsp Original Broadway cast recording 1967 cover The first recording of Cabaret was the original cast album with a number of the songs either truncated e g Sitting Pretty The Money Song or outright cut to conserve disk space 80 When this album was released on compact disc Kander and Ebb s voice and piano recordings of songs cut from the musical were added as bonus material 80 The 1968 London cast recording purportedly features a more accurate rendering of the score and includes the Act One finale Tomorrow Belongs To Me reprise the second act finale as performed in the theatre and a number of other previously unrecorded bits and pieces 80 It was released in the UK and reissued on the CBS Embassy label in 1973 The 1972 movie soundtrack with Liza Minnelli is perhaps the best known of the recordings although the movie is much re written and eliminates all but six of the original songs from the stage production 80 Both the 1986 London and 1998 Broadway revival casts were recorded 80 A 1993 two CD studio recording contains more or less the entire score including songs written for the movie or for later productions and many incidentals and instrumentals not usually recorded This recording features Jonathan Pryce as the Emcee Maria Friedman as Sally Gregg Edelman as Cliff Judi Dench as Fraulein Schneider and Fred Ebb as Herr Schultz The cast recording of the 2006 London revival at the Lyric Theatre includes James Dreyfus as the Emcee and Anna Maxwell Martin as Sally Bowles The recording peaked number 107 on the French Albums Chart 125 and number 49 on the Dutch Albums Chart 126 The 2021 London cast recording featuring Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley was recorded live at the Kit Kat Club Playhouse Theatre London and released on January 20 2023 Cabaret The Maida Vale Session is an EP that was released on March 8 2024 with four songs from the 2021 revival at the Kit Kat Club Willkommen Don t Tell Mama I Don t Care Much amp Cabaret It was recorded for a BBC Radio 2 show with Jo Whiley at the BBC s Maida Vale Studios with Jake Shears from the Scissor Sisters as Emcee Rebecca Lucy Taylor also known by her stage name of Self Esteem as Sally Bowles and the 2023 London Cast and Orchestra of Cabaret at The Kit Kat Club In addition to these recordings cast albums for the French Spanish Greek Hebrew Italian Austrian Dutch Mexican and two German productions have been released 80 Awards and nominations editOriginal Broadway production edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 1967 Tony Award Best Musical Won Best Original Score John Kander and Fred Ebb Won Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Jack Gilford Nominated Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Lotte Lenya Nominated Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Joel Grey Won Edward Winter Nominated Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Peg Murray Won Best Direction of a Musical Harold Prince Won Best Choreography Ron Field Won Best Scenic Design Boris Aronson Won Best Costume Design Patricia Zipprodt Won New York Drama Critics Circle Best Musical Won Outer Critics Circle Award Best Musical Won 1987 Broadway revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 1987 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Nominated Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Werner Klemperer Nominated Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Alyson Reed Nominated Regina Resnik Nominated Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Nominated Outstanding Actor in a Musical Joel Grey Nominated Outstanding Director of a Musical Harold Prince Nominated 1993 London revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 1994 Laurence Olivier Award Best Musical Revival Nominated Best Actor in a Musical Alan Cumming Nominated Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical Sara Kestelman Won Best Director of a Musical Sam Mendes Nominated 1998 Broadway revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 1998 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Won Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Alan Cumming Won Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Natasha Richardson Won Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Ron Rifkin Won Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Mary Louise Wilson Nominated Best Direction of a Musical Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall Nominated Best Choreography Rob Marshall Nominated Best Orchestrations Michael Gibson Nominated Best Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated Best Lighting Design Peggy Eisenhauer and Mike Baldassari Nominated Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Won Outstanding Actor in a Musical Alan Cumming Won Outstanding Actress in a Musical Natasha Richardson Won Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Michele Pawk Nominated Outstanding Director Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall Nominated Outstanding Choreography Rob Marshall Nominated Outstanding Orchestrations Michael Gibson Nominated Outstanding Set Design Robert Brill Nominated Outstanding Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated Outstanding Lighting Design Peggy Eisenhauer and Mike Baldassari Nominated Drama League Award Distinguished Production of a Revival Won New York Drama Critics Circle Special Citation Won Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Won Outstanding Actor in a Musical Alan Cumming Won Outstanding Actress in a Musical Natasha Richardson Won Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Ron Rifkin Nominated Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Michele Pawk Nominated Outstanding Choreography Rob Marshall Nominated Outstanding Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated Outstanding Director of a Musical Sam Mendes and Rob Marshall Nominated Outstanding Lighting Design Peggy Eisenhauer and Mike Baldassari Nominated Theatre World Award Outstanding Broadway Debut Alan Cumming Won 2006 West End revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 2007 Laurence Olivier Award Best Musical Revival Nominated Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical Sheila Hancock Won Best Theatre Choreographer Javier de Frutos Won 2012 West End revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 2013 Laurence Olivier Award Best Musical Revival Nominated Best Actor in a Musical Will Young Nominated Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical Sian Phillips Nominated 2014 Broadway revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 2014 Tony Award Best Featured Actor in a Musical Danny Burstein Nominated Best Featured Actress in a Musical Linda Emond Nominated Drama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Danny Burstein Nominated Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Nominated Outstanding Actress in a Musical Michelle Williams Nominated Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Danny Burstein Nominated Fred and Adele Astaire Award Outstanding Choreographer in a Broadway Show Rob Marshall Nominated Outstanding Female Dancer in a Broadway Show Gayle Rankin Nominated 2021 West End revival edit Year Award Category Nominee Result 2022 Laurence Olivier Award Best Musical Revival Won Best Actor in a Musical Eddie Redmayne Won Best Actress in a Musical Jessie Buckley Won Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical Liza Sadovy Won Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical Elliot Levey Won Best Director Rebecca Frecknall Won Best Costume Design Tom Scutt Nominated Best Set Design Nominated Best Sound Design Nick Lidster Won Best Theatre Choreographer Julia Cheng Nominated Best Lighting Design Isabella Byrd Nominated Critics Circle Theatre Award Best Actress Jessie Buckley Won Best Director Rebecca Frecknall Won Best Designer Tom Scutt Won WhatsOnStage Awards Best Musical Revival Nominated Best Performer in a Male Identifying Role in a Musical Eddie Redmayne Won Best Performer in a Female Identifying Role in a Musical Jessie Buckley Nominated Best Direction Rebecca Frecknall Nominated Best Set Design Tom Scutt Nominated Best Costume Design Nominated Best Lighting Design Isabella Byrd Nominated West End Wilma Awards Best Performer in a West End Show Anna Jane Casey Nominated Best West End Ensemble Performer B Terry as Helga Nominated Best Understudy Emily Benjamin as Sally Nominated Best Takeover in a Role Fra Fee as Emcee Nominated Amy Lennox as Sally Nominated 2024 WhatsOnStageAwards Best West End Show Won Best Takeover Performance Mason Alexander Park as Emcee Nominated Rebecca Lucy Taylor as Sally Nominated Aimee Lou Wood as Sally WonReferences editNotes edit Paul Bowles was an American writer who wrote the novel The Sheltering Sky 6 After meeting the author in Berlin Isherwood appropriated his surname for the character of Sally Bowles 7 a b Jean Ross later claimed the political indifference of the Sally Bowles character more closely resembled Isherwood and his hedonistic friends 9 many of whom fluttered around town exclaiming how sexy the storm troopers looked in their uniforms 10 a b Isherwood claimed he and Ross had a relationship which was asexual but more truly intimate than the relationships between Sally and her various partners in the novel the plays and the films 13 Many of Berlin s seedy cabarets located along the Kurfurstendamm avenue an entertainment vice district had been marked for future destruction by Joseph Goebbels as early as 1928 31 a b The character of Ernst Ludwig shares similarities with Isherwood s acquaintance Gerald Hamilton an unscrupulous smuggler who inspired the fictional character of Arthur Norris 40 Like the fictional character which he inspired Hamilton was a nefarious amoral sociopathic manipulative conniver who did not hesitate to use or abuse friends and enemies alike 40 a b The phonetic term Emcee is specifically used by playwright Joe Masteroff in the musical s script 60 Isherwood insisted Sally be depicted as a mediocre singer to reflect Jean Ross lack of vocal talent She sang badly without any expression her hands hanging down at her sides yet her performance was effective because of her startling appearance and her air of not caring a curse of what people thought of her 52 According to Isherwood Sally Bowles should not be interpreted as a tart 53 Sally is a little girl who has listened to what the grown ups had said about tarts and who was trying to copy those things 53 a b Telephone Song was cut in the 1993 1998 2012 2014 and 2021 revivals replaced by Mein Herr a b For the 1998 and 2014 revivals Tomorrow Belongs to Me was changed from an ensemble number by the cabaret waiters to a gramophone recording of a boy soprano singing the song with the leading player speaking the last words 63 a b Maybe This Time a song from the film was added in the 1998 2012 2014 and 2021 revivals a b Meeskite was cut in the 1993 1987 1998 2012 2014 and 2021 revivals a b Married Reprise was cut in the 2012 revival For the 1998 revival Fraulein Kost sang the film s German translation of Married after two English verses The line if you could see her through my eyes she wouldn t look Jewish at all was intended to illustrate how easily prejudice is accepted However boycott threats from Jewish leaders in Boston led Ebb to write an alternate line She isn t a Meeskite at all 54 a b I Don t Care Much was added for the 1987 1993 1998 2012 2014 and 2021 revivals 64 Although the musical depicts Clifford Bradshaw as staunchly anti racism Christopher Isherwood was alleged to be an antisemite 55 According to biographers Isherwood was fairly anti Semitic to a degree that required some emendations of the Berlin novels when they were republished after the war 55 In some versions of the show Herr Schultz Fraulein Schneider and Sally repeat lines from earlier in the show espousing their views Schultz s belief that he will survive Schneider choosing safety in the face of oppression and Sally choosing to ignore politics as she sings a brief reprise of Cabaret In the 1998 revival the Emcee strips off his overcoat to reveal a concentration camp prisoner s uniform marked with a yellow Star of David and a pink triangle and the backdrop raises to reveal a white space with the ensemble standing within 57 Several productions feature a finale with a white space flashing with a strobe effect implying the cabaret performers except for Sally who is not standing in the white space will fall victim to Nazi atrocities towards the Jews and gays 58 The original 1966 script by playwright Joe Masteroff specifies Maria Lulu Rosie Fritzie Texas and Frenchie as the names of the Cabaret girls 60 Later revivals often alter these names Maria is most commonly changed to Helga The character Bobby replaced one of the ladies in Two Ladies for the 1998 and 2014 revivals Typically they are Rosie and Frenchie Don t Go replaced Why Should I Wake Up in the 1987 revival but was removed from the score afterwards Money Money a song from the film was blended with Sitting Pretty in the 1987 revival It replaced Sitting Pretty in the 1998 2014 and 2021 revivals Citations edit Garebian 2011 p 3 Gray 2016 Bloom amp Vlastnik 2004 p 46 Isherwood 1976 pp 3 8 In March 1929 Isherwood joined W H Auden in Berlin Impressed by the city Isherwood returned again soon after and stayed for several years until the rise of the Nazis Moss 1979 Isherwood frequented the boy bars in Berlin in the late years of the Weimar Republic He discovered a world utterly different from the repressive English one he disliked and with it the excitements of sex and new subject matter Isherwood 1976 Chapter 1 To Christopher Berlin meant Boys Christopher was suffering from an inhibition then not unusual among upper class homosexuals he couldn t relax sexually with a member of his own class or nation He needed a working class foreigner He had become clearly aware of this when he went to Germany in May 1928 Garebian 2011 pp 6 7 Izzo 2005 p 144 Isherwood himself admitted that he named the character of Sally Bowles for Paul Bowles whose looks he liked Garebian 2011 pp 6 7 Spender 1977 Spender 1966 pp 125 130 Firchow 2008 p 120 Caudwell 1986 pp 28 29 Isherwood 1976 pp 124 125 Doyle 2013 Allen 2004 The real Isherwood was the least political of the so called Auden group and Isherwood was always guided by his personal motivations rather than by abstract ideas Stansky 1976 Isherwood was a self indulgent upper middle class foreign tourist who was a good deal less dedicated to political passion than the legend has had it Isherwood 1976 p 63 Parker 2004 Parker 2005 p 205 Lehmann 1987 p 18 Jean Ross whom Isherwood had met in Berlin as one of his fellow lodgers in the Nollendorfstrasse for a time when she was earning her living as a not very remarkable singer in a second rate cabaret Isherwood 1976 p 63 Jean moved into a room in the Nollendorfstrasse flat after she met Christopher early in 1931 Parker 2005 pp 205 206 a sixteen year old Berliner named Heinz Neddermeyer Isherwood realized that he had found someone emotionally innocent entirely vulnerable and uncritical whom he could protect and cherish as his very own In other words he had found the person for whom he had been looking in all his relationships with adolescents Izzo 2005 p 6 Vidal 1976 Isherwood 1976 pp 244 245 Parker 2005 p 205 a b c Parker 2004 An affair with a Jewish musician called Gotz von Eick who subsequently became an actor in Hollywood under the name Peter van Eyck led to her becoming pregnant and she nearly died after an abortion Isherwood 1976 pp 244 245 Spender 1966 p 127 Spender 1974 pp 138 139 Thomson 2005 Parker 2005 p 220 Lehmann 1987 pp 28 9 Gallagher 2014 Spender 1974 pp 138 139 Thomson 2005 Izzo 2005 p 144 The abortion is a turning point in the narrator s relationship with Sally and also in his relationship to Berlin and to his writing a b Spender 1966 p 129 Parker 2005 p 219 In contrast to Stephen Spender s prescient realization of impending doom Isherwood near the end of January 1933 was complaining somewhat unpresciently to Spender that situation in Germany seemed very dull Spender 1977 Spender 1966 p 129 Parker 2005 p 254 Parker 2005 p 221 Isherwood recognized that he could not remain in Berlin much longer and on April 5 the day measures were brought in to ban Jews from the teaching professions and the Civil Service he arrived back in London bringing with him many of his possessions Parker 2005 p 220 Commenting on these dramatic change of events in Germany Isherwood wrote to a friend that roving Nazi gangs could now murder anyone with impunity and it is illegal to offer any resistance Farina 2013 p 79 Isherwood 1976 pp 164 166 Isherwood 1976 pp 150 297 Farina 2013 pp 74 81 Lehmann 1987 pp 28 29 Izzo 2001 pp 97 144 Garebian 2011 pp 15 16 Garebian 2011 p 16 David Black a producer had commissioned the show and sparked the interest of Julie Andrews but the star s manager refused Andrews to play such a part as Sally Bowles a b c d e Garebian 2011 p 16 Garebian 2011 pp 15 16 25 28 Garebian 2011 p 24 Mordden 2001 p 154 a b Izzo 2001 pp 115 116 Mordden 2001 p 154 Masteroff 1967 p 7 Garebian 2011 p 26 Mordden 2001 pp 152 54 a b c d e f Riedel Michael March 26 2024 The Untold History of Cabaret Revived and Kicking No April 2024 Vanity Fair Retrieved April 7 2024 a b Garebian 2011 p 111 a b Bloom amp Vlastnik 2004 pp 47 49 a b c d e Lewis 1969 Garebian 2011 pp 39 42 a b c d e f Gray 2016 Garebian 2011 p 49 There was no question that the single greatest element in the design was the giant mirror a b Mordden 2001 pp 156 57 Isherwood 1963 p 25 Parker 2005 p 220 Lehmann 1987 p 18 a b Van Druten 1983 p 6 Jones 2003 p 243 Garebian 2011 pp 85 126 a b Hensher 2005 Masteroff 1967 p 113 Garebian 2011 p 175 Garebian 2011 pp 174 175 a b Broadway Workshop Photo Flash 2021 a b Masteroff 1967 pp 1 10 44 42 a b Bloom amp Vlastnik 2004 p 48 a b c Kander amp Ebb 1999 pp 3 4 Garebian 2011 pp 167 200 a b c Garebian 2011 p 71 a b Kander amp Ebb 1999 pp 3 4 136 8 a b Garebian 2011 p 29 Kander amp Ebb 1999 p 150 Kander amp Ebb 1999 pp 50 162 Garebian 2011 p 141 Kander amp Ebb 1999 pp 3 4 129 136 8 a b Garebian 2011 p 187 Garebian 2011 p 197 Gray 2016 Garebian 2011 p 197 Bloom amp Vlastnik 2004 p 49 Royce 2014 Kerr 1966 Hart 1967 Leonard 1968 Leonard 1968 Smith 1968 Oakland Tribune 1968 Green 1980 p 53 a b c d e f g h Mandelbaum 1998 a b Garebian 2011 p 199 a b Bloom amp Vlastnik 2004 p 47 Royce 2014 Lyman 1997 Reice 1998 Gray 2016 a b c Brantley 1998 Mendes 1993 a b c Lyman 1997 Simonson 2006 BBC News 2012 Michelle Ryan 2012 Bannister 2013 Bowie Sell 2017 Darvill 2019 Gioia 2013 Healy 2013 BroadwayWorld 2013 BroadwayWorld 2014 Feldberg 2014 Jue 2015 Dziemianowicz 2014 Holcomb Holland 2015 Brantley 2014 Dziemianowicz 2014 Holcomb Holland 2015 Healy 2015 Snetiker 2015 Brethauer Hamling 2021 Franklin 2021 Life Is a Cabaret The Shimmering Kander and Ebb Classic Heads Back to Broadway Starring Eddie Redmayne Vogue March 5 2024 Retrieved March 6 2024 Kit Kat Club 2022 Wiegand 2021 a b Yossman 2022 Wood 2022 Wiegand 2023 Wiegand Chris February 5 2024 Cara Delevingne to star as Sally Bowles in hit West End show Cabaret The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved February 6 2024 Paulson 2023 Culwell Block 2023 Ato Blankson Wood Joins Upcoming Broadway Cabaret Bebe Neuwirth and Steven Skybell Join Upcoming Broadway Cabaret Revival Natascia Diaz and Henry Gottfried Board Upcoming Broadway Cabaret Wild Stephi Eddie Redmayne Will Reprise Role in CABARET on Broadway Alongside Gayle Rankin BroadwayWorld com Retrieved October 23 2023 a b c Anglesey 1993 Godfrey 2008 Shaw Festival 2014 Broadway Workshop Main Stage 2021 Playbill Micaela Diamond 2017 Australian Production Cabaret Broadway Musical 2024 Revival IBDB www ibdb com Retrieved April 1 2024 Les Chart 2007 Dutch Charts 2007 Works cited edit Print sources edit Anglesey Natalia October 21 1993 Bolton Cabaret The Stage London Retrieved February 9 2021 via British Newspaper Archive Bloom Ken Vlastnik Frank October 2004 Broadway Musicals The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time New York City Black Dog amp Leventhal Publishers pp 46 49 ISBN 1 57912 390 2 via Google Books Brantley Ben March 20 1998 Desperate Dance at Oblivion s Brink The New York Times New York City Retrieved January 31 2021 Cabaret Opens Its Doors Tuesday Oakland Tribune Oakland California September 8 1968 p 150 Retrieved March 13 2022 via Newspapers com Caudwell Sarah October 3 1986 Reply to Berlin New Statesman London pp 28 29 Farina William 2013 Christopher Isherwood Reporting from Berlin The German Cabaret Legacy in American Popular Music London McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 6863 8 via Google Books Firchow Peter Edgerly 2008 Strange Meetings Anglo German Literary Encounters from 1910 to 1960 Washington D C Catholic University of America Press ISBN 978 0 8132 1533 4 via Google Books Garebian Keith 2011 The Making of Cabaret Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 973250 0 via Google Books Green Stanley 1980 Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre New York City Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80113 2 via Internet Archive Isherwood Christopher 1976 Christopher and His Kind A Memoir 1929 1939 New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0374 53522 3 via Google Books Isherwood Christopher 1963 1945 The Berlin Stories New York City New Directions ISBN 0 8112 0070 1 LCCN 55 2508 via Internet Archive Izzo David Garrett 2001 Christopher Isherwood His Era His Gang and the Legacy of the Truly Strong Man Columbia South Carolina University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 403 9 via Google Books Izzo David Garrett 2005 Christopher Isherwood Encyclopedia London McFarland amp Company pp 97 144 ISBN 0 7864 1519 3 via Google Books Feldberg Robert December 9 2014 Emma Stone sallies forth exhuberantly in Cabaret revival The Record Hackensack New Jersey p F1 Retrieved March 13 2022 via Newspapers com Jones John Bush 2003 Our Musicals Ourselves A Social History of the American Musical Theatre Lebanon New Hampshire University Press of New England p 243 ISBN 978 0 87451 904 4 via Internet Archive Kander John Ebb Fred March 1999 Golden Bob ed The Complete Cabaret Collection Milwaukee Wisconsin Hal Leonard ISBN 978 1 4584 5040 1 via Google Books Kerr Walter November 21 1966 The Theater Cabaret Opens at the Broadhurst Musical by Masteroff Kander and Ebb Lotte Lenya Stars Directed by Prince The New York Times New York City Retrieved February 10 2021 Lehmann John 1987 Christopher Isherwood A Personal Memoir New York City Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0 8050 1029 7 via Internet Archive Leonard William November 28 1968 A Maverick Cabaret Packs a Wallop Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois p 83 Retrieved March 13 2022 via Newspapers com Lewis Emory August 21 1969 Melissa Hart Is New Planet Find The Morning Call Paterson New Jersey p 23 Retrieved March 13 2022 via Newspapers com Lyman Rick November 13 1997 Cabaret Revival to Be Staged in Real Nightclub The New York Times New York City Retrieved February 2 2021 Mandelbaum Ken February 1 1998 Cabaret on Disc Playbill New York City Retrieved February 5 2021 Masteroff Joe 1967 Harold Prince s Cabaret New York Random House LCCN 67 24365 Retrieved October 27 2021 via Internet Archive Melissa Hart Is Signed The New York Times New York City October 13 1967 p 33 Retrieved February 10 2021 Mordden Ethan 2001 Open a New Window The Broadway Musical in the 1960s New York Palgrave ISBN 0 312 23952 1 via Google Books Moss Howard June 3 1979 Christopher Isherwood Man and Work The New York Times New York City Retrieved January 30 2021 Parker Peter 2005 2004 Isherwood A Life Revealed London Picador ISBN 978 0 330 32826 5 via Google Books Parker Peter September 2004 Ross Jean Iris 1911 1973 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 74425 Retrieved June 18 2017 Subscription or UK public library membership required Spender Stephen October 30 1977 Life Wasn t a Cabaret The New York Times New York City p 198 Retrieved February 2 2021 Spender Stephen September 1974 On Being a Ghost in Isherwood s Berlin Mademoiselle No 79 pp 138 139 Spender Stephen 1966 1951 World Within World The Autobiography of Stephen Spender Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 679 64045 5 via Google Books Smith Cecil May 23 1968 Cabaret in Summer Run at Ahmanson Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California pp 83 98 Retrieved March 13 2022 via Newspapers com Stansky Peter November 28 1976 Christopher and His Kind The New York Times New York City p 260 Retrieved February 6 2021 Van Druten John 1983 I Am a Camera A Play in Three Acts United Kingdom Dramatists Play Service ISBN 978 0 8222 0545 6 via Internet Archive Vidal Gore December 9 1976 Art Sex and Isherwood The New York Review of Books New York City Retrieved October 9 2023 Online sources edit Allen Brooke December 19 2004 Isherwood The Uses of Narcissism The New York Times New York City Retrieved February 1 2021 Bannister Rosie June 26 2013 Will Young returns to emcee Cabaret tour WhatsOnStage London Retrieved September 9 2013 Will Young is set to reprise his role of Emcee in a UK tour of Rufus Norris s production of Cabaret which will open at the New Wimbledon Theatre on 28 August 2013 Bowie Sell Daisy June 5 2017 Louise Redknapp to join Will Young in new tour of Cabaret WhatsOnStage London Retrieved August 10 2019 Brantley Ben December 4 2014 Saucy Sally Desperately Imbibing Your Gaze The New York Times New York City Retrieved February 2 2021 Brethauer Hamling Taylor December 8 2021 Photos First Look at Eddie Redmayne Jessie Buckley amp More in Cabaret BroadwayWorld New York City Retrieved March 2 2022 BWW News Desk May 6 2016 Photo Flash Broadway Workshop and Project Broadway Present Cabaret BroadwayWorld New York City Retrieved July 10 2021 Cabaret 2017 Australian Production Sydney Australia Hayes Theatre November 6 2016 Archived from the original on November 6 2016 Cabaret Festival Theatre April 10 October 26 Ontario Canada Shaw Festival 2014 Archived from the original on November 19 2013 Culwell Block Logan July 11 2023 Olivier Winning London Cabaret Revival is Officially Broadway Bound Playbill Retrieved July 11 2023 Darvill Josh August 24 2019 Cabaret UK tour cast confirmed in full for new production Stagechat London Retrieved January 31 2021 Doyle Rachel April 12 2013 Looking for Christopher Isherwood s Berlin The New York Times New York City p TR10 Retrieved February 5 2021 Dziemianowicz Joe August 20 2014 Emma Stone to join Broadway s Cabaret in November Daily News New York Retrieved January 7 2016 Franklin Marc J November 15 2021 Take a Sneak Peek at the London Revival of Cabaret Starring Eddie Redmayne Playbill New York City Retrieved November 21 2021 Gallagher Paul April 3 2014 Life is a Cabaret Christopher Isherwood on the real Sally Bowles Berlin writing and W H Auden Dangerous Minds Presented by Richard Metzger Retrieved October 2 2019 Gioia Michael September 4 2013 Willkommenn Roundabout Will Welcome Tony Winning Cabaret Back to Broadway With Alan Cumming and Michelle Williams in 2014 Playbill New York City Retrieved March 3 2022 Godfrey Robyn June 13 2008 Stratford Festival Review Terrific Cabaret in both senses of the word Southwestern Ontario News Ontario Canada Archived from the original on January 13 2015 Retrieved February 9 2021 Gray Margaret July 20 2016 50 years of Cabaret How the 1966 musical keeps sharpening its edges for modern times Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Retrieved January 31 2021 Healy Patrick September 3 2013 Michelle Williams to Make Broadway Debut in Cabaret The New York Times New York City Retrieved February 2 2021 Healy Patrick January 7 2015 Sienna Miller Will Join Cabaret on Broadway The New York Times New York City Retrieved February 2 2021 Hensher Philip May 15 2005 Christopher and His Kind The Spectator London Retrieved March 9 2022 Holcomb Holland Lori January 5 2015 Cabaret to Close March 29 and Emma Stone Extends Her Run The New York Times New York City Retrieved February 2 2021 Jue Teresa January 5 2015 Emma Stone extends Cabaret run on Broadway Entertainment Weekly New York City Retrieved January 31 2021 Cast amp Creative Cabaret Kit Kat Club London West End kitkat club 2022 Retrieved October 25 2022 Main Stage Broadway Workshop Broadway Workshop New York City May 6 2016 Retrieved July 10 2021 Mendes Sam director Cumming Alan actor 1993 Cabaret UK TV production Videotape London Channel Four Film Retrieved March 10 2022 via YouTube Micaela Diamond Playbill New York City 2021 Retrieved July 10 2021 Michelle Ryan to join Will Young in Cabaret revival BBC News London May 25 2012 Retrieved July 17 2012 Musical Cabaret Album Dutch Charts in Dutch Netherlands GfK Benelux Marketing Services 2007 Retrieved January 31 2021 Musical Cabaret Album Les Charts in French Neuilly sur Seine France Syndicat National de l Edition Phonographique 2007 Retrieved January 31 2021 Paulson Michael July 11 2023 Award Winning Cabaret Revival Plans Spring Broadway Bow The New York Times New York ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 11 2023 Peterson Tyler July 21 2014 Michelle Williams Extends Run in Broadway s Cabaret BroadwayWorld New York City Retrieved January 31 2021 Reice Sylvie March 10 1998 Cabaret by Sylvie Reice Curtain Up New York City Retrieved January 31 2021 Rosky Nicole October 7 2013 Danny Burstein and Linda Emond to Play Herr Schultz and Fraulein Schneider in Cabaret Revival BroadwayWorld New York City Retrieved March 3 2022 Royce Graydon January 13 2014 Cabaret looks very different from the original musical Star Tribune Minneapolis Minnesota Retrieved February 10 2021 Simonson Robert April 10 2006 New London Cabaret Directed by Rufus Norris Will Open Sept 26 Playbill New York City Retrieved February 5 2021 Snetiker Marc January 7 2015 Sienna Miller to replace Emma Stone in Broadway s Cabaret Entertainment Weekly New York City Retrieved January 31 2021 Thomson David March 21 2005 The Observer as Hero The New Republic New York City Retrieved January 30 2021 Will Young to make West End musical debut in Cabaret BBC News London May 18 2012 Retrieved February 2 2021 Wiegand Chris May 21 2021 Eddie Redmayne to return to London theatre in Cabaret with Jessie Buckley The Guardian London Retrieved May 24 2021 Wiegand Chris August 14 2023 Raring to take on this challenge musicians Jake Shears and Self Esteem to star in Cabaret The Guardian London ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved August 15 2023 Wood Alex March 1 2022 New West End Cabaret cast announced WhatsOnStage London Retrieved March 1 2022 Yossman K J March 8 2022 Eddie Redmayne Jessie Buckley and Emma Corrin Nominated for Olivier Awards 2022 Variety Los Angeles Retrieved March 9 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cabaret musical Cabaret at the Internet Broadway Database Cabaret 1993 UK TV production starring Alan Cumming at IMDb nbsp Plot and production information at the Guide to Musical Theatre The Making of Cabaret by Keith Garebian OUP 2011 2nd edition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cabaret musical amp oldid 1220297774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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