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Chicago (musical)

Chicago is a 1975 American musical with music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb, and book by Ebb and Bob Fosse. Set in Chicago in the jazz age, the musical is based on a 1926 play of the same title by reporter Maurine Dallas Watkins, about actual criminals and crimes on which she reported. The story is a satire on corruption in the administration of criminal justice and the concept of the "celebrity criminal".

Chicago
Original Broadway poster art
MusicJohn Kander
LyricsFred Ebb
BookFred Ebb
Bob Fosse
BasisChicago
by Maurine Dallas Watkins
PremiereJune 3, 1975: 46th Street Theatre, New York City
Productions
  • 1975 Broadway
  • 1979 West End
  • 1996 Broadway revival
  • 1997 North America tour
  • 1997 West End revival
  • 2018 West End revival
  • 2021 UK Tour
Awards1996 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical
1997 Laurence Olivier Award for Outstanding Musical Production

The original Broadway production opened in 1975 at the 46th Street Theatre[1] and ran for 936 performances, until 1977. Bob Fosse directed and choreographed the original production, and his style is strongly identified with the show. It debuted in the West End in 1979, where it ran for 600 performances. Chicago was revived on Broadway in 1996, and a year later in the West End.

The 1996 Broadway production holds the record as the longest-running musical revival and the longest-running American musical in Broadway history. It is the second longest-running show ever to run on Broadway, behind only The Phantom of the Opera. Chicago surpassed Cats on November 23, 2014, when it played its 7,486th performance.[2] The West End revival became the longest-running American musical in West End history. Additionally, since the closing of The Phantom of the Opera on April 16, 2023, Chicago is currently the longest running-active show on Broadway. Chicago has been staged in numerous productions around the world, and has toured extensively in the United States and United Kingdom. The 2002 film adaptation of the musical won the Academy Award for Best Picture.

History

The musical Chicago is based on a play of the same name by reporter and playwright Maurine Dallas Watkins, who was assigned to cover the 1924 trials of accused murderers Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner for the Chicago Tribune. In the early 1920s, Chicago's press and public became riveted by the subject of homicides committed by women. Several high-profile cases arose, which generally involved women killing their lovers or husbands. These cases were tried against a backdrop of changing views of women in the jazz age, and a long string of acquittals by Cook County juries of female murderers (juries at the time were all male, and convicted murderers generally faced death by hanging). A lore arose that, in Chicago, feminine or attractive women could not be convicted. The Chicago Tribune generally favored the prosecution's case, while still presenting the details of these women's lives. Its rivals at the Hearst papers were more pro-defendant, and employed what were derisively called "sob-sisters" – women reporters who focused on the plight, attractiveness, redemption, or grace of the female defendants. Regardless of stance, the press covered several of these women as celebrities.[3]

Annan, the model for the character of Roxie Hart, was 23 when she was accused of the April 3, 1924[4] murder of Harry Kalstedt, who served as the basis for the Fred Casely character. The Tribune reported that Annan played the foxtrot record Hula Lou over and over for two hours before calling her husband to say she killed a man who "tried to make love to her". Her husband Albert Annan inspired the character, Amos Hart. Albert was an auto mechanic who bankrupted himself to defend his wife, only for her to publicly dump him the day after she was acquitted. Velma Kelly is based on Gaertner, who was a cabaret singer, and society divorcée. The body of Walter Law was discovered slumped over the steering wheel of Gaertner's abandoned car on March 12, 1924. Two police officers testified that they had seen a woman getting into the car and shortly thereafter heard gunshots. A bottle of gin and an automatic pistol were found on the floor of the car. Lawyers William Scott Stewart and W. W. O'Brien were models for a composite character in Chicago, Billy Flynn. Just days apart, separate juries acquitted both women.[5]

Watkins' sensational columns documenting these trials proved so popular that she wrote a play based on them. The show received both good box-office sales and newspaper notices and was mounted on Broadway in 1926, running 172 performances. Cecil B. DeMille produced a silent film version, Chicago (1927), starring former Mack Sennett bathing beauty Phyllis Haver as Roxie Hart. It was later remade as Roxie Hart (1942) starring Ginger Rogers, but in this version, Roxie was accused of murder without having really committed it, due to content restrictions on Hollywood films of the era.

In the 1960s, Gwen Verdon read the play and asked her husband, Bob Fosse, about the possibility of creating a musical adaptation. Fosse approached playwright Watkins numerous times to buy the rights, but she repeatedly declined; by this point she may have regretted that Annan and Gaertner had been allowed to walk free, and that her treatment of them should not be glamorized.[4] Nonetheless, upon her death in 1969, her estate sold the rights to producer Richard Fryer, Verdon, and Fosse.[4] John Kander and Fred Ebb began work on the musical score, modeling each number on a traditional vaudeville number or a vaudeville performer. This format made explicit the show's comparison between "justice", "show-business", and contemporary society. Ebb and Fosse penned the book of the musical, and Fosse also directed and choreographed.

Synopsis

Act I

Velma Kelly is a vaudevillian who welcomes the audience to tonight's show ("All That Jazz"). Interplayed with the opening number, the scene cuts to February 14, 1928, in the bedroom of chorus girl Roxie Hart, where she murders Fred Casely as he attempts to break off an affair with her.

Roxie convinces her husband Amos that the victim was a burglar, and Amos agrees to take the blame. Roxie expresses her appreciation of her husband's willingness to do anything for her ("Funny Honey"). However, when the police mention the deceased's name, Amos belatedly realizes that Roxie has lied to him. With both Roxie and Amos furious at each other for the other's betrayal, Roxie confesses and is arrested. She is sent to the women's block in the Cook County Jail, where several women accused of killing their lovers are held ("Cell Block Tango"); among the inmates is Velma Kelly, revealing herself to have been involved in the death of her husband and sister after she caught them having sex, though she denies committing the act on account of blacking out from the sight. The block is presided over by Matron "Mama" Morton, whose system of taking bribes ("When You're Good to Mama") perfectly suits her clientele. She has helped Velma become the media's top murderer-of-the-week and is acting as a booking agent for Velma's big return to vaudeville.

Velma is not happy to see Roxie, who is stealing not only her limelight but also her lawyer, Billy Flynn. Roxie convinces Amos to pay for Billy Flynn to be her lawyer ("A Tap Dance"), though Amos lacks the funds. Eagerly awaited by his all-woman clientele, Billy sings his anthem, complete with a chorus of fan dancers ("All I Care About"). Billy takes Roxie's case before realizing Amos doesn't have the money; to make up the difference, he turns the case into a media circus and rearranges her story for consumption by sympathetic tabloid columnist Mary Sunshine ("A Little Bit of Good"), hoping to sell proceeds in an auction. Roxie's press conference turns into a ventriloquist act, with Billy dictating a new version of the truth ("We Both Reached for the Gun") to the reporters while Roxie mouths the words.

Roxie becomes the most popular celebrity in Chicago, as she boastfully proclaims while planning for her future career in vaudeville ("Roxie"). As Roxie's fame grows, Velma's notoriety subsides, and in an act of desperation she tries to talk Roxie into recreating the sister act ("I Can't Do It Alone"). Roxie turns her down, only to find her own headlines replaced by the latest sordid crime of passion ("I Can't Do It Alone (Reprise)"). Separately, Roxie and Velma realize there is no one they can count on but themselves ("My Own Best Friend"), and Roxie decides that being pregnant in prison would put her back on the front page.

Act II

Velma returns to introduce the opening act, resentful of Roxie's manipulation of the system ("I Know a Girl") and ability to seduce a doctor into saying Roxie is pregnant; as Roxie emerges, she sings gleefully of the future of her unborn (nonexistent) child ("Me and My Baby"). Amos proudly claims paternity, but still, nobody notices him, and Billy exposes holes in Roxie's story by noting that she and Amos had not had sex in four months, meaning if she were pregnant, the child was not Amos's, in hopes that Amos will divorce her and look like a villain, which Amos almost does ("Mr. Cellophane"). Velma tries to show Billy all the tricks she has planned for her trial ("When Velma Takes The Stand"), which Roxie treats skeptically. Roxie, upset with being treated like a "common criminal" and considering herself a celebrity, has a heated argument with Billy and fires him; Billy warns her that her kind of celebrity is fleeting and that she would be just as famous hanging from a noose. At that moment, Roxie witnesses one of her fellow inmates, a Hungarian woman who insisted on her innocence but could not speak English and whose public lawyer refused to defend her, become the first woman to be executed in Chicago in decades ("Hungarian Rope Trick").

The trial date arrives, and the now freshly terrified Roxie runs back to Billy, who calms Roxie by suggesting she will be fine so long as she makes a show of the trial ("Razzle Dazzle"). Billy uses Amos as a pawn, turning around and insisting that Amos is actually the father of Roxie's child. As Roxie recounts Billy's carefully crafted false narrative of the night of Fred's murder (with Fred re-appearing on stage in flashback), she steals all of Velma's schtick, down to the rhinestone garter, to the dismay of Mama and Velma ("Class"). As promised, Billy gets Roxie acquitted, but just as the verdict is announced, some even more sensational crime pulls the press away, and Roxie's fleeting celebrity life is over. Billy leaves, done with the case, admitting that he only did it for the money. Amos tries to get Roxie to come home and forget the ordeal, but she is more concerned with the end of her brief run of fame and admits she isn't pregnant, at which point a fed up Amos leaves her.

The final scene cuts to a Chicago vaudeville theater, where Roxie and Velma (acquitted off-stage) are performing a new act in which they sing bittersweetly about modern life ("Nowadays"). The former Mary Sunshine, revealed during the trial actually to be a man in drag, takes his natural male form as a pushy vaudeville promoter, shaping Roxie and Velma's dance ("Hot Honey Rag") to make it as sexy as possible. The show ends with a brief finale as Roxie and Velma thank their audience ("Finale").[6]

Musical numbers

1975 Original Broadway Production

"Chicago: A Musical Vaudeville"

1996 Revival Production

"Chicago: The Musical"

† In the 1975 Original Broadway Production and its Playbill, there are a few contradicting song lists. Songs such as "R.S.V.P" and "Keep It Hot" which were instrumental pieces in the "Finale" were removed from the licensable music, but were included in original production and script. Other songs such as "Ten Percent" sung by a deleted character who was Velma's agent, and "No" sung by Roxie and Boys were cut soon into the production and only appear on demo recordings and in the original Playbill, but are not in the original script. Other cut songs from the show were "Rose Colored Glasses" a different version of "We Both Reached for the Gun", "Pansy Eyes", and "Loopin' the Loop".[7][8]

Cast and characters

Original casts

Source for West End: overthefootlights.co.uk[9]

Principal characters (defined as having at least one featured musical number) and original performers of notable productions:

Character Description Broadway
(1975)
West End
(1979)
Australia
(1981)
Broadway
(1996)
West End
(1997)
Roxie Hart An aspiring vaudevillian and murderess who kills her paramour after a spat and is sent to jail. Gwen Verdon Antonia Ellis Nancye Hayes Ann Reinking Ruthie Henshall
Velma Kelly A vaudevillian and murderess who is on trial for killing her cheating husband and sister. She is represented by Billy Flynn and competes with Roxie Hart for him. Chita Rivera Jenny Logan Geraldine Turner Bebe Neuwirth Ute Lemper
Billy Flynn Velma and Roxie's lawyer who has a perfect track record and makes celebrities of his clients to win sympathy and sway public opinion. Jerry Orbach Ben Cross Terence Donovan James Naughton Henry Goodman
Amos Hart Roxie's faithful and good-natured but simple husband whom nobody pays attention to. He spends most of the show trying to make Roxie take interest in him or even just acknowledge his existence. Barney Martin Don Fellows George Spartels Joel Grey Nigel Planer
Matron "Mama" Morton The matron of the Cook County Jail. Grants the inmates favors in exchange for bribes. Mary McCarty Hope Jackman Judi Connelli Marcia Lewis Meg Johnson
Mary Sunshine The sob sister journalist who follows the trials of both Roxie Hart and Velma Kelly. In most productions, Sunshine is revealed to be male at the end of the show. Michael O'Haughey Gary Lyons J.P. Webster David Sabella-Mills Charles Shirvell

Notable replacements

Broadway (1975–1977)

Broadway (1996–)

West End revival (1997–2012)

Musical and staging style

According to Fred Ebb, he wrote the book in a vaudeville style because "the characters were performers. Every musical moment in the show was loosely modeled on someone else: Roxie was Helen Morgan, Velma was Texas Guinan, Billy Flynn was Ted Lewis, Mama Morton was Sophie Tucker." Composer John Kander elaborates that the reason the show was called a vaudeville "is because many of the songs we wrote are related to specific performers like those you mentioned, and Eddie Cantor and Bert Williams as well."[10]

It was through the initial production, and not the writing, that many of the "traditional" Chicago staging conventions were developed:

The double snap in "Razzle Dazzle" was added as an afterthought at the suggestion of Ebb to Kander. Kander explains: "I remember when we wrote "Razzle Dazzle", before we took it in and played it for Bob, you [Ebb] said with absolute confidence 'Try adding a couple of finger snaps to it. Bobby will love that.' We added them...and as soon as he heard the finger snaps, he loved the song."[10] During rehearsals, "Razzle Dazzle" was originally staged as an orgy on the steps of the courthouse. Fosse was talked out of allowing this staging, when Orbach "convinced him that he was missing the Brechtian subtlety intrinsic in the number."[11]

The original finale was "Loopin' the Loop", a doubles act with Verdon and Rivera; however, "the scene seemed too much like an amateur act so Fosse asked for something more 'glamorous in pretty gowns'". The piece was cut and replaced with "Nowadays". Instrumental sections of "Loopin' the Loop" can still be heard in the Overture.[11] Two other sections termed "Keep It Hot" and "RSVP" were cut from the finale as well.

Another principal character, a theatrical agent named Harry Glassman, was played by David Rounds, whose role was to exploit the notoriety of the prisoners for his own gain. He also served as the evening's M.C. This character's role and the song "Ten Percent" was cut,[12] with the character folded into that of Matron Mama Morton, and various members of the chorus shared his M.C. duties.[13]

In a reversal of roles, Fosse decided the lyrics for "Class" were too offensive and censored Kander and Ebb's original version. One of the original lyrics "Every guy is a snot/Every girl is a twat" was restored for the 2002 film, although the entire number was cut from the final product.[citation needed]

Productions

Original Broadway production

 
M. O'Haughey as Mary Sunshine and Jerry Orbach as Billy Flynn in the original Broadway cast, 1976

Chicago: A Musical Vaudeville opened on June 3, 1975 at the 46th Street Theatre, and ran for a total of 936 performances, closing on August 27, 1977.[14] The opening night cast starred Chita Rivera as Velma Kelly, Gwen Verdon as Roxie Hart, Jerry Orbach as Billy Flynn and Barney Martin as Amos Hart. Velma Kelly had been a comparatively minor character in all versions of Chicago prior to the musical rendering. The role was fleshed out to balance Chita Rivera's role opposite Gwen Verdon's Roxie Hart.

The musical received mixed reviews. The Brechtian style of the show, which frequently dropped the fourth wall, made audiences uncomfortable. According to James Leve, "Chicago is cynical and subversive, exploiting American cultural mythologies in order to attack American celebrity culture."[15]

The show opened the same year as Michael Bennett's highly successful A Chorus Line, which beat out Chicago in both ticket sales and at the Tony Awards.[16] The show was on the verge of closing when it ran into another setback: Gwen Verdon had to have surgery on nodes in her throat after inhaling a feather during the show's finale.[17] The producers contemplated closing the show, but Liza Minnelli stepped in and offered to play the role of Roxie Hart in place of Verdon.[18][19] Her run lasted slightly over a month (August 8, 1975, through September 13, 1975),[20] boosting the show's popularity, until Gwen Verdon recuperated and returned to the show. Ann Reinking, who would go on to star in the highly successful 1996 revival[21] and choreograph that production in the style of Bob Fosse, was also a cast replacement for Roxie Hart during the show's original run.[22]

1979 West End

The first West End, London production opened at the Cambridge Theatre in April 1979 and ran for around 600 performances (having had its European premiere at the Crucible Theatre, Sheffield, on 23 November 1978).[23] It commenced in the West End with most of the Sheffield cast, and was directed by Peter James and choreographed by Gillian Gregory. The producers were Ray Cooney and Larry Parnes.[24][25] Jenny Logan starred as Velma Kelly, with Ben Cross as Billy, Antonia Ellis as Roxie Hart and Don Fellows as Amos Hart.[26] Ellis (Actress of the Year in a Musical) and Ben Cross (Actor of the Year in a Musical) were nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for their performances, and the musical was nominated as Musical of the Year.[27] Elizabeth Seal later replaced Ellis as Roxie Hart.[28][29]

1977 Argentina

The original Argentine production opened at the Teatro El Nacional featuring Nélida Lobato (Roxie), Ambar La Fox (Velma), Marty Cosens (Billy), Jovita Luna (Mama Morton) and Juan Carlos Thorry (Amos) as a replica of the original Broadway production. The book was adapted by Enrique Pinti and the production was directed by Wilfredo Ferran and Mike Ribas. Gene Foote choreographed the production based on the original choreography by Bob Fosse. It was produced by Alejandro Romay.

1981 Australia

The original Australian production opened at the Sydney Opera House's Drama Theatre in June 1981. Featuring Nancye Hayes (Roxie), Geraldine Turner (Velma), Terence Donovan (Billy), Judi Connelli (Mama) and George Spartels (Amos), it was a new production directed by Richard Wherrett for the Sydney Theatre Company, rather than a replica of the Broadway production.[30] It transferred to the Theatre Royal in Sydney, before touring to Melbourne's Comedy Theatre, Adelaide's Festival Theatre and a return season at the Theatre Royal, playing until March 1982. Sydney Theatre Company's production also toured to the Hong Kong Arts Festival in February 1983.[31]

1992 Los Angeles production

The Long Beach Civic Light Opera presented Chicago in 1992, directed by Rob Marshall with choreography by Ann Reinking. Juliet Prowse played Roxie opposite Bebe Neuwirth as Velma. Gary Sandy played Billy Flynn with Kaye Ballard as Mama Morton.[32]

1996 Broadway revival

City Center Encores! series presented Chicago in concert in May 1996.[33] The Encores! series, according to their statement, "celebrates the rarely heard works of America's most important composers and lyricists...Encores! gives three glorious scores the chance to be heard as their creators originally intended."[34]

The production was directed by Walter Bobbie with choreography "in the style of Bob Fosse" by Ann Reinking, who also reprised her previous role as Roxie Hart.[33] Also in the cast were Bebe Neuwirth as Velma Kelly, Joel Grey as Amos Hart and James Naughton as Billy Flynn.[33] The show was well-received, with Howard Kissel, reviewing for the New York Daily News writing that "This Chicago impressed me far more than the original.".[35] Ben Brantley, in his review for The New York Times, wrote " 'Make love to the audience' was another Fosse dictum. That's exactly what Ms. Reinking and her ensemble do. Chicago can still seem glibly cynical and artificially cold, especially in its weaker second act. But these performers know just how to take off the chill."[36] By May 10, 1996, there was talk of a Broadway production: "Down the block, there is a move afoot to move the Encores production of Chicago to Broadway. Rocco Landesman said that he and Fran and Barry Weissler wanted to bring the production to the Martin Beck Theater this summer."[37]

 
Chicago: The Musical at the Ambassador Theatre, New York, May 2010

Barry and Fran Weissler brought the Encores! production to Broadway, after some revision and expansion, but retaining the spare and minimalist style in costumes and set.[38] The set design includes the presence of the band center stage in an evocation of a jury box, around and upon which the actors play some scenes. There are also chairs along the sides of this central piece, in which the actors at times sit or lounge, when not directly involved in the action. The show opened on November 14, 1996, at the Richard Rodgers Theatre (the same theater where the original production had played)[39] with a script adapted by David Thompson,[40] eventually setting a record for recovering its initial costs faster than any other musical in history, likely due in part to the stripped-down design elements.

Unlike the original production, the revival was met with praise from critics. The CurtainUp reviewer noted, "The show garnered ecstatic reviews, enviable box office sales and enough awards to warrant a special Chicago trophy room."[38] Society had changed in light of events such as the O. J. Simpson murder case, and audiences were more receptive to the criminal-as-celebrity theme of the show.[41]

The revival of Chicago won six Tony Awards, more than any other revival in Broadway history until South Pacific won seven Tonys in 2008.[42] Chicago won for Best Revival of a Musical, Best Leading Actress in a Musical for Bebe Neuwirth, Best Leading Actor in a Musical for James Naughton, Best Lighting Design of a Musical for Ken Billington, Best Director of a Musical for Walter Bobbie and Best Choreography for Ann Reinking.[43] Chicago: The Musical has run for more than 9,000 performances[43][44] and holds the record for longest-running musical revival on Broadway.[45] Ann Reinking, Bebe Neuwirth, James Naughton, and Joel Grey returned for cameo appearances.[46]

The cast recording of the revival was released on January 28, 1997, on RCA Victor.[47] The cast recording won the 1997 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album.[48]

Among the many other performers and celebrities who have appeared in the show are Adam Pascal, Alan Thicke, Amra-Faye Wright, Amy Spanger, Ana Villafañe, Angelica Ross, Ashlee Simpson, Billy Ray Cyrus, Billy Zane, Brandy Norwood, Brooke Shields, Carol Woods, Chandra Wilson, Charlotte d'Amboise, Christie Brinkley, Christine Pedi, Christopher Fitzgerald, Christopher Sieber, Cuba Gooding Jr., Debra Monk, Eddie George, Elvis Stojko, Erich Bergen, Erika Jayne, Gretchen Mol, Isaac Mizrahi, Jaime Camil, James Monroe Iglehart, Jeff McCarthy, Jennifer Holliday, Jennifer Nettles, Jerry Springer, Jinkx Monsoon, Joey Lawrence, John O'Hurley, Kara DioGuardi, Kevin Richardson, Kevin Chamberlin, Leigh Zimmerman, Lillias White, Lisa Rinna, Marco Zunino, Marilu Henner, Marti Pellow, Mel B, Melanie Griffith, Melora Hardin, Michael C. Hall, Michelle Williams, Mýa, Nana Visitor, NeNe Leakes, Norm Lewis, Pamela Anderson, Patrick Swayze, Paulo Szot, Philip Casnoff, Rita Wilson, Rob Bartlett, Roz Ryan, Rumer Willis, Ruthie Henshall, Samantha Harris, Shiri Maimon, Sofía Vergara, Taye Diggs, Todrick Hall, Tony Yazbeck, Usher, Veronica Dunne, and Wendy Williams.[44]

On February 12, 1997, the Broadway production moved into the larger Shubert Theatre.[49][50] On January 29, 2003, more than six years into its run, the Broadway production moved a second time, to the Ambassador Theatre, where it has played ever since.[51] On November 23, 2014, Chicago became the second longest-running Broadway show, surpassing Cats.[43]

London revivals

 
Chicago playing at the West End's Cambridge Theatre in December 2010

On November 18, 1997, the revival production opened in London's West End.[52][53] Like the New York revival, it was directed by Walter Bobbie and designed by John Lee Beatty, with choreography by Ann Reinking in the style of Bob Fosse.[54] The show ran at the Adelphi Theatre for nine years until transferring to the Cambridge Theatre in April 2006.[55] The original cast of the production included German jazz singer Ute Lemper as Velma, British actress Ruthie Henshall as Roxie Hart, Nigel Planer as Amos Hart, and Henry Goodman as Billy Flynn. The production won the 1998 Olivier Award for Outstanding Musical, and Lemper was awarded Best Actress in a Musical. Both Lemper and Henshall have played the role of Velma on Broadway.

Like its Broadway counterpart, the London production featured many celebrities, including Alison Moyet, America Ferrera, Anita Dobson, Aoife Mulholland, Ashlee Simpson, Bonnie Langford, Brooke Shields, Chita Rivera, Christie Brinkley, Claire Sweeney, Clive Rowe, Darius Campbell, David Hasselhoff, Denise van Outen, Frances Ruffelle, Gaby Roslin, Ian Kelsey, James Doherty, Jennifer Ellison, Jerry Springer, Jill Halfpenny, Joel Grey, John Barrowman, Josefina Gabrielle, Justin Lee Collins, Kelly Osbourne, Kevin Richardson, Leigh Zimmerman, Les Dennis, Linzi Hateley, Lynda Carter, Maria Friedman, Marti Pellow, Michael French, Michael Greco, Michelle Williams, Peter Davison, Raza Jaffrey, Sacha Distel, Sally Ann Triplett, Tina Arena, and Tony Hadley.

The production moved out of the Cambridge Theatre on August 27, 2011[56] and transferred to the Garrick Theatre on November 7, 2011, starring America Ferrera as Roxie.[54] Robin Cousins joined the cast as Billy Flynn on July 17, 2012. The show closed on September 1, 2012 after a total run of nearly 15 years in London.[57] The UK tour of the production continued after the closing.[58]

To celebrate the 21st Anniversary of the West End revival production, Chicago returned, this time at the Phoenix Theatre opening April 11, 2018, starring Cuba Gooding Jr. as Billy Flynn, Sarah Soetaert as Roxie Hart, Josefina Gabrielle as Velma Kelly, and Ruthie Henshall as Mama Morton.[59][60] A cast change saw Martin Kemp take over the role of Billy Flynn, with Alexandra Burke as Roxie Hart and Mazz Murray as Mama Morton.[61] Denise Van Outen was announced to take over the role of Velma from 24 September 2018, but due to sustaining a stress fracture in her heel, her integration was delayed until 7 October.[62] The production featured on ITV's reality show, The Big Audition, to cast the replacement Velma. Following multiple rounds of singing, dancing and acting auditions, Laura Tyrer was selected to fill in for the role.[63]

North American tours

There have been ten North American national tours of Chicago.[64] The first tour started in April 1997 in Cincinnati, Ohio, six months after the revival opened on Broadway. The cast featured Charlotte d'Amboise (Roxie Hart), Jasmine Guy (Velma Kelly), Obba Babatundé (Billy Flynn) and Carol Woods (Matron "Mama" Morton). A second company started in December 1997 in Tampa, Florida.[65] The tour went on hiatus in Fall 1999 and started again in October 1999 in Denver, Colorado, featuring Robert Urich as Billy Flynn, Vicki Lewis (Velma) and Nana Visitor (Roxie).[66][67] The next tour started in October 2000 in Stamford, Connecticut, with Robert Urich. Chita Rivera joined the tour for several weeks.[68]

The 2003 tour started in June 2003 at the National Theatre, Washington, DC, with Brenda Braxton playing Velma, Bianca Marroquin as Roxie, and Gregory Harrison as Billy Flynn.[69][70] During 2004 the tour cast included Alan Thicke and Tom Wopat as Billy Flynn and Carol Woods as Matron "Mama" Morton.[71] The most recent tour started in November 2008 in Charlotte, North Carolina and starred Tom Wopat as Billy Flynn, Bianca Marroquin as Roxie Hart, Terra C. MacLeod as Velma Kelly and Roz Ryan (later replaced by Carol Woods) as Matron "Mama" Morton.[64][72] On January 16, 2012 Peruvian actor Marco Zunino joined the cast as Billy Flynn.[73][74]

2019 Australia

On 14 June 2018, the Gordon Frost Organisation announced a revival tour of Chicago commencing early 2019 at the Capitol Theatre in Sydney.[75] The show starred Natalie Bassingthwaighte as Roxie and Casey Donovan as Mama Morton.[76] The Melbourne leg of the tour starred Jason Donovan as Billy Flynn.[77] Donovan's father Terence had played the same role in the 1981 Australian production.[30]

2021 UK Tour

A new UK and Ireland tour began on September 11, 2021 at the King's Theatre, Glasgow.[78]

International productions

The first Japanese-language production of the Tony-winning revival of Kander and Ebb's Chicago debuted in October 2008 at the Akasaka ACT Theatre in Tokyo, Japan, followed by an engagement at Osaka's Umeda Art Theatre. Presented by Barry and Fran Weissler in association with Tokyo Broadcasting System, Inc. and Kyodo Tokyo Inc., the b production starred Ryoko Yonekura as Roxie Hart, Yōka Wao as Velma Kelly and Ryuichi Kawamura as Billy Flynn.[79]

In Perú, the musical opened on June 16, 2012 starring Tati Alcántara, Denisse Dibós, and Marco Zunino at Teatro Municipal de Lima in Lima.[80] The show was also staged using a Spanish translation in Costa Rica in 2017 starring Silvia Baltodano and Isabel Guzman.[81]

A French-language production of Chicago, based on the Broadway 1996 revival, opened on September 18, 2018 at Théâtre Mogador in Paris with Sofia Essaïdi as Velma Kelly, Carien Keizer as Roxie Hart and Jean-Luc Guizone as Billy Flynn. Directed by Dominique Trottein with a book translated by Nicolas Engel, this production is choreographed by Ann Reinking and the music was supervised by Rob Bowman. This production closed on June 30, 2019.[82]

The Stratford Festival in Ontario, Canada, presented an entirely new production of Chicago as part of their 2020 season; the organization was granted new production rights outside of New York or London for the first time in 30 years. It was directed by Donna Feore.[83]

A new production directed by Drew Anthony and choreographed by Lauren Ferreira was staged at The Royale Theatre at Planet Royale during September 2022, with Lucy Williamson as Velma, Elethea Sartorelli as Roxie, Brendan Hanson as Billy Flynn, Rachel Monamy as Mama Morton, Vincent Hooper as Amos and Greg Jarema as Mary Sunshine.[84]

Recordings

 
Artwork for original Broadway cast recording (1975)

There have been several cast recordings of Chicago:

  • 1975 Original Broadway Cast[85]
  • 1981 Original Australian Cast[86]
  • 1996 Broadway Revival[87]
  • 1998 London Cast[88]
  • 1997 Austrian (German language) Cast – Live Cast Album (with Anna Montanaro)
  • 1999 Dutch Cast – Live Cast Album, 2 discs (with Pia Douwes)
  • 2002 Film Soundtrack
  • 2014 German Cast - Live Cast Album, Stuttgart, 1 disc with Nigel Casey, Lana Gordon, Carien Keizer

Awards and nominations

Original Broadway production

Original London production

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result
1979 Laurence Olivier Award Best New Musical Nominated
Best Actor in a Musical Ben Cross Nominated
Best Actress in a Musical Antonia Ellis Nominated

1996 Broadway revival

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result
1997 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Won
Outstanding Actor in a Musical James Naughton Nominated
Outstanding Actress in a Musical Bebe Neuwirth Won
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Joel Grey Won
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Marcia Lewis Nominated
Outstanding Choreography Ann Reinking Won
Outstanding Director of a Musical Walter Bobbie Won
Outstanding Lighting Design Ken Billington Won
Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Won
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical James Naughton Won
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Bebe Neuwirth Won
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Marcia Lewis Nominated
Best Direction of a Musical Walter Bobbie Won
Best Choreography Ann Reinking Won
Best Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated
Best Lighting Design Ken Billington Won
1998 Grammy Award Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album Won

1997 London revival

References

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External links

  • ​Chicago​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  • Chicago, El Musical, Spanish Production Official Website
  • Gerónimo Rauch-Mary Sunshine in Chicago (Spain)
  • Ovrtur.com Listing
  • Chicago song lyrics

chicago, musical, chicago, 1975, american, musical, with, music, john, kander, lyrics, fred, book, fosse, chicago, jazz, musical, based, 1926, play, same, title, reporter, maurine, dallas, watkins, about, actual, criminals, crimes, which, reported, story, sati. Chicago is a 1975 American musical with music by John Kander lyrics by Fred Ebb and book by Ebb and Bob Fosse Set in Chicago in the jazz age the musical is based on a 1926 play of the same title by reporter Maurine Dallas Watkins about actual criminals and crimes on which she reported The story is a satire on corruption in the administration of criminal justice and the concept of the celebrity criminal ChicagoOriginal Broadway poster artMusicJohn KanderLyricsFred EbbBookFred EbbBob FosseBasisChicagoby Maurine Dallas WatkinsPremiereJune 3 1975 46th Street Theatre New York CityProductions1975 Broadway 1979 West End 1996 Broadway revival 1997 North America tour 1997 West End revival 2018 West End revival 2021 UK TourAwards1996 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical 1997 Laurence Olivier Award for Outstanding Musical ProductionThe original Broadway production opened in 1975 at the 46th Street Theatre 1 and ran for 936 performances until 1977 Bob Fosse directed and choreographed the original production and his style is strongly identified with the show It debuted in the West End in 1979 where it ran for 600 performances Chicago was revived on Broadway in 1996 and a year later in the West End The 1996 Broadway production holds the record as the longest running musical revival and the longest running American musical in Broadway history It is the second longest running show ever to run on Broadway behind only The Phantom of the Opera Chicago surpassed Cats on November 23 2014 when it played its 7 486th performance 2 The West End revival became the longest running American musical in West End history Additionally since the closing of The Phantom of the Opera on April 16 2023 Chicago is currently the longest running active show on Broadway Chicago has been staged in numerous productions around the world and has toured extensively in the United States and United Kingdom The 2002 film adaptation of the musical won the Academy Award for Best Picture Contents 1 History 2 Synopsis 2 1 Act I 2 2 Act II 3 Musical numbers 4 Cast and characters 4 1 Original casts 4 2 Notable replacements 5 Musical and staging style 6 Productions 6 1 Original Broadway production 6 2 1979 West End 6 3 1977 Argentina 6 4 1981 Australia 6 5 1992 Los Angeles production 6 6 1996 Broadway revival 6 7 London revivals 6 8 North American tours 6 9 2019 Australia 6 10 2021 UK Tour 6 11 International productions 7 Recordings 8 Awards and nominations 8 1 Original Broadway production 8 2 Original London production 8 3 1996 Broadway revival 8 4 1997 London revival 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditThe musical Chicago is based on a play of the same name by reporter and playwright Maurine Dallas Watkins who was assigned to cover the 1924 trials of accused murderers Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner for the Chicago Tribune In the early 1920s Chicago s press and public became riveted by the subject of homicides committed by women Several high profile cases arose which generally involved women killing their lovers or husbands These cases were tried against a backdrop of changing views of women in the jazz age and a long string of acquittals by Cook County juries of female murderers juries at the time were all male and convicted murderers generally faced death by hanging A lore arose that in Chicago feminine or attractive women could not be convicted The Chicago Tribune generally favored the prosecution s case while still presenting the details of these women s lives Its rivals at the Hearst papers were more pro defendant and employed what were derisively called sob sisters women reporters who focused on the plight attractiveness redemption or grace of the female defendants Regardless of stance the press covered several of these women as celebrities 3 Annan the model for the character of Roxie Hart was 23 when she was accused of the April 3 1924 4 murder of Harry Kalstedt who served as the basis for the Fred Casely character The Tribune reported that Annan played the foxtrot record Hula Lou over and over for two hours before calling her husband to say she killed a man who tried to make love to her Her husband Albert Annan inspired the character Amos Hart Albert was an auto mechanic who bankrupted himself to defend his wife only for her to publicly dump him the day after she was acquitted Velma Kelly is based on Gaertner who was a cabaret singer and society divorcee The body of Walter Law was discovered slumped over the steering wheel of Gaertner s abandoned car on March 12 1924 Two police officers testified that they had seen a woman getting into the car and shortly thereafter heard gunshots A bottle of gin and an automatic pistol were found on the floor of the car Lawyers William Scott Stewart and W W O Brien were models for a composite character in Chicago Billy Flynn Just days apart separate juries acquitted both women 5 Watkins sensational columns documenting these trials proved so popular that she wrote a play based on them The show received both good box office sales and newspaper notices and was mounted on Broadway in 1926 running 172 performances Cecil B DeMille produced a silent film version Chicago 1927 starring former Mack Sennett bathing beauty Phyllis Haver as Roxie Hart It was later remade as Roxie Hart 1942 starring Ginger Rogers but in this version Roxie was accused of murder without having really committed it due to content restrictions on Hollywood films of the era In the 1960s Gwen Verdon read the play and asked her husband Bob Fosse about the possibility of creating a musical adaptation Fosse approached playwright Watkins numerous times to buy the rights but she repeatedly declined by this point she may have regretted that Annan and Gaertner had been allowed to walk free and that her treatment of them should not be glamorized 4 Nonetheless upon her death in 1969 her estate sold the rights to producer Richard Fryer Verdon and Fosse 4 John Kander and Fred Ebb began work on the musical score modeling each number on a traditional vaudeville number or a vaudeville performer This format made explicit the show s comparison between justice show business and contemporary society Ebb and Fosse penned the book of the musical and Fosse also directed and choreographed Synopsis EditAct I Edit Velma Kelly is a vaudevillian who welcomes the audience to tonight s show All That Jazz Interplayed with the opening number the scene cuts to February 14 1928 in the bedroom of chorus girl Roxie Hart where she murders Fred Casely as he attempts to break off an affair with her Roxie convinces her husband Amos that the victim was a burglar and Amos agrees to take the blame Roxie expresses her appreciation of her husband s willingness to do anything for her Funny Honey However when the police mention the deceased s name Amos belatedly realizes that Roxie has lied to him With both Roxie and Amos furious at each other for the other s betrayal Roxie confesses and is arrested She is sent to the women s block in the Cook County Jail where several women accused of killing their lovers are held Cell Block Tango among the inmates is Velma Kelly revealing herself to have been involved in the death of her husband and sister after she caught them having sex though she denies committing the act on account of blacking out from the sight The block is presided over by Matron Mama Morton whose system of taking bribes When You re Good to Mama perfectly suits her clientele She has helped Velma become the media s top murderer of the week and is acting as a booking agent for Velma s big return to vaudeville Velma is not happy to see Roxie who is stealing not only her limelight but also her lawyer Billy Flynn Roxie convinces Amos to pay for Billy Flynn to be her lawyer A Tap Dance though Amos lacks the funds Eagerly awaited by his all woman clientele Billy sings his anthem complete with a chorus of fan dancers All I Care About Billy takes Roxie s case before realizing Amos doesn t have the money to make up the difference he turns the case into a media circus and rearranges her story for consumption by sympathetic tabloid columnist Mary Sunshine A Little Bit of Good hoping to sell proceeds in an auction Roxie s press conference turns into a ventriloquist act with Billy dictating a new version of the truth We Both Reached for the Gun to the reporters while Roxie mouths the words Roxie becomes the most popular celebrity in Chicago as she boastfully proclaims while planning for her future career in vaudeville Roxie As Roxie s fame grows Velma s notoriety subsides and in an act of desperation she tries to talk Roxie into recreating the sister act I Can t Do It Alone Roxie turns her down only to find her own headlines replaced by the latest sordid crime of passion I Can t Do It Alone Reprise Separately Roxie and Velma realize there is no one they can count on but themselves My Own Best Friend and Roxie decides that being pregnant in prison would put her back on the front page Act II Edit Velma returns to introduce the opening act resentful of Roxie s manipulation of the system I Know a Girl and ability to seduce a doctor into saying Roxie is pregnant as Roxie emerges she sings gleefully of the future of her unborn nonexistent child Me and My Baby Amos proudly claims paternity but still nobody notices him and Billy exposes holes in Roxie s story by noting that she and Amos had not had sex in four months meaning if she were pregnant the child was not Amos s in hopes that Amos will divorce her and look like a villain which Amos almost does Mr Cellophane Velma tries to show Billy all the tricks she has planned for her trial When Velma Takes The Stand which Roxie treats skeptically Roxie upset with being treated like a common criminal and considering herself a celebrity has a heated argument with Billy and fires him Billy warns her that her kind of celebrity is fleeting and that she would be just as famous hanging from a noose At that moment Roxie witnesses one of her fellow inmates a Hungarian woman who insisted on her innocence but could not speak English and whose public lawyer refused to defend her become the first woman to be executed in Chicago in decades Hungarian Rope Trick The trial date arrives and the now freshly terrified Roxie runs back to Billy who calms Roxie by suggesting she will be fine so long as she makes a show of the trial Razzle Dazzle Billy uses Amos as a pawn turning around and insisting that Amos is actually the father of Roxie s child As Roxie recounts Billy s carefully crafted false narrative of the night of Fred s murder with Fred re appearing on stage in flashback she steals all of Velma s schtick down to the rhinestone garter to the dismay of Mama and Velma Class As promised Billy gets Roxie acquitted but just as the verdict is announced some even more sensational crime pulls the press away and Roxie s fleeting celebrity life is over Billy leaves done with the case admitting that he only did it for the money Amos tries to get Roxie to come home and forget the ordeal but she is more concerned with the end of her brief run of fame and admits she isn t pregnant at which point a fed up Amos leaves her The final scene cuts to a Chicago vaudeville theater where Roxie and Velma acquitted off stage are performing a new act in which they sing bittersweetly about modern life Nowadays The former Mary Sunshine revealed during the trial actually to be a man in drag takes his natural male form as a pushy vaudeville promoter shaping Roxie and Velma s dance Hot Honey Rag to make it as sexy as possible The show ends with a brief finale as Roxie and Velma thank their audience Finale 6 Musical numbers Edit1975 Original Broadway Production Chicago A Musical Vaudeville Act 1 Overture Orchestra All That Jazz Velma Kelly and Company Funny Honey Roxie Hart Amos Hart Sergeant Fogarty Cell Block Tango Velma and the Girls When You re Good to Mama Matron Mama Morton Tap Dance Roxie Amos and Boys All I Care About Billy Flynn and the Girls A Little Bit of Good Mary Sunshine We Both Reached for the Gun Billy Roxie Mary Sunshine Roxie Roxie and Boys I Can t Do It Alone Velma Chicago After Midnight Orchestra My Own Best Friend Roxie and Velma Act 2 I Know a Girl Velma Me and My Baby Roxie and Company Mr Cellophane Amos Hart When Velma Takes the Stand Velma and Boys Razzle Dazzle Billy and Company Class Velma and Morton Nowadays Roxie Finale Nowadays R S V P Keep It Hot Roxie and Velma 1996 Revival Production Chicago The Musical Act 1 Overture Orchestra All That Jazz Velma Kelly and Company Funny Honey Roxie Hart Cell Block Tango Velma and the Murderesses When You re Good to Mama Matron Mama Morton Tap Dance Roxie Amos and Boys All I Care About Billy Flynn and the Girls A Little Bit of Good Mary Sunshine We Both Reached for the Gun Billy Roxie Mary and the Reporters Roxie Roxie and the Boys I Can t Do It Alone Velma I Can t Do It Alone Reprise Velma My Own Best Friend Roxie and Velma Finale Act I All That Jazz Reprise Velma Act 2 Entr acte Orchestra I Know a Girl Velma Me and My Baby Roxie and Company Mr Cellophane Amos Hart When Velma Takes the Stand Velma and the Boys Razzle Dazzle Billy and Company Class Velma and Mama Morton Nowadays Velma and Roxie Hot Honey Rag Orchestra Finale Act II All That Jazz Reprise Company In the 1975 Original Broadway Production and its Playbill there are a few contradicting song lists Songs such as R S V P and Keep It Hot which were instrumental pieces in the Finale were removed from the licensable music but were included in original production and script Other songs such as Ten Percent sung by a deleted character who was Velma s agent and No sung by Roxie and Boys were cut soon into the production and only appear on demo recordings and in the original Playbill but are not in the original script Other cut songs from the show were Rose Colored Glasses a different version of We Both Reached for the Gun Pansy Eyes and Loopin the Loop 7 8 Cast and characters EditOriginal casts Edit Source for West End overthefootlights co uk 9 Principal characters defined as having at least one featured musical number and original performers of notable productions Character Description Broadway 1975 West End 1979 Australia 1981 Broadway 1996 West End 1997 Roxie Hart An aspiring vaudevillian and murderess who kills her paramour after a spat and is sent to jail Gwen Verdon Antonia Ellis Nancye Hayes Ann Reinking Ruthie HenshallVelma Kelly A vaudevillian and murderess who is on trial for killing her cheating husband and sister She is represented by Billy Flynn and competes with Roxie Hart for him Chita Rivera Jenny Logan Geraldine Turner Bebe Neuwirth Ute LemperBilly Flynn Velma and Roxie s lawyer who has a perfect track record and makes celebrities of his clients to win sympathy and sway public opinion Jerry Orbach Ben Cross Terence Donovan James Naughton Henry GoodmanAmos Hart Roxie s faithful and good natured but simple husband whom nobody pays attention to He spends most of the show trying to make Roxie take interest in him or even just acknowledge his existence Barney Martin Don Fellows George Spartels Joel Grey Nigel PlanerMatron Mama Morton The matron of the Cook County Jail Grants the inmates favors in exchange for bribes Mary McCarty Hope Jackman Judi Connelli Marcia Lewis Meg JohnsonMary Sunshine The sob sister journalist who follows the trials of both Roxie Hart and Velma Kelly In most productions Sunshine is revealed to be male at the end of the show Michael O Haughey Gary Lyons J P Webster David Sabella Mills Charles ShirvellNotable replacements Edit Broadway 1975 1977 Roxie Hart Liza Minnelli Lenora Nemetz Ann Reinking Velma Kelly Lenora Nemetz Amos Hart Rex Everhart Matron Mama Morton Alaina Reed HallBroadway 1996 Roxie Hart Pamela Anderson Mel B Christie Brinkley Charlotte d Amboise Paige Davis Kara DioGuardi Sandy Duncan Veronica Dunne Charlotte Kate Fox Robin Givens Melanie Griffith Melora Hardin Samantha Harris Marilu Henner Ruthie Henshall Olivia Holt Robyn Hurder Erika Jayne Bonnie Langford Shiri Maimon Bianca Marroquin Gretchen Mol Jennifer Nettles Bebe Neuwirth Petra Nielsen Brandy Norwood Desi Oakley Lisa Rinna Chita Rivera Angelica Ross Brooke Shields Ashlee Simpson Amy Spanger Denise van Outen Ana Villafane Nana Visitor Michelle Williams Rumer Willis Rita Wilson Ryoko Yonekura Karen Ziemba Velma Kelly Pia Douwes Deidre Goodwin Lana Gordon Jasmine Guy Mya Harrison Ruthie Henshall Carly Hughes Nikka Graff Lanzarone Sharon Lawrence Ute Lemper Vicki Lewis Bianca Marroquin Luba Mason Anna Montanaro Caroline O Connor Reva Rice Amra Faye Wright Leigh Zimmerman Billy Flynn Pasquale Aleardi Obba Babatunde Brent Barrett Hinton Battle Erich Bergen Wayne Brady Jaime Camil Philip Casnoff Maxwell Caulfield Chuck Cooper Billy Ray Cyrus Jason Danieley Taye Diggs Brandon Victor Dixon Colman Domingo John Dossett Christopher Fitzgerald Alexander Gemignani Eddie George Cuba Gooding Jr Louis Gossett Jr Michael C Hall Todrick Hall George Hamilton Harry Hamlin Gregory Harrison Tom Hewitt James Monroe Iglehart Gregory Jbara Joey Lawrence Huey Lewis Norm Lewis Hal Linden Peter Lockyer Jeff McCarthy Christopher McDonald Brian McKnight Paul Alexander Nolan John O Hurley Adam Pascal Marti Pellow Clarke Peters Ron Raines Kevin Richardson John Schneider Matthew Settle Chaz Lamar Shepherd Christopher Sieber Jerry Springer Elvis Stojko Patrick Swayze Paulo Szot Alan Thicke Robert Urich Usher Ben Vereen Tom Wopat Tony Yazbeck Billy Zane Adrian Zmed Marco Zunino Amos Hart Rob Bartlett Kevin Carolan Kevin Chamberlin Cory English Christopher Fitzgerald Tom McGowan Isaac Mizrahi Vincent Pastore Ernie Sabella Chris Sullivan Paul C Vogt Matron Mama Morton Kandi Burruss B J Crosby Lea DeLaria Larisa Dolina Debbie Gravitte Jennifer Holliday Cady Huffman Patti LaBelle NeNe Leakes Adriane Lenox Debra Monk Jinkx Monsoon Anne L Nathan Bebe Neuwirth Michele Pawk Christine Pedi Roz Ryan Camille Saviola Valerie Simpson Angie Stone Mary Testa Aida Turturro Sofia Vergara Lillias White Terri White Wendy Williams Chandra Wilson Carol Woods Mary Sunshine Daniel Levine Max von EssenWest End revival 1997 2012 Roxie Hart Tina Arena Emma Barton Christie Brinkley Jennifer Ellison America Ferrera Maria Friedman Josefina Gabrielle Jill Halfpenny Linzi Hateley Bonnie Langford Aoife Mulholland Petra Nielsen Chita Rivera Frances Ruffelle Suzanne Shaw Brooke Shields Ashlee Simpson Claire Sweeney Sally Ann Triplett Denise van Outen Michelle Williams Velma Kelly Anna Jane Casey Pia Douwes Ruthie Henshall Nicola Hughes Debbie Kurup Rachel McDowall Anna Montanaro Valerie Pettiford Leigh Zimmerman Billy Flynn Luca Barbareschi John Barrowman David Bedella Darius Campbell Maxwell Caulfield Robin Cousins Juan Pablo Di Pace John Diedrich Sacha Distel Michael French Matthew Goodgame Michael Greco Tony Hadley David Hasselhoff Raza Jaffrey Duncan James Ian Kelsey Craig McLachlan Jimmy Osmond Marti Pellow Clarke Peters Kevin Richardson Rolf Saxon Michael Siberry Jerry Springer Jonathan Wilkes Gary Wilmot Amos Hart Justin Lee Collins Peter Davison Les Dennis James Doherty Joel Grey Gareth Hale Kevin Kennedy George Layton Victor McGuire Dale Meeks Norman Pace Clive Rowe Matron Mama Morton Lynda Carter Sharon D Clarke Anita Dobson Brenda Edwards Diane Langton Alison Moyet Kelly Osbourne Gaby Roslin Mary Sunshine Cory English Nathan KileyMusical and staging style EditAccording to Fred Ebb he wrote the book in a vaudeville style because the characters were performers Every musical moment in the show was loosely modeled on someone else Roxie was Helen Morgan Velma was Texas Guinan Billy Flynn was Ted Lewis Mama Morton was Sophie Tucker Composer John Kander elaborates that the reason the show was called a vaudeville is because many of the songs we wrote are related to specific performers like those you mentioned and Eddie Cantor and Bert Williams as well 10 It was through the initial production and not the writing that many of the traditional Chicago staging conventions were developed The double snap in Razzle Dazzle was added as an afterthought at the suggestion of Ebb to Kander Kander explains I remember when we wrote Razzle Dazzle before we took it in and played it for Bob you Ebb said with absolute confidence Try adding a couple of finger snaps to it Bobby will love that We added them and as soon as he heard the finger snaps he loved the song 10 During rehearsals Razzle Dazzle was originally staged as an orgy on the steps of the courthouse Fosse was talked out of allowing this staging when Orbach convinced him that he was missing the Brechtian subtlety intrinsic in the number 11 The original finale was Loopin the Loop a doubles act with Verdon and Rivera however the scene seemed too much like an amateur act so Fosse asked for something more glamorous in pretty gowns The piece was cut and replaced with Nowadays Instrumental sections of Loopin the Loop can still be heard in the Overture 11 Two other sections termed Keep It Hot and RSVP were cut from the finale as well Another principal character a theatrical agent named Harry Glassman was played by David Rounds whose role was to exploit the notoriety of the prisoners for his own gain He also served as the evening s M C This character s role and the song Ten Percent was cut 12 with the character folded into that of Matron Mama Morton and various members of the chorus shared his M C duties 13 In a reversal of roles Fosse decided the lyrics for Class were too offensive and censored Kander and Ebb s original version One of the original lyrics Every guy is a snot Every girl is a twat was restored for the 2002 film although the entire number was cut from the final product citation needed Productions EditOriginal Broadway production Edit M O Haughey as Mary Sunshine and Jerry Orbach as Billy Flynn in the original Broadway cast 1976 Chicago A Musical Vaudeville opened on June 3 1975 at the 46th Street Theatre and ran for a total of 936 performances closing on August 27 1977 14 The opening night cast starred Chita Rivera as Velma Kelly Gwen Verdon as Roxie Hart Jerry Orbach as Billy Flynn and Barney Martin as Amos Hart Velma Kelly had been a comparatively minor character in all versions of Chicago prior to the musical rendering The role was fleshed out to balance Chita Rivera s role opposite Gwen Verdon s Roxie Hart The musical received mixed reviews The Brechtian style of the show which frequently dropped the fourth wall made audiences uncomfortable According to James Leve Chicago is cynical and subversive exploiting American cultural mythologies in order to attack American celebrity culture 15 The show opened the same year as Michael Bennett s highly successful A Chorus Line which beat out Chicago in both ticket sales and at the Tony Awards 16 The show was on the verge of closing when it ran into another setback Gwen Verdon had to have surgery on nodes in her throat after inhaling a feather during the show s finale 17 The producers contemplated closing the show but Liza Minnelli stepped in and offered to play the role of Roxie Hart in place of Verdon 18 19 Her run lasted slightly over a month August 8 1975 through September 13 1975 20 boosting the show s popularity until Gwen Verdon recuperated and returned to the show Ann Reinking who would go on to star in the highly successful 1996 revival 21 and choreograph that production in the style of Bob Fosse was also a cast replacement for Roxie Hart during the show s original run 22 1979 West End Edit The first West End London production opened at the Cambridge Theatre in April 1979 and ran for around 600 performances having had its European premiere at the Crucible Theatre Sheffield on 23 November 1978 23 It commenced in the West End with most of the Sheffield cast and was directed by Peter James and choreographed by Gillian Gregory The producers were Ray Cooney and Larry Parnes 24 25 Jenny Logan starred as Velma Kelly with Ben Cross as Billy Antonia Ellis as Roxie Hart and Don Fellows as Amos Hart 26 Ellis Actress of the Year in a Musical and Ben Cross Actor of the Year in a Musical were nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for their performances and the musical was nominated as Musical of the Year 27 Elizabeth Seal later replaced Ellis as Roxie Hart 28 29 1977 Argentina Edit The original Argentine production opened at the Teatro El Nacional featuring Nelida Lobato Roxie Ambar La Fox Velma Marty Cosens Billy Jovita Luna Mama Morton and Juan Carlos Thorry Amos as a replica of the original Broadway production The book was adapted by Enrique Pinti and the production was directed by Wilfredo Ferran and Mike Ribas Gene Foote choreographed the production based on the original choreography by Bob Fosse It was produced by Alejandro Romay 1981 Australia Edit The original Australian production opened at the Sydney Opera House s Drama Theatre in June 1981 Featuring Nancye Hayes Roxie Geraldine Turner Velma Terence Donovan Billy Judi Connelli Mama and George Spartels Amos it was a new production directed by Richard Wherrett for the Sydney Theatre Company rather than a replica of the Broadway production 30 It transferred to the Theatre Royal in Sydney before touring to Melbourne s Comedy Theatre Adelaide s Festival Theatre and a return season at the Theatre Royal playing until March 1982 Sydney Theatre Company s production also toured to the Hong Kong Arts Festival in February 1983 31 1992 Los Angeles production Edit The Long Beach Civic Light Opera presented Chicago in 1992 directed by Rob Marshall with choreography by Ann Reinking Juliet Prowse played Roxie opposite Bebe Neuwirth as Velma Gary Sandy played Billy Flynn with Kaye Ballard as Mama Morton 32 1996 Broadway revival Edit City Center Encores series presented Chicago in concert in May 1996 33 The Encores series according to their statement celebrates the rarely heard works of America s most important composers and lyricists Encores gives three glorious scores the chance to be heard as their creators originally intended 34 The production was directed by Walter Bobbie with choreography in the style of Bob Fosse by Ann Reinking who also reprised her previous role as Roxie Hart 33 Also in the cast were Bebe Neuwirth as Velma Kelly Joel Grey as Amos Hart and James Naughton as Billy Flynn 33 The show was well received with Howard Kissel reviewing for the New York Daily News writing that This Chicago impressed me far more than the original 35 Ben Brantley in his review for The New York Times wrote Make love to the audience was another Fosse dictum That s exactly what Ms Reinking and her ensemble do Chicago can still seem glibly cynical and artificially cold especially in its weaker second act But these performers know just how to take off the chill 36 By May 10 1996 there was talk of a Broadway production Down the block there is a move afoot to move the Encores production of Chicago to Broadway Rocco Landesman said that he and Fran and Barry Weissler wanted to bring the production to the Martin Beck Theater this summer 37 Chicago The Musical at the Ambassador Theatre New York May 2010 Barry and Fran Weissler brought the Encores production to Broadway after some revision and expansion but retaining the spare and minimalist style in costumes and set 38 The set design includes the presence of the band center stage in an evocation of a jury box around and upon which the actors play some scenes There are also chairs along the sides of this central piece in which the actors at times sit or lounge when not directly involved in the action The show opened on November 14 1996 at the Richard Rodgers Theatre the same theater where the original production had played 39 with a script adapted by David Thompson 40 eventually setting a record for recovering its initial costs faster than any other musical in history likely due in part to the stripped down design elements Unlike the original production the revival was met with praise from critics The CurtainUp reviewer noted The show garnered ecstatic reviews enviable box office sales and enough awards to warrant a special Chicago trophy room 38 Society had changed in light of events such as the O J Simpson murder case and audiences were more receptive to the criminal as celebrity theme of the show 41 The revival of Chicago won six Tony Awards more than any other revival in Broadway history until South Pacific won seven Tonys in 2008 42 Chicago won for Best Revival of a Musical Best Leading Actress in a Musical for Bebe Neuwirth Best Leading Actor in a Musical for James Naughton Best Lighting Design of a Musical for Ken Billington Best Director of a Musical for Walter Bobbie and Best Choreography for Ann Reinking 43 Chicago The Musical has run for more than 9 000 performances 43 44 and holds the record for longest running musical revival on Broadway 45 Ann Reinking Bebe Neuwirth James Naughton and Joel Grey returned for cameo appearances 46 The cast recording of the revival was released on January 28 1997 on RCA Victor 47 The cast recording won the 1997 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album 48 Among the many other performers and celebrities who have appeared in the show are Adam Pascal Alan Thicke Amra Faye Wright Amy Spanger Ana Villafane Angelica Ross Ashlee Simpson Billy Ray Cyrus Billy Zane Brandy Norwood Brooke Shields Carol Woods Chandra Wilson Charlotte d Amboise Christie Brinkley Christine Pedi Christopher Fitzgerald Christopher Sieber Cuba Gooding Jr Debra Monk Eddie George Elvis Stojko Erich Bergen Erika Jayne Gretchen Mol Isaac Mizrahi Jaime Camil James Monroe Iglehart Jeff McCarthy Jennifer Holliday Jennifer Nettles Jerry Springer Jinkx Monsoon Joey Lawrence John O Hurley Kara DioGuardi Kevin Richardson Kevin Chamberlin Leigh Zimmerman Lillias White Lisa Rinna Marco Zunino Marilu Henner Marti Pellow Mel B Melanie Griffith Melora Hardin Michael C Hall Michelle Williams Mya Nana Visitor NeNe Leakes Norm Lewis Pamela Anderson Patrick Swayze Paulo Szot Philip Casnoff Rita Wilson Rob Bartlett Roz Ryan Rumer Willis Ruthie Henshall Samantha Harris Shiri Maimon Sofia Vergara Taye Diggs Todrick Hall Tony Yazbeck Usher Veronica Dunne and Wendy Williams 44 On February 12 1997 the Broadway production moved into the larger Shubert Theatre 49 50 On January 29 2003 more than six years into its run the Broadway production moved a second time to the Ambassador Theatre where it has played ever since 51 On November 23 2014 Chicago became the second longest running Broadway show surpassing Cats 43 London revivals Edit Chicago playing at the West End s Cambridge Theatre in December 2010 On November 18 1997 the revival production opened in London s West End 52 53 Like the New York revival it was directed by Walter Bobbie and designed by John Lee Beatty with choreography by Ann Reinking in the style of Bob Fosse 54 The show ran at the Adelphi Theatre for nine years until transferring to the Cambridge Theatre in April 2006 55 The original cast of the production included German jazz singer Ute Lemper as Velma British actress Ruthie Henshall as Roxie Hart Nigel Planer as Amos Hart and Henry Goodman as Billy Flynn The production won the 1998 Olivier Award for Outstanding Musical and Lemper was awarded Best Actress in a Musical Both Lemper and Henshall have played the role of Velma on Broadway Like its Broadway counterpart the London production featured many celebrities including Alison Moyet America Ferrera Anita Dobson Aoife Mulholland Ashlee Simpson Bonnie Langford Brooke Shields Chita Rivera Christie Brinkley Claire Sweeney Clive Rowe Darius Campbell David Hasselhoff Denise van Outen Frances Ruffelle Gaby Roslin Ian Kelsey James Doherty Jennifer Ellison Jerry Springer Jill Halfpenny Joel Grey John Barrowman Josefina Gabrielle Justin Lee Collins Kelly Osbourne Kevin Richardson Leigh Zimmerman Les Dennis Linzi Hateley Lynda Carter Maria Friedman Marti Pellow Michael French Michael Greco Michelle Williams Peter Davison Raza Jaffrey Sacha Distel Sally Ann Triplett Tina Arena and Tony Hadley The production moved out of the Cambridge Theatre on August 27 2011 56 and transferred to the Garrick Theatre on November 7 2011 starring America Ferrera as Roxie 54 Robin Cousins joined the cast as Billy Flynn on July 17 2012 The show closed on September 1 2012 after a total run of nearly 15 years in London 57 The UK tour of the production continued after the closing 58 To celebrate the 21st Anniversary of the West End revival production Chicago returned this time at the Phoenix Theatre opening April 11 2018 starring Cuba Gooding Jr as Billy Flynn Sarah Soetaert as Roxie Hart Josefina Gabrielle as Velma Kelly and Ruthie Henshall as Mama Morton 59 60 A cast change saw Martin Kemp take over the role of Billy Flynn with Alexandra Burke as Roxie Hart and Mazz Murray as Mama Morton 61 Denise Van Outen was announced to take over the role of Velma from 24 September 2018 but due to sustaining a stress fracture in her heel her integration was delayed until 7 October 62 The production featured on ITV s reality show The Big Audition to cast the replacement Velma Following multiple rounds of singing dancing and acting auditions Laura Tyrer was selected to fill in for the role 63 North American tours Edit There have been ten North American national tours of Chicago 64 The first tour started in April 1997 in Cincinnati Ohio six months after the revival opened on Broadway The cast featured Charlotte d Amboise Roxie Hart Jasmine Guy Velma Kelly Obba Babatunde Billy Flynn and Carol Woods Matron Mama Morton A second company started in December 1997 in Tampa Florida 65 The tour went on hiatus in Fall 1999 and started again in October 1999 in Denver Colorado featuring Robert Urich as Billy Flynn Vicki Lewis Velma and Nana Visitor Roxie 66 67 The next tour started in October 2000 in Stamford Connecticut with Robert Urich Chita Rivera joined the tour for several weeks 68 The 2003 tour started in June 2003 at the National Theatre Washington DC with Brenda Braxton playing Velma Bianca Marroquin as Roxie and Gregory Harrison as Billy Flynn 69 70 During 2004 the tour cast included Alan Thicke and Tom Wopat as Billy Flynn and Carol Woods as Matron Mama Morton 71 The most recent tour started in November 2008 in Charlotte North Carolina and starred Tom Wopat as Billy Flynn Bianca Marroquin as Roxie Hart Terra C MacLeod as Velma Kelly and Roz Ryan later replaced by Carol Woods as Matron Mama Morton 64 72 On January 16 2012 Peruvian actor Marco Zunino joined the cast as Billy Flynn 73 74 2019 Australia Edit On 14 June 2018 the Gordon Frost Organisation announced a revival tour of Chicago commencing early 2019 at the Capitol Theatre in Sydney 75 The show starred Natalie Bassingthwaighte as Roxie and Casey Donovan as Mama Morton 76 The Melbourne leg of the tour starred Jason Donovan as Billy Flynn 77 Donovan s father Terence had played the same role in the 1981 Australian production 30 2021 UK Tour Edit A new UK and Ireland tour began on September 11 2021 at the King s Theatre Glasgow 78 International productions Edit The first Japanese language production of the Tony winning revival of Kander and Ebb s Chicago debuted in October 2008 at the Akasaka ACT Theatre in Tokyo Japan followed by an engagement at Osaka s Umeda Art Theatre Presented by Barry and Fran Weissler in association with Tokyo Broadcasting System Inc and Kyodo Tokyo Inc the b production starred Ryoko Yonekura as Roxie Hart Yōka Wao as Velma Kelly and Ryuichi Kawamura as Billy Flynn 79 In Peru the musical opened on June 16 2012 starring Tati Alcantara Denisse Dibos and Marco Zunino at Teatro Municipal de Lima in Lima 80 The show was also staged using a Spanish translation in Costa Rica in 2017 starring Silvia Baltodano and Isabel Guzman 81 A French language production of Chicago based on the Broadway 1996 revival opened on September 18 2018 at Theatre Mogador in Paris with Sofia Essaidi as Velma Kelly Carien Keizer as Roxie Hart and Jean Luc Guizone as Billy Flynn Directed by Dominique Trottein with a book translated by Nicolas Engel this production is choreographed by Ann Reinking and the music was supervised by Rob Bowman This production closed on June 30 2019 82 The Stratford Festival in Ontario Canada presented an entirely new production of Chicago as part of their 2020 season the organization was granted new production rights outside of New York or London for the first time in 30 years It was directed by Donna Feore 83 A new production directed by Drew Anthony and choreographed by Lauren Ferreira was staged at The Royale Theatre at Planet Royale during September 2022 with Lucy Williamson as Velma Elethea Sartorelli as Roxie Brendan Hanson as Billy Flynn Rachel Monamy as Mama Morton Vincent Hooper as Amos and Greg Jarema as Mary Sunshine 84 Recordings Edit Artwork for original Broadway cast recording 1975 There have been several cast recordings of Chicago 1975 Original Broadway Cast 85 1981 Original Australian Cast 86 1996 Broadway Revival 87 1998 London Cast 88 1997 Austrian German language Cast Live Cast Album with Anna Montanaro 1999 Dutch Cast Live Cast Album 2 discs with Pia Douwes 2002 Film Soundtrack 2014 German Cast Live Cast Album Stuttgart 1 disc with Nigel Casey Lana Gordon Carien KeizerAwards and nominations EditOriginal Broadway production Edit Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result1976 Tony Award Best Musical NominatedBest Book of a Musical Bob Fosse and Fred Ebb NominatedBest Original Score John Kander and Fred Ebb NominatedBest Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Jerry Orbach NominatedBest Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Chita Rivera NominatedGwen Verdon NominatedBest Direction of a Musical Bob Fosse NominatedBest Choreography NominatedBest Scenic Design Tony Walton NominatedBest Costume Design Patricia Zipprodt NominatedBest Lighting Design Jules Fisher NominatedDrama Desk Award Outstanding Actor in a Musical Jerry Orbach NominatedOutstanding Lighting Design Jules Fisher WonGrammy Award Grammy Award for Best Cast Show Album NominatedOriginal London production Edit Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result1979 Laurence Olivier Award Best New Musical NominatedBest Actor in a Musical Ben Cross NominatedBest Actress in a Musical Antonia Ellis Nominated1996 Broadway revival Edit Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result1997 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical WonOutstanding Actor in a Musical James Naughton NominatedOutstanding Actress in a Musical Bebe Neuwirth WonOutstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Joel Grey WonOutstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Marcia Lewis NominatedOutstanding Choreography Ann Reinking WonOutstanding Director of a Musical Walter Bobbie WonOutstanding Lighting Design Ken Billington WonTony Award Best Revival of a Musical WonBest Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical James Naughton WonBest Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Bebe Neuwirth WonBest Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Marcia Lewis NominatedBest Direction of a Musical Walter Bobbie WonBest Choreography Ann Reinking WonBest Costume Design William Ivey Long NominatedBest Lighting Design Ken Billington Won1998 Grammy Award Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album Won1997 London revival Edit Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result1997 Laurence Olivier Award Outstanding Musical Production WonBest Actor in a Musical Henry Goodman NominatedBest Actress in a Musical Ute Lemper WonRuthie Henshall NominatedBest Director Walter Bobbie NominatedBest Theatre Choreographer Ann Reinking NominatedBest Costume Design William Ivey Long Nominated1999 Grammy Award Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album NominatedReferences Edit Chicago Retrieved January 6 2009 Gans Andrew All That Jazz Chicago Becomes Second Longest Running Broadway Show Tonight Playbill com November 23 2014 Perry Douglas 2010 The Girls of Murder City fame lust and the beautiful killers that inspiredChicago New York Penguin Group Viking Press pp 1 7 16 18 57 58 ISBN 978 0 670 02197 0 a b c Grubb Kevin Boyd 1989 Razzle Dazzle The Life and Work of Bob Fosse New York St Martin s Press pp 193 203 ISBN 978 0 312 03414 6 McConnell Virginia A Fatal Fortune the Death of Chicago s Millionaire Orphan p 62 Fatal Fortune the Death of Chicago s Millionaire Orphan books google Greenwood Publishing Group 2005 ISBN 0 275 98473 7 p 62 Plot Summary based on that of Bill Rosenfield copyright 1997 BMG Music Chicago Broadway 46th Street Theatre Playbill Playbill Retrieved April 7 2017 CHICAGO s missing character or WHO is Henry Glassman BroadwayWorld com Board www broadwayworld com Retrieved April 7 2017 1979 Musicals p 33 Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine overthefootlights co uk accessed June 8 2012 a b Kander John Ebb Fred Lawrence Greg October 2004 Colored Lights Forty Years of Words and Music Show Biz Collaboration and All That Jazz Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 128 129 ISBN 978 0 571 21169 2 a b Leve James Kander and Ebb Chapter Chicago Broadway To Hollywood Kander and Ebb Yale University Press 2009 ISBN 0 300 11487 7 p 86 Bloom Ken Vlastnik Frank and Orbach Jerry Broadway Musicals The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time Broadway Musicals The 101 Greatest Shows of All Time Black Dog Publishing 2008 ISBN 1 57912 313 9 p 66 Mordden Ethan One More Kiss The Broadway Musical in the 1970s One More Kiss The Broadway Musical in the 1970s Palgrave Macmillan 2004 ISBN 1 4039 6539 0 p 129 Chicago original 1975 run at IBDB Leve James Kander and Ebb Kander and Ebb Yale University Press 2009 ISBN 0 300 11487 7 p 6 Chicago a musical by John Kander Fred Ebb and Bob Fosse Retrieved June 25 2007 New York Intelligencer New York Magazine 8 32 58 August 11 1975 Wasson Sam 2019 Fosse The Biography Ebury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4735 3191 8 Ethan Mordden 2018 All That Jazz The Life and Times of the Musical Chicago Oxford University Press pp 192 193 ISBN 978 0 19 065180 0 Liza Minnelli Broadway credits Internet Broadway Database The Broadway League Archived from the original on October 10 2017 Retrieved October 9 2017 Chicago 1996 revival at IBDB Ann Reinking Broadway credits Internet Broadway Database The Broadway League Archived from the original on October 6 2017 Retrieved October 9 2017 Hamilton Alex November 18 2013 Broadway hit Chicago makes UK debut in Yorkshire From the archive 18 November 1978 The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved April 25 2020 Equity stops Chicago musical pay cuts archive 7 July 1980 The Guardian July 7 2016 Retrieved April 25 2020 London Shows Chronology 1979 guidetomusicaltheatre com Retrieved January 1 2011 ChicagoWest End 1979 listing westend broadwayworld com Retrieved January 1 2011 Oliviers Olivier Winners 1979 Archived 2010 11 28 at the Wayback Machine officiallondontheatre co uk Retrieved January 1 2011 Elizabeth Seal The Official Masterworks Broadway Site Retrieved April 25 2020 Elizabeth Seal Theatre Credits News Bio and Photos www broadwayworld com Retrieved April 25 2020 a b Chicago in the 1920s not a cheap American copy The Canberra Times Vol 55 no 16 697 Australian Capital Territory Australia June 14 1981 p 8 Retrieved May 21 2017 via National Library of Australia AusStage Chicago www ausstage edu au Retrieved May 21 2017 Chicago May 13 1992 a b c Haun Harry and Viagas Robert Hit Encores Chicago Definite for B way playbill com June 18 1996 Encores About nycitycenter org accessed April 19 2015 Kissel Howard May 4 1996 PUTTING THE CHIC IN CHICAGO REVIVAL BETTER THAN ORIGINAL NY Daily News Retrieved April 7 2017 Brantley Ben Theater Review Musical s Brief Revival Mixes Joy and Contempt New York Times May 4 1996 Marks Peter On Stage and Off The New York Times May 10 1996 a b Sommer Elyse Review Chicago curtainup com accessed April 19 2015 Viagas Robert and moved to the Shubert Theatre in February of 1997 Chicago Broadway Revival Opens playbill com November 14 1996 Chicago Cast and Creative Archived 2016 02 18 at the Wayback Machine chicagothemusical com accessed April 19 2015 Online NewsHour Chicago the Musical May 30 1997 PBS Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved June 25 2007 Ku Andrew Just the Facts List of 2008 Tony Award Winners and Nominees playbill com June 16 2008 a b c Chicago 1996 REvival Archived 2015 12 24 at the Wayback Machine playbillvault com accessed April 19 2015 a b Chicago Listing IBDB com RPM Chicago The Musical Official Site www chicagothemusical com Archived from the original on March 4 2012 Retrieved February 18 2012 Playbill com Archived April 10 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ku Andrew and Prince Andrea Notes From the Chicago Cast Album Party Playbill January 26 1997 Grammy Award Best Musical Show Album grammy com accessed April 19 2015 Viagas Robert February 12 1997 Chicago Transfers to the Shubert Today Playbill Retrieved September 7 2022 Grimes William February 7 1997 On Stage and Off The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 28 2022 McKinley Jesse January 17 2003 On Stage and Off The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 22 2021 Retrieved December 22 2021 Timeline Archived May 24 2009 at the Wayback Machine chicagothemusical com Chicago listing thisistheatre com accessed May 27 2009 a b Bosanquet Theo Ugly Betty s America Ferrera Leads Chicago at Garrick Archived 2011 12 14 at the Wayback Machine WhatsOnStage October 10 2011 Chicago the Musical at Cambridge Theatre listing thisistheatre com retrieved January 2 2011 Shenton Mark Razzle Dazzle Dimmed West End s Love Never Dies and Chicago Close Aug 27 Archived 2011 09 15 at the Wayback Machine Playbill com August 27 2011 Shenton Mark London Production of Chicago to Close After Record Breaking 15 Year Run Archived July 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine Playbill com July 13 2012 Chicago the Musical UK Official UK website accessed October 15 2012 Gans Andrew December 15 2017 Chicago Will Return to London s West End Playbill Retrieved January 1 2018 Sarah Soetaert Josefina Gabrielle amp Ruthie Henshall to join Cuba Gooding Jr in CHICAGO Best of Theatre February 16 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 Alexandra Burke joins the cast of Chicago in the West End Retrieved August 10 2018 Denise van Outen s return to Chicago cast delayed Laura Tyrer to razzle dazzle in Chicago a b Gans Andrew Wopat Marroquin MacLeod and Ryan to Head Cast of Chicago Tour Archived October 19 2012 at the Wayback Machine playbill com September 16 2008 Kuchwara Michael Chicago sizzles across the country and beyond Associated Press July 18 1997 Section Entertainment News no page number Jones Kenneth Lewis Urich and Visitor are New Trio in Chicago Tour in Detroit Nov 16 28 Archived 2012 10 19 at the Wayback Machine playbill com November 16 1999 Dillard Sandra C ALL JAZZED UP Robert Urich is keen on dancing in Chicago The Denver PostOctober 17 1999 p H1 Jones Kenneth New Tour of Chicago Begins Oct 6 7 in CT Chita Will Join Troupe Archived 2012 10 19 at the Wayback Machine playbill com October 5 2000 Marks Peter Chicago This Musical Has Legs The Washington Post June 13 2003 STYLE p C1 Gans Andrew Brenda Braxton Returns to Chicago Next Month Archived October 19 2012 at the Wayback Machine playbill com December 24 2003 Butler Grant CHICAGO The Oregonian March 12 2004 p 45 Arts and Living Section Russell Robert Review Chicago s Razzle Dazzle frazzle at Starlight The Kansas City Star August 14 2009 Zielinski Peter James Photo Coverage Marco Zunino Joins CHICAGO Amra Faye Wright Returns to Broadway s Chicago Feb 2 Marco Zunino Bianca Marroquin Extend Runs Archived February 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine Chicago Saturday Night Fever and Waitress all announced for Sydney News June 14 2018 Chicago review Capitol Theatre Sydney August 30 2019 CHICAGO Arts Centre Melbourne Retrieved April 7 2020 King s Theatre in Glasgow opens for Chicago after being closed for 500 days due to Covid glasgowtimes co uk Retrieved September 13 2021 Ryoko Yonekura kicks off musical Chicago dead link Japan Today Ellos protagonizaran el musical Chicago en Lima January 21 2012 Conozca a las estrellas de Chicago el musical que se estrenara en Costa Rica La Nacion Grupo Nacion in Spanish Retrieved May 22 2018 Compte rendu Dans Les coulisses de Chicago Le musical a Mogador Musical Avenue in French Retrieved September 7 2018 2020 Our vision revealed August 13 2019 Retrieved August 13 2019 Review Chicago A Musical Vaudeville at the Royale Theatre at Planet Royale Chicago 1975 Original Broadway Cast amazon com accessed October 2 2011 Australian cast recordings Straight To The Point AussieTheatre com September 8 2010 Retrieved May 21 2017 Chicago 1996 Broadway Revival Cast amazon com accessed October 2 2011 Chicago 1998 London Cast amazon com accessed October 2 2011External links Edit Chicago portal Chicago at the Internet Broadway Database Chicago The Musical Official Website Chicago El Musical Spanish Production Official Website Plot summary character descriptions amp licensing info for Chicago New Velma on B way Geronimo Rauch Mary Sunshine in Chicago Spain Ovrtur com Listing Chicago song lyrics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chicago musical amp oldid 1153086676, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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