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Wikipedia

Godspell

Godspell is a musical composed by Stephen Schwartz with book by John-Michael Tebelak. The show is structured as a series of parables, primarily based on the Gospel of Matthew, interspersed with music mostly set to lyrics from traditional hymns, with the passion of Christ appearing briefly near the end.

Godspell
Original cast recording
MusicStephen Schwartz
LyricsStephen Schwartz
BookJohn-Michael Tebelak
BasisGospel of Saint Matthew (primarily)
Productions1971 Off-Broadway
1971 Australian tour
1971 London
1972 Toronto
1973 Film Adaptation
1976 Broadway
1988 Off-Broadway revival
2000 Off-Broadway revival
2001 National Tour
2007 UK Tour
2011 Broadway revival
2012 Broadway tour
2014 Mexico City
2015 Lisbon
2016 Guatemala City
2016 Brazil
2018 Santo Domingo
2020 Bogota

Godspell began as a project by drama students at Carnegie Mellon University and then moved to the off-off-Broadway theater La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in the East Village of Manhattan. The show was rescored for an off-Broadway production, which opened on May 17, 1971, and became a long-running success. Many productions have followed worldwide, including a 2011 Broadway revival. An abbreviated one-act version of the musical designed for performers aged 18 and under also exists, titled Godspell Junior.[1]

Several cast albums have been released over the years. "Day by Day", from the original cast album, reached #13 on the Billboard pop singles chart in the summer of 1972.[2]

Characters

The show features eight non-Biblical characters, who sing and act out the parables: Gilmer (silly, a great storyteller); Robin (a tomboy); Herb (goofy and entertaining); Jeffrey (happy and excited); Joanne (eager and enthusiastic); Lamar (clumsy and unintentionally funny); Peggy (shy and loyal); and Sonia (dramatic with a put-on sensuality).[3] In the original script, licensed through Theatre Maximus, the "Christ" character and the "John" and "Judas" role are assigned the names of the original performers, Stephen and David.[4] All ten actors are on stage throughout the entirety of the production.[5]

In the revised script used for the 2011 Broadway revival, the names of the cast are again assigned to the non-Biblical roles: Nick, Telly, George, Anna Maria, Lindsay, Uzo, Morgan, and Celisse. Each character is also assigned a few character traits. An ensemble can also be added to the production if needed.[6]

Casts

Due to the fact the names of the characters are normally changed to the cast's name in professional productions, the names here match the character's main song sung, excluding Jesus and John/Judas. These are the names the characters are referred to in the licensing of the show.[7]

Most Notable Casts
Off-Broadway (1971)[8] London (1971) Broadway (1976)[9] Broadway (2011)[10]
Jesus Stephen Nathan David Essex Don Scardino Hunter Parrish
John the Baptist/Judas David Haskell Jeremy Irons Tom Rolfing Wallace Smith
"Day By Day" Robin Lamont Julie Covington Robin Lamont Anna Maria Perez de Tagle
"Learn Your Lessons Well" Gilmer McCormick Verity-Anne Meldrum Marley Sims Celiese Henderson
"Bless the Lord" Joanne Jonas Marti Webb Valerie Williams Lindsay Mendez
"All Good Gifts" Lamar Alford Tom Saffery Lamar Alford Telly Leung
"Light of the World" Herb Braha Deryk Parkin Laurie Faso George Salazar
"Turn Back, O Man" Sonia Manzano Gay Soper Lois Foraker Morgan James
"By My Side" Peggy Gordon Jacquie-Ann Carr Elizabeth Lathram Uzo Aduba
"We Beseech Thee" Jeffrey Mylett Neil Fitzwiliam Bobby Lee Nick Blaemire

Notable replacements include: Corbin Bleu as Jesus (Broadway 2011),[11] Sonia Manzano (Broadway 1976) and Victor Garber (Off-Broadway 1972).

Synopsis

Act I

The show opens with God's voice, as spoken by Jesus, declaring his supremacy: "My name is Known: God and King. I am most in majesty, in whom no beginning may be and no end." ("Opening (Monologue)"). The cast then enters and takes the roles of various philosophers who sing their philosophies, first alone, then in cacophonous counterpoint ("Prologue: Tower of Babble").

In response, John the Baptist enters blowing a shofar to call the community to order. He then beckons them to "Prepare Ye, The Way of the Lord!" and baptizes the cast ("Prepare Ye"). John gives a short sermon, as Jesus watches quietly. Jesus then announces his presence and says that he also wishes to be baptized. John instead asks to be baptized by Jesus. Jesus explains that "We do well now to conform with all that God requires" and is baptized by John. The cast enters and sings with Jesus ("Save the People").

In his first parable, Jesus explains that he has come "not to abolish the law and the prophets, but to complete." Jesus explains to the cast that those who adhere to the law of God will earn the highest place in the Kingdom of Heaven. He tells them the parable of the Widow and the Judge, demonstrating that God is a just jurist who will support those who cry out to him.

The cast begins to understand Jesus' teachings and take it upon themselves to tell the story of the Pharisee and the Publican praying in the temple: "Every man who humbles himself shall be exalted!"

As Jesus teaches the law of the offering gifts at the altar, the cast makes offerings of themselves. They are taught that to approach God's altar, they must be pure of heart and soul. They then act out the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant a story of a master and a servant who owes him a debt. The servant asks his master for pity in repaying the debt, and the master absolves it. The servant then turns to a fellow servant who "owed him a few dollars" and demands that it be paid in full. The master, hearing this, then condemns the servant to prison. Jesus explains the moral: "Forgive your brothers from your heart." The character telling the parable sings "Day by Day", and the cast joins in. After the song, Jesus teaches that if one part of you offends God, it is better to lose it than to have the whole of the body thrown into hell.

The cast then plays charades to finish several statements posed by Jesus, including "If a man sues you for your shirt..." and "If a man asks you to go one mile with him...." The cast then performs the Parable of the Good Samaritan as a play-within-a-play. Jesus explains the need to "love your enemies" and "not make a show of religion before men". He says: "God will reward a good deed done in secret" ("Shhh! It's a secret!").

The cast then performs the parable of Lazarus and the rich man. On earth, the rich man feasts, and Lazarus begs and is ignored. Upon dying, Lazarus is rewarded with Heaven, while the rich man is in Hell. The audience is told to "Learn Your Lessons Well" or be faced with eternal damnation. When the rich man asks Abraham if he would send Lazarus back from the dead to warn his brothers of their impending doom, Abraham tells him no: "If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone should rise from the dead."

Jesus teaches that no man can serve two masters (God and money). A member of the cast tells a story of a man who spent a lifetime acquiring the good things in life, then dies before he has the time to enjoy them. This character sings "Bless the Lord," then Jesus tells the cast not to worry about tomorrow: "Tomorrow will take care of itself. Today has problems of its own."

In an antiphonic chorus, the cast recites the Beatitudes. Judas directs the final beatitude regarding persecution at Jesus, and Jesus quickly changes the subject ("Did I ever tell you that I used to read feet?"). However, Jesus then persuades the cast that it is "All for the Best" and heaven contains the ultimate reward as Jesus and Judas do a soft shoe together.

This is followed by the parable of the Sower of the Seeds, which Jesus tells them represent the Word of God ("All Good Gifts").

By this point in the musical, the group has transformed from a rag-tag cast, into a community of love and caring and now march as soldiers in the military, signifying their ability to think as one. With Jesus as the drill sergeant, they perform the Parable of the Prodigal Son. The cast sings "Light of the World" about Christ's Light and how it shines in each person.

Intermission

Jesus thanks the audience for coming and announces a 10-minute intermission.

There is audience interaction during intermission. In the original production, the cast joined the audience for wine and bread. In the 2011 Broadway revival, the audience was offered wine on the stage.

The second act then opens with one or more cast members singing "Learn Your Lessons Well", calling the audience back to their seats.

Act II

After the reprise of "Learn Your Lessons Well", a member of the cast sings "Turn Back, O Man", imploring mankind to give up its temporal pursuits and turn to God. Jesus then says: "This is the beginning."

Several members of the cast then begin to question Jesus's authority, and he responds with yet another parable. He is asked, "What is the greatest commandment?" and responds, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and all your soul... And the second is like it: 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.'" The Pharisees continue to question him, and he laments "Alas for You" and calls them hypocrites. Members of the cast gather, join in Jesus' song, and throw garbage at the Pharisees.

Jesus predicts that he will not be seen for quite a while, while standing at the "Wailing Wall", and predicts great wars and famines. He reminds the cast and audience of the time of Noah and teaches that faith can calm the storm. The cast is told: "Keep awake, then. For the Son of Man will come at a time when you least expect it."

One woman in the cast is shunned as an adulteress. Jesus says: "Let the one of you who is faultless cast the first stone." Her accusers then bow their heads and walk away. Jesus walks over to her and asks: "Woman... where are they now? Has no one condemned you?" The woman answers: "No one, sir." He tells her: "Then nor shall I. You may go, but do not sin again." As she watches Jesus walk from her, she entreats him to remain "By My Side". During this song, Judas foretells his upcoming betrayal of Jesus.

In one of the lighter moments in the second act, Jesus tells how he will separate men as a shepherd separates his flock into sheep and goats. The sheep will enter heaven while the goats must suffer eternal damnation. "We Beseech Thee" cry the goats, begging for mercy.

After the song, the cast reminds each other to take things "Day By Day", as they remove their clown makeup, face paint, or object. They assemble for the Last Supper and Jesus tells them that one of them will betray him. Each member of the cast asks, "Is it I?" ending with Judas: "Rabbi... can you mean me?" Jesus tells him to do quickly what he must do and Judas runs off. Jesus breaks the bread and shares the wine, while saying the traditional Hebrew Seder blessings. He tells his followers that they will dine together in the Kingdom of Heaven. The band sings "On the Willows", which is about what has been sacrificed. In the song, Jesus blesses each member the cast. He asks that they wait for him as he goes into the Garden of Gethsemane to pray.

In the garden, Jesus implores God to let the burden be lifted from his shoulders if there is another way. Jesus returns to his followers to find them all asleep. He begs them to stay awake, but they all fall asleep again and Jesus warns them they will all betray him three times (a reference to the apostle Peter). Jesus then prays to God that if his death cannot pass him by, then His will must be done. He is then tempted by Satan (usually played by the apostles), but orders him away.

Judas returns to betray Jesus, but has a moment where he cannot bring himself to do it. He tries to leave but finds himself boxed in by invisible walls, except for one path which leads to Jesus. Jesus encourages Judas to do what he has come to do, and Judas grabs Jesus to bring him to be crucified. The community starts to attack Judas, while Jesus tells them to stop, as all who live by the sword will one day die by it. Judas (usually alone, as a representation of the others arresting Jesus) ties Jesus upon an electric fence (representative of the cross) as Jesus berates him for arresting him at night, but then says that it had to happen to fulfill the prophets' writings.

The "Finale" begins, loud and in B-minor, with Jesus wailing, "Oh, God, I'm bleeding," and the community answers: "Oh, God, You're bleeding." Jesus dies and the music ends. The women of the cast sing "Long Live God", and the men join in with "Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord" in counterpoint. The cast removes Jesus from the fence and carries him out, either offstage or through the aisles. The cast then finishes with a reprise of "Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord".

Ending interpretation

Similar to criticism of the 1970 rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar there is controversy over there being no obvious allusion to the Resurrection of Jesus in the show. It can be interpreted that either the singing of "Prepare Ye" in the finale or the curtain call, where all including Jesus return to the stage, represents the resurrection. The Music Theatre International script states that either representation is valid.[who?]

Musical numbers

Off-Broadway production

2011 Broadway revival

Tower of Babble

"Tower of Babble," the show's opening number, is often omitted by many productions. The song consists of the eight disciples (or soloists) acting out as philosophers, each singing about their various philosophies. They grow increasingly more irritated with each other, sing in contradiction, and eventually run out of words. "Prepare Ye" follows this prologue.

In the original productions, the philosophers were Socrates (Jeffrey Mylett), Thomas Aquinas (Peggy Gordon), Martin Luther (Lamar Alford), Leonardo da Vinci (Gilmer McCormick), Edward Gibbon (Sonia Manzano), Jean-Paul Sartre (Joanne Jonas), Friedrich Nietzsche (Robin Lamont), and Buckminster Fuller (Herb Braha). In the 2001 revival, Luther, Gibbon, Nietzsche, and Fuller were replaced by Galileo Galilei, Jonathan Edwards, L. Ron Hubbard, and Marianne Williamson, respectively. The 2011 revival retains Galilei, Hubbard, and Williamson, but restores Gibbon and replaces da Vinci with Georg Hegel.

On many early cast recordings, including the original off-Broadway recording and the original London recording, the prologue was omitted in order to produce an album that could sell as a pop album. This omission was for marketing purposes and was not meant to diminish the importance of the number, as Stephen Schwartz has repeatedly stated. As a consequence, some audiences have gotten the impression that this number was added into the score later.

Beautiful City

"Beautiful City" was written in 1972 as part of the film and re-written in 1993 after the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles. In the film, it follows "Alas for You" and "By My Side", omitting the parable typically found in between these two numbers.

In the decades following the film's release, many directors have chosen to use the lyrics from the original film version, sometimes to replace the "Day by Day" reprise, "Tower of Babble", like the prologue, or adding it the end of the musical as an additional scene depicting the Resurrection.

The 2011 Broadway revival places "Beautiful City" after "We Beseech Thee" and just before the Last Supper, sung by Jesus as a slow ballad. This production used the revised 1993 lyrics and is included on its cast recording, along with a cover by John Ondrasik of Five For Fighting as a bonus track.

Some productions use both the original upbeat film version as a prologue as well as the ballad version, either in its original place just before the Last Supper whereupon the Day By Day reprise is used as the Resurrection, or as an epilogue depicting the resurrection itself.

In Music Theater International's Broadway Junior series, which edits popular musicals to one act appropriate for a middle school cast, "Beautiful City" is included in the show. Godspell Junior contains most of the first act and almost none of the second act. "By My Side" is omitted entirely. "Beautiful City" is placed at the beginning of the second act and is immediately followed by the Last Supper, the Betrayal, and the Crucifixion.

Production history

1970: Carnegie Mellon University

John-Michael Tebelak wrote the first version of Godspell as his master's thesis at Carnegie Mellon University. The Carnegie Mellon cast included (listed in speaking order): Andrew Rohrer, Mary Mazziotti, Martha Jacobs, Robin Lamont, Robert Miller, Sonia Manzano, Stanley King, Randy Danson, James Stevens, and David Haskell with original music by Duane Bolick.[12] This version was performed at Carnegie Mellon in 1970 by students from Carnegie Mellon's Theatre Department.

1971: La MaMa and off-Broadway

The show was then brought to the attention of producers Edgar Lansbury (brother of Angela Lansbury), Joseph Beruh, and Stuart Duncan by Carnegie Mellon alumnus and associate producer Charles Haid, who wanted to transfer the show to off-Broadway.[13] The show was first produced at La Mama as a play with original music for eight songs by Duane Bolick, Jeffrey Mylett, who added one of his songs ("The Raven and The Swan") and Peggy Gordon and Jay Hamburger, who added "By My Side". The producers then hired Stephen Schwartz, another Carnegie Mellon alumnus, to re-score the show. Schwartz's score incorporated a variety of musical genres, including pop, folk rock, gospel, and vaudeville. "By My Side", written by Carnegie Mellon students Jay Hamburger and Peggy Gordon, was kept from the original score. As in the original score, most of the lyrics not written by Schwartz were from the Episcopal hymnal.[14] The show opened as a musical at the Cherry Lane Theatre on May 17, 1971. It transferred to the Promenade Theatre three months later, and closed on June 13, 1976, after 2,124 performances at the Promenade.[15] This production was directed by Tebelak, and the original cast included Lamar Alford, Peggy Gordon, David Haskell, Joanne Jonas, Robin Lamont, Sonia Manzano, Gilmer McCormick, Jeffrey Mylett, Stephen Nathan, and Herb Braha (Simon).[16] The band included Jesse Cutler on guitar and bass, Richard LaBonte on bass, Stephen Reinhardt on keyboards, and Ricky Shutter on drums and percussion. In late 1971, LaBonte was replaced by bassist Steve Manes when two of the original musicians, Shutter and LaBonte, went with the majority of the original cast to The Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles to open the show there. With the exception of LaBonte, they all returned to the Promenade in January 1972.[16]

1971: Melbourne, Australia

The first production after the off-Broadway show opened at the Playbox Theatre in Melbourne, Australia on November 15, 1971. The cast included Colleen Hewett, Collette Mann, Christopher Pate, and George Spartels. The producers, Aztec Services and Williamson Edgley Theatres, opened a second production in Sydney on April 10, 1972. Peta Toppano, John Waters, and Marty Rhone were in the Sydney production. Melbourne played 504 performances and Sydney played 507 before the two companies went on tour, performing another 700 shows.[17]

1971: London, England

Godspell opened at the Roundhouse Theatre in Chalk Farm, London on November 17, 1971. This London production featured Jacquie-Ann Carr, Julie Covington, David Essex, Neil Fitzwiliam, Jeremy Irons, Verity-Anne Meldrum, Deryk Parkin, Tom Saffery, Gay Soper, and Marti Webb. After a successful run at the Roundhouse Theatre, the production transferred to the Wyndham's Theatre, also in London, on January 26, 1972.[18] with Barry Stokes.

1972: Washington, D.C.

The Washington, D.C. production of Godspell, at Ford's Theater, ran from 1972 into 1973.[19] The cast consisted of Bartley Braverman, Scotch Byerley, Baillie Gerstein, Tony Hoty, Maggie Hyatt, Doris Jamin, Irving Lee, Dean Pitchford, John-Ann Washingson and Lynne Thigpen.

1972: Chicago

The 1972-1973 Chicago production played at the Studebaker Theatre, with a cast of Richard Gilliland (Jesus), Joe Mantegna (Judas), JoAnn Brown-El, Sammy Chester, Karla DeVito, Carol McGill, Jim Parks, Tricia Smith, Dan Stone, and Fran Uditsky.

1972: Toronto

The 1972–1973 Toronto production opened at the Royal Alexandra Theatre and was intended to be a run of a few dozen performances for a subscription audience. The cast was drawn entirely from local performers, instead of a touring cast. After an enthusiastic response from the audience, the scheduled run at the Royal Alexandra ended and the show moved uptown to the Bayview Playhouse in Leaside. The Bayview Playhouse production ran until August 1973, with a then-record run of 488 performances.[20]

The Toronto production launched the careers of many actors, including Victor Garber, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Gilda Radner, Dave Thomas, and Martin Short, as well as the show's musical director, Paul Shaffer.[20] Howard Shore played saxophone for this production.

1973: Maseru (Lesotho, Southern Africa)

Godspell opened in Maseru, Lesotho in 1973 and ran for five months. When Des and Dawn Lindberg brought the show to the University of the Witwatersrand (Johannesburg), it was immediately banned on the grounds of blasphemy. The ban was widely recognized as a political response to the depiction of racial mixing, which presented a direct challenge to apartheid in South Africa.

The Lindbergs challenged the ban in the Supreme Court and won their case. As a result, Godspell toured South Africa for two years and opened doors to all races on both sides of the footlights. This production was both a theatrical triumph and a political and legal breakthrough.[21]

1974: Tehran, Iran

The Tehran production was staged at the Iran-America Society by the Masquers theater group, under the direction of Pat Zich, with musical direction by Richard and Georgia Bassett. The cast, crew and musicians were drawn from American, British and Iranian students, teachers and expatriates. The production ran for 7 days in April '74, with matinee and evening performances.

1976: Broadway

The first Broadway production opened on June 22, 1976, at the Broadhurst Theatre. It was directed by John Michael Tebelak, with Steve Reinhardt as musical director, costumes by Susan Tsu, lighting by Spencer Mosse, and sound by Robert Minor. The opening cast featured Lamar Alford, Laurie Faso, Lois Foraker, Robin Lamont, Elizabeth Lathram, Bobby Lee, Tom Rolfing, Don Scardino, Marley Sims, and Valerie Williams. Kerin Blair, Bob Garrett, Michael Hoit, and Kitty Rea were understudies. The band consisted of Paul Shaffer (keyboards, conductor), Mark Zeray (guitar), Chris Warwin (bass), and Michael Redding (percussion).[22]

The show transferred to the Plymouth Theatre, then to the Ambassador Theatre, where it closed on September 4, 1977, after 5 previews and 527 performances.

1981: La MaMa revival

Ten years after the original production of Godspell and twenty years after the theater's founding, the musical was revived at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in Manhattan. Tebelak directed the 1981 production, with Robert Stecko as musical directed. The cast included Lamar Alford, Kerin Blair, R. Bruce Connelly, Michael Hoit, Paul Kreppel, Sonia Manzano, Melanie Mayron, Marilyn Pasekoff, Leslie Ann Ray, and Jeremy Sage, with Danny Rutigliano as understudy.[23] John Michael Tebelak then flew to Los Angeles where a west coast tenth anniversary reunion production was staged featuring original cast members Peggy Gordon, Stephen Nathan, Herb Braha, Jeffrey Mylett, Gilmer McCormick and David Haskell, with Marley Sims, Patti Mariano, Jeannie Lange, Bob Garrett and original musical director Stephen Reinhardt.

1988: Off-Broadway

The Lamb's Theatre revival ran from June 12 through December 31, 1988. It was directed by Don Scardino, with Steven M. Alper as musical director and Doug Besterman as assistant musical director, and with new musical arrangements by Steven M. Alper and Doug Besterman. Costumes were by David C. Woolard, lighting was by Phil Monat, and sound was by T. Richard Fitzgerald. The cast included Trini Alvarado, Anne Bobby (credited as Anne Marie Bobby), Bill Damaschke, Laura Dean, Angel Jemmott, Eddie Korbich, Mia Korf, Robert McNeill, Harold Perrineau, (credited as Harold Perrineau Jr.), and Jeffrey Steefel.

2000: Off-Broadway

Godspell was revived off-Broadway at the York Theatre from August 2 to October 7, 2000.[24] Cast members included Shoshana Bean, Tim Cain, Catherine Cox, Will Erat, Barrett Foa, Lucia Giannetta, Capathia Jenkins, Chad Kimball, Leslie Kritzer and Eliseo Roman.

2011: Broadway revival

 
Corbin Bleu took over in the starring role, as Jesus.

The first Broadway revival opened for previews on October 13, 2011, at the Circle in the Square Theatre, and officially opened on November 7, 2011, to mixed reviews. Theatre review aggregator Curtain Critic gave the production a score of 63/100, based on the opinions of eighteen critics.[25] The production featured Hunter Parrish, Wallace Smith, Anna Maria Perez de Tagle, Celisse Henderson, Telly Leung, George Salazar, Morgan James, Uzo Aduba, Nick Blaemire, and Lindsay Mendez, and was directed by Daniel Goldstein, choreographed by Christopher Gattelli, and produced by Ken Davenport. On April 17, 2012, Corbin Bleu took over the role of Jesus.[26] The 2011 cast recording was released digitally on December 20, 2011, and in stores on January 31, 2012.[27] The production closed on June 24, 2012.[28]

2016: São Paulo, Brazil

2016 production of Godspell in Brazil opened at Teatro das Artes , directed by Dagoberto Feliz. It received great reviews such as from O Estado de São Paulo: "Best Off-Broadway from 2016". This production featured Leonardo Miggiorin, Beto Sargentelli, Gabriela Medvedovski, Matheus Severo, Artur Volpi, Juliana Peppi, Rafael Pucca, Nathália Borges, Mariana Nunes, Fernanda Cascardo, Pri Esteves, Pedro Navarro e Adler Henrique.

2020: Berkshire Theatre Group

Godspell became the first live show to be approved by the Actors' Equity Association during the COVID-19 pandemic. This production, which was performed in a tent in the Berkshire Theatre Group's parking lot, featured Nicholas Edwards, Tim Jones, Alex Getlin, Michael Wartella, Zach Williams, Dan Rosales, Brandon Lee, Emily Koch, Isabel Jordan, Najah Hetsberger and Kimberly Emmanuel. Instead of the standard opening to the show, which features the song, "Tower of Babble," the actors of the show shared how their lives were uniquely impacted by the pandemic. The show, which had the audience sitting ten feet away from the actors on stage (who were socially distanced themselves) required that every audience member wear a facial covering for the duration of the performance. This production brought up the possibility of more socially distanced theatrical productions in the future. The show ran from August 6, 2020, until September 20, 2020.[29]

Adaptations

Godspell, Jr.

Part of Music Theatre International's Broadway Junior series, Godspell Junior is a revised script to be performed by a younger cast. Godspell Junior contains much of the first act and very little of the second. In the hour-long one-act show, four songs are cut: "Turn Back, O Man", "Alas for You", "By My Side", and "On the Willows". "Beautiful City" with updated lyrics is a part of the show, placed at the beginning of the second act, and is immediately followed by the Last Supper, the Betrayal, and the Crucifixion.[30]

1973 film

 
Poster for Godspell by David Byrd in the Cherry Lane Theatre

A film version of the musical was released in 1973, set in modern New York and featuring Victor Garber (from the first Canadian cast) as Jesus, David Haskell (from the original cast) as John the Baptist/Judas, and Lynne Thigpen. Tebelak co-wrote the screenplay and served as creative consultant for the film. The song "Beautiful City" was written for and first included in the film. "Prologue: Tower Of Babel" was omitted, and "Learn Your Lessons Well" and "We Beseech Thee" were reduced to minor interludes. Original cast members Robin Lamont, Gilmer McCormick, Joanne Jonas, and Jeffrey Mylett also appear in the film.

Controversy

The hippie clothing that the cast wears in the play has caused some controversy.[31] In his "Notes on the Script" (1999), Stephen Schwartz wrote, "There are often misconceptions about the concept of the clown analogy in Godspell. For instance, sometimes cast members are thought to be 'hippies' or 'flower children'. The concept was derived by John-Michael Tebelak from a book by Harvey Cox, a professor at Harvard Divinity School, entitled Feast of Fools."[32]

There has also been some controversy or confusion over Godspell's lack of a resurrection scene. This criticism notably mirrors similar criticism leveled at the 1970 rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar which also did not depict the resurrection. Rather than be resurrected, Jesus dies in the "Finale", and the cast is typically directed to lift his body over their heads and walk off through the audience to end the show. Schwartz has made a note of this in the script, saying:

Over the years, there has been comment from some about the lack of an apparent Resurrection in the show. Some choose to view the curtain call, in which JESUS appears, as symbolic of the resurrection; others point to the moment when the cast raise JESUS above their heads. While either view is valid, both miss the point. GODSPELL is about the formation of a community which carries on JESUS' teachings after he has gone. In other words, it is the effect JESUS has on the OTHERS which is the story of the show, not whether or not he himself is resurrected. Therefore, it is very important at the end of the show that it be clear that the OTHERS have come through the violence and pain of the crucifixion sequence and leave with a joyful determination to carry on the ideas and feelings they have learned during the course of the show.[33]

Though Godspell was a successful production, much like Jesus Christ Superstar, that began to break down the barriers between rock and roll and Christianity, it was regarded with suspicion by the mainstream evangelical culture because it did not emphasize the religious doctrines of resurrection and atonement.[34]

Awards and nominations

Original Broadway production

Year Award ceremony Category Nominee Result
1977 Tony Award Best Original Score Stephen Schwartz Nominated

References

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  2. ^ Spreadsheet of Pop 100 charts through 2013, available for download as RAR from Bullfrogs Pond.
  3. ^ (PDF). Stephen Schwartz. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-27.
  4. ^ Tebelak, John-Michael, and Stephen Schwartz. Godspell. Original edition, Theatre Maximus, 1972.
  5. ^ Waterman, Matthew. . Herald Times. Archived from the original on August 14, 2014. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  6. ^ "Godspell (2012)". MTI Shows. 16 September 2015.
  7. ^ "Godspell". Music Theatre International. 2015-09-16. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
  8. ^ Godspell (Original Off-Broadway Cast Recording), 1995-03-06, retrieved 2022-12-08
  9. ^ "Godspell Playbill (Broadway 1976-1977)". Playbill.com. Retrieved December 7, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ Godspell (The New Broadway Cast Recording), 2011-12-20, retrieved 2022-12-08
  11. ^ "Godspell Playbill (Broadway 2011)". Playbill.com. Retrieved December 8, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ "History", MusicalSchwartz.com.
  13. ^ , Geocities.com, 1998.
  14. ^ (PDF). Stephen Schwartz. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 12, 2014. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  15. ^ Green, Stanley. "Chapter Thirty, Sherman Edwards, Gretchen Cryer, et al.," The World of Musical Comedy, Da Capo Press: 1984, p. 361.
  16. ^ a b "Godspell, 1971–1976" 2012-01-26 at the Wayback Machine Internet Off-Broadway Database. Accessed October 2, 2011.
  17. ^ "'Stephen Schwartz in Oz'", Stagewhispers.com.au.
  18. ^ with Barry Stokes "'Godspell'", Thebeautifulchanges.co.uk.
  19. ^ "Godspell's Record-Breaking Run". Fords Theatre.
  20. ^ a b "Toronto's Legendary Production of GODSPELL". Godspell1972 (WordPress).
  21. ^ "Des & Dawn Lindberg: Cabaret and Theatre". DesDawn.co.za.
  22. ^ "'Godspell' Broadway listing", 1976–1977" Internet Broadway Database. Accessed October 2, 2011.
  23. ^ La MaMa Archives Digital Collections. "Production: Godspell (1981)". Accessed August 13, 2018.
  24. ^ . Playbill. Archived from the original on 2014-04-26.
  25. ^ "Godspell". Curtain Critic. Retrieved June 21, 2012.
  26. ^ "People of Godspell – The Producers and Investors of Godspell on Broadway". PeopleofGodspell.com.
  27. ^ . Playbill. Archived from the original on February 7, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2012.
  28. ^ . Playbill. Archived from the original on June 15, 2012. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  29. ^ "2020/21 Program Book".
  30. ^ "Godspell JR. Music Theater International". MTI Shows. MTI. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  31. ^ "FAQ – Stephen Schwartz". StephenSchwartz.com. Retrieved May 20, 2012.
  32. ^ Cox, Harvey Gallagher (1969). The feast of fools: a theological essay on festivity and fantasy. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
  33. ^ "Godspell Notes for Directors, Music Directors and Musicians, Producers" (PDF). Stephen Schwartz. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  34. ^ Howard, Jay R. Apostles of Rock: The Splintered World of Contemporary Christian Rock. University Press of Kentucky. p. 30.

External links

  • Godspell on MusicalSchwartz.com (cast album details, lyrics, history, stories from Stephen Schwartz)
  • Godspell on Internet Broadway Database
  • Godspell plot and production information at guidetomusicaltheatre.com
  • Godspell on Music Theatre International
  • Directors' notes for Godspell
  • Godspell on La MaMa Archives Digital Collections

godspell, this, article, about, musical, musical, album, 1971, broadway, cast, movie, soundtrack, film, musical, composed, stephen, schwartz, with, book, john, michael, tebelak, show, structured, series, parables, primarily, based, gospel, matthew, intersperse. This article is about the musical For the musical s album see Godspell 1971 Off Broadway Cast For the movie and its soundtrack see Godspell film Godspell is a musical composed by Stephen Schwartz with book by John Michael Tebelak The show is structured as a series of parables primarily based on the Gospel of Matthew interspersed with music mostly set to lyrics from traditional hymns with the passion of Christ appearing briefly near the end GodspellOriginal cast recordingMusicStephen SchwartzLyricsStephen SchwartzBookJohn Michael TebelakBasisGospel of Saint Matthew primarily Productions1971 Off Broadway 1971 Australian tour 1971 London 1972 Toronto 1973 Film Adaptation 1976 Broadway 1988 Off Broadway revival 2000 Off Broadway revival 2001 National Tour 2007 UK Tour 2011 Broadway revival 2012 Broadway tour 2014 Mexico City 2015 Lisbon 2016 Guatemala City 2016 Brazil 2018 Santo Domingo 2020 BogotaGodspell began as a project by drama students at Carnegie Mellon University and then moved to the off off Broadway theater La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in the East Village of Manhattan The show was rescored for an off Broadway production which opened on May 17 1971 and became a long running success Many productions have followed worldwide including a 2011 Broadway revival An abbreviated one act version of the musical designed for performers aged 18 and under also exists titled Godspell Junior 1 Several cast albums have been released over the years Day by Day from the original cast album reached 13 on the Billboard pop singles chart in the summer of 1972 2 Contents 1 Characters 2 Casts 3 Synopsis 3 1 Act I 3 2 Intermission 3 3 Act II 3 4 Ending interpretation 4 Musical numbers 4 1 Off Broadway production 4 2 2011 Broadway revival 4 3 Tower of Babble 4 4 Beautiful City 5 Production history 5 1 1970 Carnegie Mellon University 5 2 1971 La MaMa and off Broadway 5 3 1971 Melbourne Australia 5 4 1971 London England 5 5 1972 Washington D C 5 6 1972 Chicago 5 7 1972 Toronto 5 8 1973 Maseru Lesotho Southern Africa 5 9 1974 Tehran Iran 5 10 1976 Broadway 5 11 1981 La MaMa revival 5 12 1988 Off Broadway 5 13 2000 Off Broadway 5 14 2011 Broadway revival 5 15 2016 Sao Paulo Brazil 5 16 2020 Berkshire Theatre Group 6 Adaptations 6 1 Godspell Jr 6 2 1973 film 7 Controversy 8 Awards and nominations 8 1 Original Broadway production 9 References 10 External linksCharacters EditThe show features eight non Biblical characters who sing and act out the parables Gilmer silly a great storyteller Robin a tomboy Herb goofy and entertaining Jeffrey happy and excited Joanne eager and enthusiastic Lamar clumsy and unintentionally funny Peggy shy and loyal and Sonia dramatic with a put on sensuality 3 In the original script licensed through Theatre Maximus the Christ character and the John and Judas role are assigned the names of the original performers Stephen and David 4 All ten actors are on stage throughout the entirety of the production 5 In the revised script used for the 2011 Broadway revival the names of the cast are again assigned to the non Biblical roles Nick Telly George Anna Maria Lindsay Uzo Morgan and Celisse Each character is also assigned a few character traits An ensemble can also be added to the production if needed 6 Casts EditDue to the fact the names of the characters are normally changed to the cast s name in professional productions the names here match the character s main song sung excluding Jesus and John Judas These are the names the characters are referred to in the licensing of the show 7 Most Notable Casts Off Broadway 1971 8 London 1971 Broadway 1976 9 Broadway 2011 10 Jesus Stephen Nathan David Essex Don Scardino Hunter ParrishJohn the Baptist Judas David Haskell Jeremy Irons Tom Rolfing Wallace Smith Day By Day Robin Lamont Julie Covington Robin Lamont Anna Maria Perez de Tagle Learn Your Lessons Well Gilmer McCormick Verity Anne Meldrum Marley Sims Celiese Henderson Bless the Lord Joanne Jonas Marti Webb Valerie Williams Lindsay Mendez All Good Gifts Lamar Alford Tom Saffery Lamar Alford Telly Leung Light of the World Herb Braha Deryk Parkin Laurie Faso George Salazar Turn Back O Man Sonia Manzano Gay Soper Lois Foraker Morgan James By My Side Peggy Gordon Jacquie Ann Carr Elizabeth Lathram Uzo Aduba We Beseech Thee Jeffrey Mylett Neil Fitzwiliam Bobby Lee Nick BlaemireNotable replacements include Corbin Bleu as Jesus Broadway 2011 11 Sonia Manzano Broadway 1976 and Victor Garber Off Broadway 1972 Synopsis EditAct I Edit The show opens with God s voice as spoken by Jesus declaring his supremacy My name is Known God and King I am most in majesty in whom no beginning may be and no end Opening Monologue The cast then enters and takes the roles of various philosophers who sing their philosophies first alone then in cacophonous counterpoint Prologue Tower of Babble In response John the Baptist enters blowing a shofar to call the community to order He then beckons them to Prepare Ye The Way of the Lord and baptizes the cast Prepare Ye John gives a short sermon as Jesus watches quietly Jesus then announces his presence and says that he also wishes to be baptized John instead asks to be baptized by Jesus Jesus explains that We do well now to conform with all that God requires and is baptized by John The cast enters and sings with Jesus Save the People In his first parable Jesus explains that he has come not to abolish the law and the prophets but to complete Jesus explains to the cast that those who adhere to the law of God will earn the highest place in the Kingdom of Heaven He tells them the parable of the Widow and the Judge demonstrating that God is a just jurist who will support those who cry out to him The cast begins to understand Jesus teachings and take it upon themselves to tell the story of the Pharisee and the Publican praying in the temple Every man who humbles himself shall be exalted As Jesus teaches the law of the offering gifts at the altar the cast makes offerings of themselves They are taught that to approach God s altar they must be pure of heart and soul They then act out the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant a story of a master and a servant who owes him a debt The servant asks his master for pity in repaying the debt and the master absolves it The servant then turns to a fellow servant who owed him a few dollars and demands that it be paid in full The master hearing this then condemns the servant to prison Jesus explains the moral Forgive your brothers from your heart The character telling the parable sings Day by Day and the cast joins in After the song Jesus teaches that if one part of you offends God it is better to lose it than to have the whole of the body thrown into hell The cast then plays charades to finish several statements posed by Jesus including If a man sues you for your shirt and If a man asks you to go one mile with him The cast then performs the Parable of the Good Samaritan as a play within a play Jesus explains the need to love your enemies and not make a show of religion before men He says God will reward a good deed done in secret Shhh It s a secret The cast then performs the parable of Lazarus and the rich man On earth the rich man feasts and Lazarus begs and is ignored Upon dying Lazarus is rewarded with Heaven while the rich man is in Hell The audience is told to Learn Your Lessons Well or be faced with eternal damnation When the rich man asks Abraham if he would send Lazarus back from the dead to warn his brothers of their impending doom Abraham tells him no If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets they will not be convinced even if someone should rise from the dead Jesus teaches that no man can serve two masters God and money A member of the cast tells a story of a man who spent a lifetime acquiring the good things in life then dies before he has the time to enjoy them This character sings Bless the Lord then Jesus tells the cast not to worry about tomorrow Tomorrow will take care of itself Today has problems of its own In an antiphonic chorus the cast recites the Beatitudes Judas directs the final beatitude regarding persecution at Jesus and Jesus quickly changes the subject Did I ever tell you that I used to read feet However Jesus then persuades the cast that it is All for the Best and heaven contains the ultimate reward as Jesus and Judas do a soft shoe together This is followed by the parable of the Sower of the Seeds which Jesus tells them represent the Word of God All Good Gifts By this point in the musical the group has transformed from a rag tag cast into a community of love and caring and now march as soldiers in the military signifying their ability to think as one With Jesus as the drill sergeant they perform the Parable of the Prodigal Son The cast sings Light of the World about Christ s Light and how it shines in each person Intermission Edit Jesus thanks the audience for coming and announces a 10 minute intermission There is audience interaction during intermission In the original production the cast joined the audience for wine and bread In the 2011 Broadway revival the audience was offered wine on the stage The second act then opens with one or more cast members singing Learn Your Lessons Well calling the audience back to their seats Act II Edit After the reprise of Learn Your Lessons Well a member of the cast sings Turn Back O Man imploring mankind to give up its temporal pursuits and turn to God Jesus then says This is the beginning Several members of the cast then begin to question Jesus s authority and he responds with yet another parable He is asked What is the greatest commandment and responds You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and all your soul And the second is like it You shall love your neighbor as yourself The Pharisees continue to question him and he laments Alas for You and calls them hypocrites Members of the cast gather join in Jesus song and throw garbage at the Pharisees Jesus predicts that he will not be seen for quite a while while standing at the Wailing Wall and predicts great wars and famines He reminds the cast and audience of the time of Noah and teaches that faith can calm the storm The cast is told Keep awake then For the Son of Man will come at a time when you least expect it One woman in the cast is shunned as an adulteress Jesus says Let the one of you who is faultless cast the first stone Her accusers then bow their heads and walk away Jesus walks over to her and asks Woman where are they now Has no one condemned you The woman answers No one sir He tells her Then nor shall I You may go but do not sin again As she watches Jesus walk from her she entreats him to remain By My Side During this song Judas foretells his upcoming betrayal of Jesus In one of the lighter moments in the second act Jesus tells how he will separate men as a shepherd separates his flock into sheep and goats The sheep will enter heaven while the goats must suffer eternal damnation We Beseech Thee cry the goats begging for mercy After the song the cast reminds each other to take things Day By Day as they remove their clown makeup face paint or object They assemble for the Last Supper and Jesus tells them that one of them will betray him Each member of the cast asks Is it I ending with Judas Rabbi can you mean me Jesus tells him to do quickly what he must do and Judas runs off Jesus breaks the bread and shares the wine while saying the traditional Hebrew Seder blessings He tells his followers that they will dine together in the Kingdom of Heaven The band sings On the Willows which is about what has been sacrificed In the song Jesus blesses each member the cast He asks that they wait for him as he goes into the Garden of Gethsemane to pray In the garden Jesus implores God to let the burden be lifted from his shoulders if there is another way Jesus returns to his followers to find them all asleep He begs them to stay awake but they all fall asleep again and Jesus warns them they will all betray him three times a reference to the apostle Peter Jesus then prays to God that if his death cannot pass him by then His will must be done He is then tempted by Satan usually played by the apostles but orders him away Judas returns to betray Jesus but has a moment where he cannot bring himself to do it He tries to leave but finds himself boxed in by invisible walls except for one path which leads to Jesus Jesus encourages Judas to do what he has come to do and Judas grabs Jesus to bring him to be crucified The community starts to attack Judas while Jesus tells them to stop as all who live by the sword will one day die by it Judas usually alone as a representation of the others arresting Jesus ties Jesus upon an electric fence representative of the cross as Jesus berates him for arresting him at night but then says that it had to happen to fulfill the prophets writings The Finale begins loud and in B minor with Jesus wailing Oh God I m bleeding and the community answers Oh God You re bleeding Jesus dies and the music ends The women of the cast sing Long Live God and the men join in with Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord in counterpoint The cast removes Jesus from the fence and carries him out either offstage or through the aisles The cast then finishes with a reprise of Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord Ending interpretation Edit Similar to criticism of the 1970 rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar there is controversy over there being no obvious allusion to the Resurrection of Jesus in the show It can be interpreted that either the singing of Prepare Ye in the finale or the curtain call where all including Jesus return to the stage represents the resurrection The Music Theatre International script states that either representation is valid who Musical numbers EditOff Broadway production Edit Act ITower of Babble Company Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord David and Company Save the People Stephen and Company Day by Day Robin and Company Learn Your Lessons Well Gilmer Bless the Lord Joanne and Company All for the Best Stephen and David All Good Gifts Lamar and Company Light of the World Company Act IILearn Your Lessons Well Reprise Lamar and Company Turn Back O Man Sonia and Company Alas for You Stephen By My Side Peggy and Company We Beseech Thee Jeffrey and Company On the Willows Band Finale Company 2011 Broadway revival Edit Act ITower of Babble cast Prepare Ye John the Baptist and cast Save the People Jesus and cast Day by Day Anna Marie and cast Learn Your Lessons Well Celisse and cast Bless the Lord Lindsay and cast All for the Best Jesus Judas and cast All Good Gifts Telly and cast Light of the World George and cast Act IITurn Back O Man Morgan Jesus and cast Alas for You Jesus By My Side Uzo and cast We Beseech Thee Nick and cast Beautiful City Jesus On the Willows Judas and the Band or ensemble Finale Jesus and cast Tower of Babble Edit Tower of Babble the show s opening number is often omitted by many productions The song consists of the eight disciples or soloists acting out as philosophers each singing about their various philosophies They grow increasingly more irritated with each other sing in contradiction and eventually run out of words Prepare Ye follows this prologue In the original productions the philosophers were Socrates Jeffrey Mylett Thomas Aquinas Peggy Gordon Martin Luther Lamar Alford Leonardo da Vinci Gilmer McCormick Edward Gibbon Sonia Manzano Jean Paul Sartre Joanne Jonas Friedrich Nietzsche Robin Lamont and Buckminster Fuller Herb Braha In the 2001 revival Luther Gibbon Nietzsche and Fuller were replaced by Galileo Galilei Jonathan Edwards L Ron Hubbard and Marianne Williamson respectively The 2011 revival retains Galilei Hubbard and Williamson but restores Gibbon and replaces da Vinci with Georg Hegel On many early cast recordings including the original off Broadway recording and the original London recording the prologue was omitted in order to produce an album that could sell as a pop album This omission was for marketing purposes and was not meant to diminish the importance of the number as Stephen Schwartz has repeatedly stated As a consequence some audiences have gotten the impression that this number was added into the score later Beautiful City Edit Beautiful City was written in 1972 as part of the film and re written in 1993 after the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles In the film it follows Alas for You and By My Side omitting the parable typically found in between these two numbers In the decades following the film s release many directors have chosen to use the lyrics from the original film version sometimes to replace the Day by Day reprise Tower of Babble like the prologue or adding it the end of the musical as an additional scene depicting the Resurrection The 2011 Broadway revival places Beautiful City after We Beseech Thee and just before the Last Supper sung by Jesus as a slow ballad This production used the revised 1993 lyrics and is included on its cast recording along with a cover by John Ondrasik of Five For Fighting as a bonus track Some productions use both the original upbeat film version as a prologue as well as the ballad version either in its original place just before the Last Supper whereupon the Day By Day reprise is used as the Resurrection or as an epilogue depicting the resurrection itself In Music Theater International s Broadway Junior series which edits popular musicals to one act appropriate for a middle school cast Beautiful City is included in the show Godspell Junior contains most of the first act and almost none of the second act By My Side is omitted entirely Beautiful City is placed at the beginning of the second act and is immediately followed by the Last Supper the Betrayal and the Crucifixion Production history Edit1970 Carnegie Mellon University Edit John Michael Tebelak wrote the first version of Godspell as his master s thesis at Carnegie Mellon University The Carnegie Mellon cast included listed in speaking order Andrew Rohrer Mary Mazziotti Martha Jacobs Robin Lamont Robert Miller Sonia Manzano Stanley King Randy Danson James Stevens and David Haskell with original music by Duane Bolick 12 This version was performed at Carnegie Mellon in 1970 by students from Carnegie Mellon s Theatre Department 1971 La MaMa and off Broadway Edit The show was then brought to the attention of producers Edgar Lansbury brother of Angela Lansbury Joseph Beruh and Stuart Duncan by Carnegie Mellon alumnus and associate producer Charles Haid who wanted to transfer the show to off Broadway 13 The show was first produced at La Mama as a play with original music for eight songs by Duane Bolick Jeffrey Mylett who added one of his songs The Raven and The Swan and Peggy Gordon and Jay Hamburger who added By My Side The producers then hired Stephen Schwartz another Carnegie Mellon alumnus to re score the show Schwartz s score incorporated a variety of musical genres including pop folk rock gospel and vaudeville By My Side written by Carnegie Mellon students Jay Hamburger and Peggy Gordon was kept from the original score As in the original score most of the lyrics not written by Schwartz were from the Episcopal hymnal 14 The show opened as a musical at the Cherry Lane Theatre on May 17 1971 It transferred to the Promenade Theatre three months later and closed on June 13 1976 after 2 124 performances at the Promenade 15 This production was directed by Tebelak and the original cast included Lamar Alford Peggy Gordon David Haskell Joanne Jonas Robin Lamont Sonia Manzano Gilmer McCormick Jeffrey Mylett Stephen Nathan and Herb Braha Simon 16 The band included Jesse Cutler on guitar and bass Richard LaBonte on bass Stephen Reinhardt on keyboards and Ricky Shutter on drums and percussion In late 1971 LaBonte was replaced by bassist Steve Manes when two of the original musicians Shutter and LaBonte went with the majority of the original cast to The Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles to open the show there With the exception of LaBonte they all returned to the Promenade in January 1972 16 1971 Melbourne Australia Edit The first production after the off Broadway show opened at the Playbox Theatre in Melbourne Australia on November 15 1971 The cast included Colleen Hewett Collette Mann Christopher Pate and George Spartels The producers Aztec Services and Williamson Edgley Theatres opened a second production in Sydney on April 10 1972 Peta Toppano John Waters and Marty Rhone were in the Sydney production Melbourne played 504 performances and Sydney played 507 before the two companies went on tour performing another 700 shows 17 1971 London England Edit Godspell opened at the Roundhouse Theatre in Chalk Farm London on November 17 1971 This London production featured Jacquie Ann Carr Julie Covington David Essex Neil Fitzwiliam Jeremy Irons Verity Anne Meldrum Deryk Parkin Tom Saffery Gay Soper and Marti Webb After a successful run at the Roundhouse Theatre the production transferred to the Wyndham s Theatre also in London on January 26 1972 18 with Barry Stokes 1972 Washington D C Edit The Washington D C production of Godspell at Ford s Theater ran from 1972 into 1973 19 The cast consisted of Bartley Braverman Scotch Byerley Baillie Gerstein Tony Hoty Maggie Hyatt Doris Jamin Irving Lee Dean Pitchford John Ann Washingson and Lynne Thigpen 1972 Chicago Edit The 1972 1973 Chicago production played at the Studebaker Theatre with a cast of Richard Gilliland Jesus Joe Mantegna Judas JoAnn Brown El Sammy Chester Karla DeVito Carol McGill Jim Parks Tricia Smith Dan Stone and Fran Uditsky 1972 Toronto Edit The 1972 1973 Toronto production opened at the Royal Alexandra Theatre and was intended to be a run of a few dozen performances for a subscription audience The cast was drawn entirely from local performers instead of a touring cast After an enthusiastic response from the audience the scheduled run at the Royal Alexandra ended and the show moved uptown to the Bayview Playhouse in Leaside The Bayview Playhouse production ran until August 1973 with a then record run of 488 performances 20 The Toronto production launched the careers of many actors including Victor Garber Eugene Levy Andrea Martin Gilda Radner Dave Thomas and Martin Short as well as the show s musical director Paul Shaffer 20 Howard Shore played saxophone for this production 1973 Maseru Lesotho Southern Africa Edit Godspell opened in Maseru Lesotho in 1973 and ran for five months When Des and Dawn Lindberg brought the show to the University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg it was immediately banned on the grounds of blasphemy The ban was widely recognized as a political response to the depiction of racial mixing which presented a direct challenge to apartheid in South Africa The Lindbergs challenged the ban in the Supreme Court and won their case As a result Godspell toured South Africa for two years and opened doors to all races on both sides of the footlights This production was both a theatrical triumph and a political and legal breakthrough 21 1974 Tehran Iran Edit The Tehran production was staged at the Iran America Society by the Masquers theater group under the direction of Pat Zich with musical direction by Richard and Georgia Bassett The cast crew and musicians were drawn from American British and Iranian students teachers and expatriates The production ran for 7 days in April 74 with matinee and evening performances 1976 Broadway Edit The first Broadway production opened on June 22 1976 at the Broadhurst Theatre It was directed by John Michael Tebelak with Steve Reinhardt as musical director costumes by Susan Tsu lighting by Spencer Mosse and sound by Robert Minor The opening cast featured Lamar Alford Laurie Faso Lois Foraker Robin Lamont Elizabeth Lathram Bobby Lee Tom Rolfing Don Scardino Marley Sims and Valerie Williams Kerin Blair Bob Garrett Michael Hoit and Kitty Rea were understudies The band consisted of Paul Shaffer keyboards conductor Mark Zeray guitar Chris Warwin bass and Michael Redding percussion 22 The show transferred to the Plymouth Theatre then to the Ambassador Theatre where it closed on September 4 1977 after 5 previews and 527 performances 1981 La MaMa revival Edit Ten years after the original production of Godspell and twenty years after the theater s founding the musical was revived at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in Manhattan Tebelak directed the 1981 production with Robert Stecko as musical directed The cast included Lamar Alford Kerin Blair R Bruce Connelly Michael Hoit Paul Kreppel Sonia Manzano Melanie Mayron Marilyn Pasekoff Leslie Ann Ray and Jeremy Sage with Danny Rutigliano as understudy 23 John Michael Tebelak then flew to Los Angeles where a west coast tenth anniversary reunion production was staged featuring original cast members Peggy Gordon Stephen Nathan Herb Braha Jeffrey Mylett Gilmer McCormick and David Haskell with Marley Sims Patti Mariano Jeannie Lange Bob Garrett and original musical director Stephen Reinhardt 1988 Off Broadway Edit The Lamb s Theatre revival ran from June 12 through December 31 1988 It was directed by Don Scardino with Steven M Alper as musical director and Doug Besterman as assistant musical director and with new musical arrangements by Steven M Alper and Doug Besterman Costumes were by David C Woolard lighting was by Phil Monat and sound was by T Richard Fitzgerald The cast included Trini Alvarado Anne Bobby credited as Anne Marie Bobby Bill Damaschke Laura Dean Angel Jemmott Eddie Korbich Mia Korf Robert McNeill Harold Perrineau credited as Harold Perrineau Jr and Jeffrey Steefel 2000 Off Broadway Edit Godspell was revived off Broadway at the York Theatre from August 2 to October 7 2000 24 Cast members included Shoshana Bean Tim Cain Catherine Cox Will Erat Barrett Foa Lucia Giannetta Capathia Jenkins Chad Kimball Leslie Kritzer and Eliseo Roman 2011 Broadway revival Edit Corbin Bleu took over in the starring role as Jesus The first Broadway revival opened for previews on October 13 2011 at the Circle in the Square Theatre and officially opened on November 7 2011 to mixed reviews Theatre review aggregator Curtain Critic gave the production a score of 63 100 based on the opinions of eighteen critics 25 The production featured Hunter Parrish Wallace Smith Anna Maria Perez de Tagle Celisse Henderson Telly Leung George Salazar Morgan James Uzo Aduba Nick Blaemire and Lindsay Mendez and was directed by Daniel Goldstein choreographed by Christopher Gattelli and produced by Ken Davenport On April 17 2012 Corbin Bleu took over the role of Jesus 26 The 2011 cast recording was released digitally on December 20 2011 and in stores on January 31 2012 27 The production closed on June 24 2012 28 2016 Sao Paulo Brazil Edit 2016 production of Godspell in Brazil opened at Teatro das Artes directed by Dagoberto Feliz It received great reviews such as from O Estado de Sao Paulo Best Off Broadway from 2016 This production featured Leonardo Miggiorin Beto Sargentelli Gabriela Medvedovski Matheus Severo Artur Volpi Juliana Peppi Rafael Pucca Nathalia Borges Mariana Nunes Fernanda Cascardo Pri Esteves Pedro Navarro e Adler Henrique 2020 Berkshire Theatre Group Edit Godspell became the first live show to be approved by the Actors Equity Association during the COVID 19 pandemic This production which was performed in a tent in the Berkshire Theatre Group s parking lot featured Nicholas Edwards Tim Jones Alex Getlin Michael Wartella Zach Williams Dan Rosales Brandon Lee Emily Koch Isabel Jordan Najah Hetsberger and Kimberly Emmanuel Instead of the standard opening to the show which features the song Tower of Babble the actors of the show shared how their lives were uniquely impacted by the pandemic The show which had the audience sitting ten feet away from the actors on stage who were socially distanced themselves required that every audience member wear a facial covering for the duration of the performance This production brought up the possibility of more socially distanced theatrical productions in the future The show ran from August 6 2020 until September 20 2020 29 Adaptations EditGodspell Jr Edit Part of Music Theatre International s Broadway Junior series Godspell Junior is a revised script to be performed by a younger cast Godspell Junior contains much of the first act and very little of the second In the hour long one act show four songs are cut Turn Back O Man Alas for You By My Side and On the Willows Beautiful City with updated lyrics is a part of the show placed at the beginning of the second act and is immediately followed by the Last Supper the Betrayal and the Crucifixion 30 1973 film Edit Poster for Godspell by David Byrd in the Cherry Lane Theatre Main article Godspell film A film version of the musical was released in 1973 set in modern New York and featuring Victor Garber from the first Canadian cast as Jesus David Haskell from the original cast as John the Baptist Judas and Lynne Thigpen Tebelak co wrote the screenplay and served as creative consultant for the film The song Beautiful City was written for and first included in the film Prologue Tower Of Babel was omitted and Learn Your Lessons Well and We Beseech Thee were reduced to minor interludes Original cast members Robin Lamont Gilmer McCormick Joanne Jonas and Jeffrey Mylett also appear in the film Controversy EditThe hippie clothing that the cast wears in the play has caused some controversy 31 In his Notes on the Script 1999 Stephen Schwartz wrote There are often misconceptions about the concept of the clown analogy in Godspell For instance sometimes cast members are thought to be hippies or flower children The concept was derived by John Michael Tebelak from a book by Harvey Cox a professor at Harvard Divinity School entitled Feast of Fools 32 There has also been some controversy or confusion over Godspell s lack of a resurrection scene This criticism notably mirrors similar criticism leveled at the 1970 rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar which also did not depict the resurrection Rather than be resurrected Jesus dies in the Finale and the cast is typically directed to lift his body over their heads and walk off through the audience to end the show Schwartz has made a note of this in the script saying Over the years there has been comment from some about the lack of an apparent Resurrection in the show Some choose to view the curtain call in which JESUS appears as symbolic of the resurrection others point to the moment when the cast raise JESUS above their heads While either view is valid both miss the point GODSPELL is about the formation of a community which carries on JESUS teachings after he has gone In other words it is the effect JESUS has on the OTHERS which is the story of the show not whether or not he himself is resurrected Therefore it is very important at the end of the show that it be clear that the OTHERS have come through the violence and pain of the crucifixion sequence and leave with a joyful determination to carry on the ideas and feelings they have learned during the course of the show 33 Though Godspell was a successful production much like Jesus Christ Superstar that began to break down the barriers between rock and roll and Christianity it was regarded with suspicion by the mainstream evangelical culture because it did not emphasize the religious doctrines of resurrection and atonement 34 Awards and nominations EditOriginal Broadway production Edit Year Award ceremony Category Nominee Result1977 Tony Award Best Original Score Stephen Schwartz NominatedReferences Edit Godspell Jr PDF Stephen Schwartz Archived from the original PDF on August 12 2014 Retrieved August 10 2014 Spreadsheet of Pop 100 charts through 2013 available for download as RAR from Bullfrogs Pond Godspell notes for performers PDF Stephen Schwartz Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 27 Tebelak John Michael and Stephen Schwartz Godspell Original edition Theatre Maximus 1972 Waterman Matthew GODSPELL modern touches added to IFT s Godspell Herald Times Archived from the original on August 14 2014 Retrieved August 10 2014 Godspell 2012 MTI Shows 16 September 2015 Godspell Music Theatre International 2015 09 16 Retrieved 2022 12 08 Godspell Original Off Broadway Cast Recording 1995 03 06 retrieved 2022 12 08 Godspell Playbill Broadway 1976 1977 Playbill com Retrieved December 7 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Godspell The New Broadway Cast Recording 2011 12 20 retrieved 2022 12 08 Godspell Playbill Broadway 2011 Playbill com Retrieved December 8 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link History MusicalSchwartz com Interview with Stephen Schwartz Geocities com 1998 Godspell songs Stephen Schwartz answers questions about the Godspell score PDF Stephen Schwartz Archived from the original PDF on August 12 2014 Retrieved August 10 2014 Green Stanley Chapter Thirty Sherman Edwards Gretchen Cryer et al The World of Musical Comedy Da Capo Press 1984 p 361 a b Godspell 1971 1976 Archived 2012 01 26 at the Wayback Machine Internet Off Broadway Database Accessed October 2 2011 Stephen Schwartz in Oz Stagewhispers com au with Barry Stokes Godspell Thebeautifulchanges co uk Godspell s Record Breaking Run Fords Theatre a b Toronto s Legendary Production of GODSPELL Godspell1972 WordPress Des amp Dawn Lindberg Cabaret and Theatre DesDawn co za Godspell Broadway listing 1976 1977 Internet Broadway Database Accessed October 2 2011 La MaMa Archives Digital Collections Production Godspell 1981 Accessed August 13 2018 OB Godspell To Close Oct 7 Transfer Expected Playbill Archived from the original on 2014 04 26 Godspell Curtain Critic Retrieved June 21 2012 People of Godspell The Producers and Investors of Godspell on Broadway PeopleofGodspell com Godspell Broadway Revival Cast Album Released Digitally Dec 20 Playbill com Playbill Archived from the original on February 7 2012 Retrieved January 26 2012 Broadway Revival of Godspell Will End Run June 24 Playbill com Playbill Archived from the original on June 15 2012 Retrieved June 12 2012 2020 21 Program Book Godspell JR Music Theater International MTI Shows MTI Retrieved January 8 2015 FAQ Stephen Schwartz StephenSchwartz com Retrieved May 20 2012 Cox Harvey Gallagher 1969 The feast of fools a theological essay on festivity and fantasy Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Godspell Notes for Directors Music Directors and Musicians Producers PDF Stephen Schwartz Retrieved 28 November 2018 Howard Jay R Apostles of Rock The Splintered World of Contemporary Christian Rock University Press of Kentucky p 30 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Godspell musical Godspell on MusicalSchwartz com cast album details lyrics history stories from Stephen Schwartz Godspell on Internet Broadway Database Godspell plot and production information at guidetomusicaltheatre com Godspell on Music Theatre International Script notes for Godspell Directors notes for Godspell Godspellmusical com Godspell on La MaMa Archives Digital Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Godspell amp oldid 1149892682, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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