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Lady in the Dark

Lady in the Dark is a musical with music by Kurt Weill, lyrics by Ira Gershwin and book and direction by Moss Hart. It was produced by Sam Harris. The protagonist, Liza Elliott, is the unhappy editor of a fashion magazine who is undergoing psychoanalysis. The musical ran on Broadway in 1941, and in the United Kingdom in 1981. A film version was released in 1944, and a live television special followed in 1954.

Lady in the Dark
Original Broadway Playbill
MusicKurt Weill
LyricsIra Gershwin
BookMoss Hart
Productions1941 Broadway
1944 Film
1954 Television movie
1981 Nottingham, UK
1997 London concert

Structure edit

Lady in the Dark has an unusual structure for a work of musical theatre. The play is divided into dialogue scenes portraying the life of the protagonist, Liza Elliott, and dream sequences portraying her fantasies and nightmares. The musical score is confined to the dream sequences, each of which takes the form of a mini-operetta; unlike a typical book musical, no songs are performed during the real-life scenes.[1]

Story edit

Liza Elliott finds herself constantly plagued by indecision in her professional and personal life. She is courted by two men, the already-married publisher Kendall Nesbitt who is trying to divorce his wife for Liza, and the film star Randy Curtis, and cannot decide whom to choose. When she begins seeing a psychologist, she delves into her dreams and memories of her unhappy childhood, and is haunted by the melody of a song she cannot recall. In one dream, she believes she is being put on trial for her indecision in a circus setting, with her marketing manager Charley Johnson acting as prosecutor, Kendall as chief witness, and Randy as her defense attorney, in which she defends her refusal to make up her mind ("The Saga of Jenny"). She eventually comes to realize that the root of her trauma is having been repeatedly rejected in her youth due to her plain appearance; as she makes this breakthrough, she remembers the mysterious song ("My Ship"). She realizes that Kendall and Randy both relate to her only on a superficial level, and finds true partnership with Charley, who sees her as an equal.

Background edit

Originally beginning as a solo effort, I Am Listening by Moss Hart about a successful woman who is under the care of a psychiatrist. Late developed into a work involving Kurt Weill with a change in title.

The musical's theme of psychoanalysis is said to be based on Hart's own experiences with psychoanalyst Gregory Zilboorg.[2] Except for the final song, all the music in the play is heard in three extended dream sequences: the Glamour Dream, the Wedding Dream, and the Circus Dream, which, to some extent, become three small operettas integrated into a straight play.[2] The final song, "My Ship", functions as a leitmotif for Liza's insecurity: as each dream commences, a snippet of the tune is heard, as it is a haunting melody which Liza recognizes but cannot name, or sing with words, until her anxiety is resolved.

Productions edit

The musical opened on Broadway at the Alvin Theatre (now the Neil Simon) on January 23, 1941 and closed on May 30, 1942 after 467 performances. Direction was by Hart, produced by Sam H. Harris, with musical staging by Hassard Short, who also was the production designer, and choreography by Albertina Rasch. The original cast included Gertrude Lawrence in the role of Liza Elliott, alongside Danny Kaye, Bert Lytell, Victor Mature, Donald Randolph, Margaret Dale, Davis Cunningham and Macdonald Carey.

Kaye's performance as fashion photographer Russell Paxton, and particularly his consistently showstopping performance of the patter song "Tschaikowsky (and Other Russians)" in which he dashes through the names of 50 Russian composers in 39 seconds, made him a star.[3] The musical went on an eight city tour for 160 performances,[4] and also played on the West Coast, including Los Angeles and San Francisco, for 56 performances. The show then ran at The Broadway Theatre from February 27 through May 15, 1943, for 83 performances. Gertrude Lawrence reprised her role as Liza Elliott in all venues.[5]

Subsequent productions edit

Lady in the Dark premiered in the United Kingdom on December 9, 1981, at the Nottingham Playhouse, Nottingham. American actor Celeste Holm starred; it was her British debut.[6] Kendall Nesbitt was Jeremy Hawk, Robert Swales played Randy Curtis and Kenneth Nelson appeared as Russell Paxton. The show was produced by Crispin Thomas and musical director was Tony Britten. Jane Wenham was assistant director.[7]

A New York City Center Encores! semi-staged concert was produced in New York in May 1994 with Christine Ebersole.[8]

The musical opened on the West End at the Royal National Theatre, London, on March 11, running through August 2, 1997, directed by Francesca Zambello and starring Maria Friedman.[9][10] The production received the Evening Standard Award for Best Musical.[11][12]

A production was staged by Boston Academy of Music in 2000 starring mezzo-soprano Delores Ziegler, and by Philadelphia's Prince Music Theatre in the autumn of 2001, with Andrea Marcovicci as Liza Elliott.

A production by MasterVoices, directed and conducted by Ted Sperling, choreographed by Doug Varone, and starring Victoria Clark as Liza Elliott took place at New York City Center on April 25, 26, and 27, 2019. This production featured MasterVoices' 120 singers, the Orchestra of St. Luke's, and Doug Varone and Dancers. Amy Irving played Dr. Brooks and Victoria Clark played Liza Elliot.[13][14]

A production was staged in China at Beijing’s Century Theatre in April 2003, directed by Jennifer Schwerin, conducted by Nicholas Michael Smith and produced by Nancy Fraser, Andrew Andreasen and Jiang Shan. Marsha Mercant performed the role of Liza Elliot and Michael Sterling performed the role of the Ringmaster.

Adaptations edit

The 1944 film version starred Ginger Rogers and Ray Milland. The film cut most of the Weill/Gershwin songs, though "The Saga of Jenny" and "Girl of the Moment" remained, and part of "This Is New" is played by a nightclub band in the background. "My Ship" was heard as background music, but never sung, even though the music was constantly referred to in the story. Kaye's role went to Hollywood's "Mad Russian," the slightly taller Mischa Auer.

Lady in the Dark was adapted for the radio on multiple occasions. Gertrude Lawrence twice reprised her leading stage role for a one-hour adaptation on Theatre Guild on the Air;[15] on October 19, 1947,[16] and on March 5, 1950.[17] On January 29, 1945, Ginger Rogers, who played Liza in the film version, starred with Ray Milland in a one-hour adaptation for Lux Radio Theatre on CBS Radio.[18] On February 16, 1953 Judy Garland starred in a second Lux Radio Theatre adaptation alongside John Lund.[19]

The musical was broadcast on NBC Television on September 25, 1954, as part of an irregularly scheduled series under the umbrella title Max Liebman Presents. Ann Sothern played Liza, and Carleton Carpenter played Russell.[20][21] A cast recording of the TV special was released on Sepia.[22]

  • Cast

Songs edit

Recordings edit

Although recordings of individual songs were made, no attempt was made to record the entire score until 1963, when Lehman Engel produced a stereo studio recording for Columbia, starring Risë Stevens, Roger White, and Adolph Green. This recording was reissued as a Masterworks Heritage CD, MHK 62869. The reissue also includes five 1941 mono recordings of songs (including "Tschaikowsky") sung by Danny Kaye. According to the liner notes, the maximum playing time of an LP did not permit including everything, and some cuts were made (not specified, but mostly in the number of verses or repeats).

The Royal National Theatre revival in 1997 led to the first complete recording of the score (TER/JAY).

A telecast from February 11, 1981 Musical Comedy Tonight II presented Danny Kaye (from the original cast), Lynn Redgrave, and others reenacting the circus scene from the original production of "Lady in the Dark," including Kaye's hit song "Tchaikovsky".[23]

Reception edit

Life Magazine wrote that "with its unique blend of serious drama, musical comedy and pageantry, Lady in the Dark is a grand-scale smash hit."[24]

Notes edit

  1. ^ McClung, Bruce D. (2007). Lady in the Dark: Biography of a Musical. Oxford University Press.{
  2. ^ a b Detailed review of the film moviediva.com, accessed February 4, 2011
  3. ^ McClung, Bruce. p. 33
  4. ^ McClung, p. 140
  5. ^ McClung, pp. 139-140
  6. ^ McClung, pp. 195–196
  7. ^ Theatre Programme: "Lady in the Dark", Nottingham Playhouse, 9 Dec 1981.
  8. ^ Holden, Stephen. "Fashion, Freud, and Frigidity, With 40's Fizz" The New York Times, p. C3, May 6, 1994
  9. ^ Lady in the Dark, London production listing, broadwayworld.com, March 1, 2009
  10. ^ Lefkowitz, David."National Theatre's 'Lady in the Dark' Opens March 11" 2012-10-19 at the Wayback Machine playbill.com, March 11, 1997
  11. ^ "'Lady in the Dark' gallery" 2011-07-11 at the Wayback Machine francescazambello.com, accessed February 4, 2011
  12. ^ "Evening Standard Awards for 1997" 2010-12-13 at the Wayback Machine albemarle-london.com, accessed February 4, 2011
  13. ^ "'Lady In The Dark' Starring Victoria Clark Adds Additional Performances" broadwayworld.com, March 25, 2019
  14. ^ Colter Walls, Seth. "Review: ‘Lady in the Dark’ Is Kurt Weill on the Couch" The New York Times, April 26, 2019
  15. ^ "Logs, Theater Guild On The Air" otrsite.com, accessed February 4, 2011
  16. ^ "Radio Programs". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 1947-10-19. p. 30. Retrieved 2021-06-21.
  17. ^ "Sunday Selections". Toledo Blade (Ohio). 1950-03-05. p. Section 6: Page 15. Retrieved 2021-06-21.
  18. ^ "Lux radio Theatre"
  19. ^ "Radio Highlights". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 1953-02-16. p. 19. Retrieved 2021-06-21.
  20. ^ Capsuto, p. 31
  21. ^ Schultz, Margie."Chapter: Television"Ann Sothern: a bio-bibliography, p. 154
  22. ^ Suskin, Steven. "On the Record: Lady in the Dark and Warm Spring Night" 2008-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, Playbill, August 7, 2005
  23. ^ "[ Excerpt from "Musical Comedy Tonight II," February 11, 1981]". Library of Congress.
  24. ^ "Broadway 1940-41" Life Magazine, February 17, 1941 (pp. 43-44)

References edit

  • Capsuto, Steven (2000). Alternate Channels: The Uncensored Story of Gay and Lesbian Images on Radio and Television. Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-41243-5
  • McClung, Bruce (2007). Lady in the Dark, Biography of a Musical. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512012-4
  • Atkinson, Brooks, "Lady in the Dark", Broadway Scrapbook, Theatre Arts, Inc., New York, 1947. pp. 184-187.

External links edit

lady, dark, 1944, film, film, musical, with, music, kurt, weill, lyrics, gershwin, book, direction, moss, hart, produced, harris, protagonist, liza, elliott, unhappy, editor, fashion, magazine, undergoing, psychoanalysis, musical, broadway, 1941, united, kingd. For the 1944 film see Lady in the Dark film Lady in the Dark is a musical with music by Kurt Weill lyrics by Ira Gershwin and book and direction by Moss Hart It was produced by Sam Harris The protagonist Liza Elliott is the unhappy editor of a fashion magazine who is undergoing psychoanalysis The musical ran on Broadway in 1941 and in the United Kingdom in 1981 A film version was released in 1944 and a live television special followed in 1954 Lady in the DarkOriginal Broadway PlaybillMusicKurt WeillLyricsIra GershwinBookMoss HartProductions1941 Broadway1944 Film1954 Television movie 1981 Nottingham UK 1997 London concert Contents 1 Structure 2 Story 3 Background 4 Productions 5 Subsequent productions 6 Adaptations 7 Songs 8 Recordings 9 Reception 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksStructure editLady in the Dark has an unusual structure for a work of musical theatre The play is divided into dialogue scenes portraying the life of the protagonist Liza Elliott and dream sequences portraying her fantasies and nightmares The musical score is confined to the dream sequences each of which takes the form of a mini operetta unlike a typical book musical no songs are performed during the real life scenes 1 Story editLiza Elliott finds herself constantly plagued by indecision in her professional and personal life She is courted by two men the already married publisher Kendall Nesbitt who is trying to divorce his wife for Liza and the film star Randy Curtis and cannot decide whom to choose When she begins seeing a psychologist she delves into her dreams and memories of her unhappy childhood and is haunted by the melody of a song she cannot recall In one dream she believes she is being put on trial for her indecision in a circus setting with her marketing manager Charley Johnson acting as prosecutor Kendall as chief witness and Randy as her defense attorney in which she defends her refusal to make up her mind The Saga of Jenny She eventually comes to realize that the root of her trauma is having been repeatedly rejected in her youth due to her plain appearance as she makes this breakthrough she remembers the mysterious song My Ship She realizes that Kendall and Randy both relate to her only on a superficial level and finds true partnership with Charley who sees her as an equal Background editOriginally beginning as a solo effort I Am Listening by Moss Hart about a successful woman who is under the care of a psychiatrist Late developed into a work involving Kurt Weill with a change in title The musical s theme of psychoanalysis is said to be based on Hart s own experiences with psychoanalyst Gregory Zilboorg 2 Except for the final song all the music in the play is heard in three extended dream sequences the Glamour Dream the Wedding Dream and the Circus Dream which to some extent become three small operettas integrated into a straight play 2 The final song My Ship functions as a leitmotif for Liza s insecurity as each dream commences a snippet of the tune is heard as it is a haunting melody which Liza recognizes but cannot name or sing with words until her anxiety is resolved Productions editThe musical opened on Broadway at the Alvin Theatre now the Neil Simon on January 23 1941 and closed on May 30 1942 after 467 performances Direction was by Hart produced by Sam H Harris with musical staging by Hassard Short who also was the production designer and choreography by Albertina Rasch The original cast included Gertrude Lawrence in the role of Liza Elliott alongside Danny Kaye Bert Lytell Victor Mature Donald Randolph Margaret Dale Davis Cunningham and Macdonald Carey Kaye s performance as fashion photographer Russell Paxton and particularly his consistently showstopping performance of the patter song Tschaikowsky and Other Russians in which he dashes through the names of 50 Russian composers in 39 seconds made him a star 3 The musical went on an eight city tour for 160 performances 4 and also played on the West Coast including Los Angeles and San Francisco for 56 performances The show then ran at The Broadway Theatre from February 27 through May 15 1943 for 83 performances Gertrude Lawrence reprised her role as Liza Elliott in all venues 5 Subsequent productions editLady in the Dark premiered in the United Kingdom on December 9 1981 at the Nottingham Playhouse Nottingham American actor Celeste Holm starred it was her British debut 6 Kendall Nesbitt was Jeremy Hawk Robert Swales played Randy Curtis and Kenneth Nelson appeared as Russell Paxton The show was produced by Crispin Thomas and musical director was Tony Britten Jane Wenham was assistant director 7 A New York City Center Encores semi staged concert was produced in New York in May 1994 with Christine Ebersole 8 The musical opened on the West End at the Royal National Theatre London on March 11 running through August 2 1997 directed by Francesca Zambello and starring Maria Friedman 9 10 The production received the Evening Standard Award for Best Musical 11 12 A production was staged by Boston Academy of Music in 2000 starring mezzo soprano Delores Ziegler and by Philadelphia s Prince Music Theatre in the autumn of 2001 with Andrea Marcovicci as Liza Elliott A production by MasterVoices directed and conducted by Ted Sperling choreographed by Doug Varone and starring Victoria Clark as Liza Elliott took place at New York City Center on April 25 26 and 27 2019 This production featured MasterVoices 120 singers the Orchestra of St Luke s and Doug Varone and Dancers Amy Irving played Dr Brooks and Victoria Clark played Liza Elliot 13 14 A production was staged in China at Beijing s Century Theatre in April 2003 directed by Jennifer Schwerin conducted by Nicholas Michael Smith and produced by Nancy Fraser Andrew Andreasen and Jiang Shan Marsha Mercant performed the role of Liza Elliot and Michael Sterling performed the role of the Ringmaster Adaptations editThe 1944 film version starred Ginger Rogers and Ray Milland The film cut most of the Weill Gershwin songs though The Saga of Jenny and Girl of the Moment remained and part of This Is New is played by a nightclub band in the background My Ship was heard as background music but never sung even though the music was constantly referred to in the story Kaye s role went to Hollywood s Mad Russian the slightly taller Mischa Auer Lady in the Dark was adapted for the radio on multiple occasions Gertrude Lawrence twice reprised her leading stage role for a one hour adaptation on Theatre Guild on the Air 15 on October 19 1947 16 and on March 5 1950 17 On January 29 1945 Ginger Rogers who played Liza in the film version starred with Ray Milland in a one hour adaptation for Lux Radio Theatre on CBS Radio 18 On February 16 1953 Judy Garland starred in a second Lux Radio Theatre adaptation alongside John Lund 19 The musical was broadcast on NBC Television on September 25 1954 as part of an irregularly scheduled series under the umbrella title Max Liebman Presents Ann Sothern played Liza and Carleton Carpenter played Russell 20 21 A cast recording of the TV special was released on Sepia 22 CastAnn Sothern as Liza Elliott James Daley as Charley Johnson Paul McGrath as Kendall Nesbitt Robert Fortier as Randy Culver Shepperd Strudwick as Dr Brooks Carleton Carpenter as Russell Paxton Luella Gear as Maggie Grant Stephanie Augustine as Miss Foster James Congdon as Ben Marjorie Barrett as BarbaraSongs editAct I Glamour Dream Oh Fabulous One in Your Ivory Tower Liza Elliott s Serenaders The World s Inamorata Liza Elliott and Miss Foster One Life to Live Liza Elliott and Russell Paxton Girl of the Moment EnsembleWedding Dream Liza Liza Ensemble Mapleton High Chorale Ensemble This is New Randy Curtis and Liza Elliott The Princess of Pure Delight Liza Elliott and Children This Woman at the Altar Ensemble Act II Circus Dream The Greatest Show on Earth Ringmaster i e Russell Paxton and Ensemble The Best Years of His Life Charley Johnson and Randy Curtis Tschaikowsky and Other Russians Ringmaster and Ensemble The Saga of Jenny Liza Elliott Jury and EnsembleFinal Scene My Ship Liza Elliott not retained in the film version Recordings editAlthough recordings of individual songs were made no attempt was made to record the entire score until 1963 when Lehman Engel produced a stereo studio recording for Columbia starring Rise Stevens Roger White and Adolph Green This recording was reissued as a Masterworks Heritage CD MHK 62869 The reissue also includes five 1941 mono recordings of songs including Tschaikowsky sung by Danny Kaye According to the liner notes the maximum playing time of an LP did not permit including everything and some cuts were made not specified but mostly in the number of verses or repeats The Royal National Theatre revival in 1997 led to the first complete recording of the score TER JAY A telecast from February 11 1981 Musical Comedy Tonight II presented Danny Kaye from the original cast Lynn Redgrave and others reenacting the circus scene from the original production of Lady in the Dark including Kaye s hit song Tchaikovsky 23 Reception editLife Magazine wrote that with its unique blend of serious drama musical comedy and pageantry Lady in the Dark is a grand scale smash hit 24 Notes edit McClung Bruce D 2007 Lady in the Dark Biography of a Musical Oxford University Press a b Detailed review of the film moviediva com accessed February 4 2011 McClung Bruce p 33 McClung p 140 McClung pp 139 140 McClung pp 195 196 Theatre Programme Lady in the Dark Nottingham Playhouse 9 Dec 1981 Holden Stephen Fashion Freud and Frigidity With 40 s Fizz The New York Times p C3 May 6 1994 Lady in the Dark London production listing broadwayworld com March 1 2009 Lefkowitz David National Theatre s Lady in the Dark Opens March 11 Archived 2012 10 19 at the Wayback Machine playbill com March 11 1997 Lady in the Dark gallery Archived 2011 07 11 at the Wayback Machine francescazambello com accessed February 4 2011 Evening Standard Awards for 1997 Archived 2010 12 13 at the Wayback Machine albemarle london com accessed February 4 2011 Lady In The Dark Starring Victoria Clark Adds Additional Performances broadwayworld com March 25 2019 Colter Walls Seth Review Lady in the Dark Is Kurt Weill on the Couch The New York Times April 26 2019 Logs Theater Guild On The Air otrsite com accessed February 4 2011 Radio Programs Brooklyn Daily Eagle 1947 10 19 p 30 Retrieved 2021 06 21 Sunday Selections Toledo Blade Ohio 1950 03 05 p Section 6 Page 15 Retrieved 2021 06 21 Lux radio Theatre Radio Highlights Brooklyn Daily Eagle 1953 02 16 p 19 Retrieved 2021 06 21 Capsuto p 31 Schultz Margie Chapter Television Ann Sothern a bio bibliography p 154 Suskin Steven On the Record Lady in the Dark and Warm Spring Night Archived 2008 05 15 at the Wayback Machine Playbill August 7 2005 Excerpt from Musical Comedy Tonight II February 11 1981 Library of Congress Broadway 1940 41 Life Magazine February 17 1941 pp 43 44 References editCapsuto Steven 2000 Alternate Channels The Uncensored Story of Gay and Lesbian Images on Radio and Television Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 41243 5 McClung Bruce 2007 Lady in the Dark Biography of a Musical Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512012 4 Atkinson Brooks Lady in the Dark Broadway Scrapbook Theatre Arts Inc New York 1947 pp 184 187 External links editLady in the Dark Internet Broadway Database Lady in the Dark Kurt Weill Foundation Lady in the Dark listing permanent dead link Rodgers and Hammerstein Organization Lady in the Dark film at the Internet Movie Database Lady in the Dark TV at the Internet Movie Database Plot song list at Guide to Musical Theatre UArts Lady in the Dark summary Lady in the Dark permanent dead link at ovrtur com 1947 Theatre Guild on the Air radio adaptation at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lady in the Dark amp oldid 1213489898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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