Read On Sondheim: An Opinionated Guide Online
Authors: Ethan Mordden
*
“America” was written as a dispute between a pro–Puerto Rico Anita and an assimilating Bernardo, backed by the girls and boys, but Jerome Robbins wanted an all-girl number on Broadway. The original lyrics are in
Finishing the Hat
.
*
A perfect example is
Show Boat
’s “Why Do I Love You?,” a duet turned into an ensemble when bystanders—visitors at the Chicago World’s Fair, actually—simply join in. Rodgers and Hammerstein generally banned the practice as illogical, though
Allegro
’s very busy chorus does take over “You Are Never Away” from the hero. One year before
Waltz
,
Hello, Dolly!
(1964) employed the usage throughout the evening.
*
Jones produced wonderful cast albums, wedding the music to anchoring dialogue to “artifact” a show. His
Ben Franklin in Paris
(Capitol, DRG) is exemplary: the Mark Sandrich Jr.-Sidney Michaels score is not on the cult list, yet it jumps out of one’s speakers so theatrically one can almost see Robert Preston going through another of his period impersonations in wholly contemporary style. Thomas Z. Shepard, also known for catching the spirit of a show on disc, handled most of Sondheim’s Broadway cast recordings, from
Company
through
Sunday in the Park With George
, though the most recent titles were produced by Tommy Krasker.
†
As I said earlier, Sondheim used Joan Crawford as his model. But the song ends up telling us of someone who never really made it, not someone who, like Crawford, was big enough to tie with Greta Garbo and Norma Shearer as Queen of the Lot at MGM and win a Best Actress Oscar (for
Mildred Pierce
).
*
Opera buffs will recognize it as the first word of the introduction to the famous “Laugh, clown, laugh!” aria “Vesti la Giubba” in Leoncavallo’s
Pagliacci
. “Recitar!,” it begins, with savage irony: “Play your part!”
*
The ruler of the spirit world in
Die Frau Ohne Schatten
. Keikobad’s influence pervades the action, but, now commanding, now leading from behind, he never actually appears. One might say that, as with Robert, we know him except when we don’t.
Note: Page numbers in
bold
indicate the primary reference to a title.
Aarons, Alex,
11
Abel, Walter,
113
Adams, Edie,
82
ad libbing,
52
Aladdin
,
150
Aldredge, Tom,
124
Alexander, Jace,
128
Alexander, Jason,
110
Allegro
(Rodgers and Hammerstein)
cast recordings,
172
–
74
and
Company
,
67
experimental nature of,
20
first act ending,
125
Follies
compared to,
83
and Hammerstein’s influence on Sondheim,
4
and inspirations for Sondheim’s musicals,
112
and
Merrily We Roll Along
,
117
mixed reactions to,
77
All That Glitters
,
22
American Repertory Theatre,
17
Amory, Cleveland,
6
Anderson, Judith,
113
Antonelli, Laura,
137
Anyone Can Whistle
,
54–59
cast recordings,
171
,
179
–
80
,
184
and
Do I Hear a Waltz?
,
60
and film musicals,
156
and Sondheim’s characters,
68
and Sondheim’s creative control,
9
Anything Goes
,
136
Applause
,
15
Aron, John,
13
Aronson, Boris,
67
,
82
,
92
,
98
–
99
,
109
Asner, Edward,
154
Astaire, Adele,
135
Astaire, Fred,
135
Babbitt, Milton,
5
Bacall, Lauren,
15
Ballroom
,
84
Barnes, Clive,
94
Barrow, Robert,
4
Bass, Alfie,
155
The
Beggar’s Opera
,
38
Begman, Ingmar,
86
Behan, Brendan,
74
Behrman, S. N.,
73
Belmondo, Jean-Paul,
151
Bennett, Michael,
67
,
77
,
79
,
83
–
84
Bergen, Polly,
82
Bergman, Ingmar,
87
,
88
–
89
,
91
n,
93
Berkman, John,
82
Berle, Milton,
102
Berliner Ensemble,
29
Bernstein, Leonard
and
Candide
,
82
,
119
cast recordings,
169
,
171
and film musicals,
154
influence on Sondheim,
24
–
25
inspirations for Sondheim’s musicals,
104
relationship with Sondheim,
17
–
18
and Sondheim as Play Doctor,
9
and Sondheim’s career,
7
–
8
,
14
and
West Side Story
,
7
,
37
,
41
–
43
Bettelheim, Bruno,
126
Be Yourself theme,
33
Billington, Ken,
109
Bishop, André,
129
Björnson, Maria,
84
Black Comedy
,
63
The
Black Crook
,
136
Blyden, Larry,
140
Boito, Arrigo,
133
Bond, Christopher,
103
,
104
–
6
,
109
Bower, Jamie Campbell,
155
Bowles, Sally,
27