The line-up of winter and spring musicals begins about as big as can be expected. Marshalling its usual deep stores of talent and capital, Disney opens its sixth Broadway show, The Little Mermaid, on Jan. 10 at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre. (The show was to have bowed in 2007, but its arrival was delayed by the three-week-long stagehands strike.)
The underwater tale of a mermaid who longs to sample human life is a well-known property to audiences, as is the show's composer, Alan Menken, who has written many a familiar Disney ditty over the years. His late collaborator Howard Ashman, who worked on the original film, is given an assist here by additional lyricist Glenn Slater. Directing her first Broadway show is Francesca Zambello. On stage are such familiar hands as Norm Lewis, Sherie Rene Scott and Eddie Korbich, as well as newcomer Sierra Boggess. The show took some licks at the hands of critics during its Denver tryout. Time will soon tell whether it will hook Broadway critics and audiences.
photo by Michal Daniel |
Keeping Stew feel company in his offbeat Off-Broadwayness will be the cast and crew of In the Heights, which began life at 37 Arts last year. The show, about a Latino community in the Manhattan neighborhood of Washington Heights, was written by Lin-Manuel Miranda (who, like Stew, also stars) and Quiara Alegría Hudes. It will begin previews on Feb. 14 at the Richard Rodgers Theatre.
photo by Craig Schwartz |
Meanwhile, beginning March 1, Lincoln Center Theater reminds us what musicals can be, offering the first Broadway revival in half a century of the classic, South Pacific. This show has been so anticipated that its coming was announced nearly a year-and-a-half ago. That announcement was followed by months of speculation as to who would play the leads. In the end, director Bartlett Sher cast Kelli O'Hara and Paulo Szot as Nellie Forbush and Emile de Becque. The design staff will duplicate that of LCT's The Light in the Piazza, a production that apparently mightily impressed the Rodgers and Hammerstein camp.
photo by Craig Schwartz |
Sheba will still be playing when director Debbie Allen's all-black staging of Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof begins Feb. 12 at the Broadhurst. Featured in the unique take on the classic Southern drama of deceit and disillusion will be Anika Noni Rose, Giancarlo Esposito, James Earl Jones, Phylicia Rashad and Terrence Howard.
Adding to the post-WWII feeling will be a couple other productions. Laurence Fishburne will star as the title character in the new play Thurgood. (Thurgood Marshall, in case you're still scratching your head. How many famous Thurgoods do you know?) The show, by George Stevens Jr., is based on the life of the famous lawyer, Civil Rights crusader and Supreme Court Justice. The presence of this attraction also adds to what is shaping up to be one of the most prosperous seasons for African-African actors in recent memory. Previews begin this spring at the Booth.
The other 1950s-flavored show is an unlikely revival of Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski's war drama set in a German prison camp, Stalag 17. The original play ran on Broadway in 1951 and played 472 performances at the 48th Street Theatre before closing June 21, 1952. Film director Spike Lee is the unusual helmsman of this work, which has not announced any official theatre or dates.
photo by David Kennerly |
Opening a couple days before that is a very unexpected sort of screen-to-stage adaptation. Few people are familiar with the British Alfred Hitchcock thriller The 39 Steps. But that didn't stop Patrick Barlow from adapting it, or Maria Aitken from directing it, or four actors from essaying all 150 parts, or the whole darn thing from becoming a great hit — first in North Yorkshire, then off-West End and then on the West End. The Roundabout has brought it in to its American Airlines Theatre.
Also at the Roundabout will be a new revival of Christopher Hampton's Les Liaisons Dangereuses, starring Ben Daniels and Laura Linney as the devious lovers, the Vicomte de Valmont and Marquise de Merteuil. Rufus Norris will stage the work scheduled to begin April 11, at the American Airlines Theatre.
Finally, starting April 15, James MacDonald will direct a Broadway revival of Caryl Churchill's modern classic Top Girls at the Biltmore. MacDonald likes him some Caryl Churchill; he will also direct the playwright's Drunk Enough to Say I Love You at the Public Theater Off-Broadway this spring. The cast of the MTC production will comprise Elizabeth Marvel, Mary Catherine Garrison, Martha Plimpton and Marisa Tomei. Now, there're some top girls, indeed.