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Dancin'

Did you mean: Dancin', Dancin' (Lift Your Spirits Higher), Dancin' (performed by Guy), Dancin' (performed by Vanilla Ice)

 
 

Dancin' (1978), a choreographic revue featuring original dance pieces by Bob Fosse. [ Broadhurst Theatre, 1,774 perf.] Using such diverse composers as Johann Sebastian Bach, George M. Cohan, Neil Diamond, and John Philip Sousa for its music, Fosse devised a variety of “dance for dance's sake” numbers. The Shubert production enjoyed an exceptionally long run not only because of its fine dancing but because it became a prime attraction for foreigners, who found it offered no language problems. Some numbers were later repeated in the Livent‐produced revue Fosse (1999) which ran for 1,100 performances at the same theatre, winning the Tony Award. Ann Reinking and others re‐created several of the late Fosse's numbers from various Broadway shows and movies.

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Wikipedia: Dancin'
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Dancin'
Playbill
Music various
Lyrics various
Productions 1978 Broadway
2009 Broadway

Dancin' is a musical revue first produced in 1978, directed and choreographed by Bob Fosse, who won a Tony Award for the choreography. The show is a tribute to the art of dance, and the music is a collection of mostly American songs, many with a dance theme from a wide variety of styles, from operetta to jazz to classical to marches to pop.

Contents

Production

Dancin' opened on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theatre on March 27, 1978. It then transferred to the Ambassador Theatre and ran for a total of 1,774 performances (including previews). Additional choreography was by Christopher Chadman.

After the extraordinary success of the dance-intensive A Chorus Line, Fosse proposed a show with little dialogue and singing. Fosse's concept for the show was to use classical and show music, popular music, rock and roll, Mozart, Bach, George M. Cohan, and contemporary music by Neil Diamond and Melissa Manchester, anything except a new score written by a collaborator. He stated publicly that the project would free him from the burden of an artistic partnership: "When you have collaborators, you have all those midnight meetings. I'm tired of those.... So I just decided to meet myself at midnight."[1] [2] Fosse invited choreographer Graciela Daniele to contribute a few numbers, but she declined, saying "When you are out of ideas, call me. I have the feeling that once you get into it, you're going to want to do it all."[2] Despite the lack of creative partners, Fosse still had to negotiate with his co-producer Bernard Jacobs, the president of the Shubert Organization, who objected to Fosse's risqué number depicting a tourist coping with New York City's then-notoriously seamy Times Square.[1] The show's remaining numbers impressed audiences, and because Fosse co-produced the show, it became his biggest financial success in the theatre.[3] [4]

The show's choreography was so demanding, however, that small theatre companies were unable to effectively recreate it, and so the show has not enjoyed any revivals.[3] However, several numbers from Dancin' were recreated for the 1999 dance review Fosse, such as : "Crunchy Granola Suite", "I Wanna Be a Dancin' Man", "Big Noise from Winnetka", "Mr. Bojangles", and "Sing Sing Sing". [5]

A revival was scheduled to be produced by the Roundabout Theatre Company at Studio 54 for 2009, but this has been postponed until the 2009-10 season.[6][7]

Song list

Act 1
Act 2
Act 3

Opening night cast

  • Vicki Frederick
  • Linda Haberman
  • Richard Korthaze
  • Edward Love
  • John Mineo
  • Ann Reinking
  • Blane Savage
  • Charles Ward (dancer)
  • William Whitener

Review

In his New York Times review, Richard Eder writes the show is designed to be a musical show — there is no story line. He states that Ann Reinking is clearly the star and she is at her best in the high point of the evening, "Benny's Number", which recreates Benny Goodman and his band using "Sing, Sing, Sing". He also mentions several other dances, such as "Dancin' Man", with the entire cast dressed in "ice-cream" suits and lavender shirts; and "Fourteen Feet", where the shoes are nailed to the floor, and the dancers proceed to move within those confines. He sums up by writing "precision and style mark the evening at its best", but they serve very little. [8]

Clive Barnes, newly moved to the New York Post, told Fosse that he thought the show was "tremendous" and "fantastic".[4]

Awards and nominations

  • Best Musical (nominee)
  • Best Featured Actor in a Musical - Wayne Cilento (nominee)
  • Best Featured Actress in a Musical - Ann Reinking (nominee)
  • Best Costume Design - Willa Kim (nominee)
  • Best Lighting Design - Jules Fisher (winner)
  • Best Choreography - Bob Fosse (winner)
  • Best Direction of a Musical - Bob Fosse (nominee)
  • Outstanding Musical (nominee)
  • Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical - Charles Ward (nominee)
  • Outstanding Choreography - Bob Fosse (winner)
  • Outstanding Lighting Design - Jules Fisher (winner)

References

  1. ^ a b Information from PBS.org
  2. ^ a b Gottfried, Martin. All His Jazz, Da Capo Press, 1990, p. 359. ISBN 0-306-80837-4
  3. ^ a b Information from the musicals101 website
  4. ^ a b Gottfried, p. 366.
  5. ^ Fosse at the Internet Broadway Database
  6. ^ Bob Fosse's Dancin' Will Strut Into Studio 54 in 2009, Playbill, 20 March 2008.
  7. ^ Jones, Kenneth."Bill Irwin and Nathan Lane Will Be Waiting for Godot on Broadway in Spring 2009", Playbill.com, 16 October 2008.
  8. ^ Eder, Richard. Review, The New York Times, March 28, 1978, p. 48

External links


 
 

Did you mean: Dancin', Dancin' (Lift Your Spirits Higher), Dancin' (performed by Guy), Dancin' (performed by Vanilla Ice)


 

Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dancin'" Read more

 

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