1975
Broadway Open House was created in 1950.
Possibly Vicki Frederick circa early Autumn 1976
No. Chorus is a noun. The adjective form is choral.
Cats Hit international musical based on the poems of T. S. Eliot (Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats) with music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, choreography by Gillian Lynne, and direction by Trevor Nunn. It opened in 1981 at the New London Theatre in London's West End and transferred to Broadway the following year, opening at the Winter Garden Theater on 7 Oct. 1982. On 19 June 1997 it became the longest-running show in Broadway history, its 6, 138th consecutive performance pushing it ahead of A Chorus Line. It was also the longest-running musical in London's West End, where it ran for 21 years.
there is really no answer to this but if there was an answer it all depends on the broadway musical
A Chorus Line is a musical about 17 dancers during an audition. A Chorus Line opened on Broadway on July 25, 1975. The musical was directed and choreographed by Michael Bennett.
A Chorus Line is set at an audition. As it was an audition for a Broadway show, the musical is set in New York City.
It was created from several taped workshop sessions with Broadway dancers, so the stories talked about in the monologues and the songs in A Chorus Line are mostly true stories, the audition in A Chorus Line never really happened.
I heard it was just under 2 hours, not including intermissions.
the concept of the muscial "A Chorus Line" was a Broadway chorus audition where a director demands that his dancers share their most private memories and inner demons. hope this answers ur question!
The original Broadway production of the show 'A Chorus Line' received 10 Tony Awards, 7 Drama Desk Awards, a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and a Theatre World Award in 1976. Since then the production has won a further 8 awards.
Unless I am dead wrong- and have been at times, Raquel Welch was NOT in the broadway show ( a play) A Chorus Line. She was only in one play- Victor-Victoria which ran posters in the Star-Ledger. She is not the type for Chorus Line type shows, to my knowledge.
The musical "A Chorus Line" was created by Micheal Bennet because he wanted to do a show on Broadway about dancers. Michael's purpose for this was to show what the true life of a dancer trying to get a job was like.
I asked a friend of mine who is a Broadway expert. He suggested Michael Gruber. He was in the original run of the show on broadway, but not the original cast, and then he was in the revivial.
"Hello, Dolly!" premiered on Broadway in 1964, while "A Chorus Line" opened later, in 1975. Therefore, "Hello, Dolly!" came first. Both musicals are significant in American theater history, but they represent different eras and styles within the Broadway landscape.
"A Chorus Line" is a musical with a book by James Kirkwood Jr. and Nicholas Dante, and music by Marvin Hamlisch. It features lyrics by Edward Kleban and was first performed in 1975. The show explores the lives of Broadway dancers auditioning for a chorus line, highlighting their dreams, struggles, and personal stories.
If you want a classic Broadway show, A Chorus Line, Wicked, or Chicago is always a good show to pick. An off-beat rock show would be Spring Awakening, American Idiot, or Rent