Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (musical)
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers is a
The show's 1978–79 premiere tour was canceled without reaching
Synopsis
- Act 1
In 1850s
- Act 2
The brothers kidnap the girls and then cause an
Productions
U.S. national tours and Broadway
The stage musical version of Seven Brides for Seven Brothers was first performed in June 1978 in the
The musical was revived in 1981 as a vehicle for singer
1985 West End
The musical premiered in the
This West End production actually opened at the York Theatre Royal in April 1984 and had been on a successful UK tour with Newpalm Productions. Because of the early closure of “The Com is Green” with Deborah Kerr, the Old Vic was suddenly available for a few weeks until the planned opening of “The Cradle Will Rock” on August 14. This production filled the gap – though there was an ongoing dispute that said the show did not have the rights to play in London itself, only in the provinces. However, the situation seems to have resolved itself when “Seven Brides” returned to the West End – at the Prince of Wales – the following year where it ran for five-and-a-half months from 8 May 1986 to 26 October 1986, and again Newpalm Productions toured the UK a number of times during the following years.
A 2002 tour of the UK starred Dave Willetts.
2003 Madrid
A Spanish production premiered at Teatro Nuevo Apolo on August 29, 2003, starring David Castedo as Adam and Xana García as Milly, and directed by Ricard Reguant with choreography by María Giménez.
2005 Goodspeed Opera House
A major revival ran from April 15, 2005, through June 26, 2005, at the
2006 West End revival
A production ran at the
Revised 2007 U.S. production
A revised version played at several venues, including the Paper Mill Playhouse (New Jersey) (April 11 – May 11, 2007), North Shore Music Theatre (May 29 – June 17, 2007), Theatre Under the Stars (June 26 – July 1, 2007), and Theater of the Stars (Atlanta) (June 26 – July 1, 2007). Under the direction of Scott Schwartz, set design was by Tony Award nominee, Anna Louizos and lighting by Tony Award winner Donald Holder. This production was a hybrid between the literal approach of the Goodspeed production and the slapstick camp of the original film.
The Paper Mill Playhouse announced a week prior to Seven Brides for Seven Brothers's scheduled premiere that a million dollar plus shortfall in operating expenses threatened to not only cancel the production but close the theater down indefinitely. Paper Mill would in fact be enabled to fund the production of Seven Brides for Seven Brothers throughout its scheduled run, the critical and popular success of the production clinching the 69-year old iconic theater's survival. Subsequent engagements of the production drew weak reviews, with some praise afforded Patti Colombo's acrobatic, athletic, and inventive choreography.[15][16]
The 2007 revival is expected to be the version that will be licensed by Music Theatre International for stock and regional use.
UK regional tour (2008)
The musical toured in the UK during 2008, starring Steven Houghton and Susan McFadden, and played in over thirty cities, including The Liverpool Empire.[17]
UK & Ireland National Tour (2013–14)
A new restaged version of the show is currently being produced and will open at The Churchill Theatre Bromley on 13 September 2013 before touring the UK & Ireland. The new re-staged production stars Sam Attwater & Helena Blackman and directed/choreographed by Patti Colombo. www.sevenbridesthemusical.com
Regent's Park Open Air Theatre (2015)
With Rachel Kavanaugh directing a cast led by Alex Gaumond as Adam and Laura Pitt-Pulford as Milly, Seven Brides For Seven Brothers was mounted at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre 16 July – 29 August 2015. The production was critically well-received, as exemplified by the assessment of Michael Billington of The Guardian: "[if] not exactly...in tune with modern gender politics [the play] comes off well [mostly] thanks to some exhilarating dancing [there being] several high points...vividly realised in Alistair David's choreography...Laura Pitt-Pulford endows the far-from-modern Milly with the right dogged determination, and Alex Gaumond even manages to find a few redemptive qualities in the Petruchio-like figure of Adam, who seems to think a wife is a domestic slave. Clearly the original book has [lost some] inherent chauvinism, and it says a lot for Kavanaugh's production that [Adam's song] 'A Woman Ought to Know Her Place'...seems less...a crude manifesto than the cry of a man in crisis. The show...boasts some good songs. But in the end it's the choreography, which rivals anything on the London stage, that makes this a musical worth reviving."[18]
2nd US National Tour (2015)
In January 2015, Prather Touring (a subsection of Prather Entertainment Group) produced a National Tour of the production. The tour played at venues in over 30 states and was followed by an eight-week sit-down at the Broadway Palm Dinner Theatre in Ft Myers, FL. The cast was headed up by Justun Hart as Adam and Kate Marshall as Milly. The brothers were played by Wes Drummond (Benjamin), Carver Duncan (Caleb), Matt Casey (Daniel), Ben Cramer (Ephraim), Will Leonard (Frank) and Max King (Gideon). The brides were played by Diane Huber (Dorcas), Danielle Barnes (Ruth / Dance Captain), Kelsey Beckert (Liza), Avery Bryce Epstein (Martha), Corinne Munsch (Sarah) and Kiersten Benzing (Alice). The suitors were played by Sean Cleary (Nathan), Marty Craft (Luke), Joshua Kolberg (Matt), Olin Davidson (Joel), Corey John Hafner (Zeke), and Glenn Britton (Jeb). The cast was rounded out by Dustin Cunningham and Courtney Cunningham as the Hoallums, Michael Weaver as the Preacher and Katharine Gentsch as the Swing. The production was directed by Dean Sobon, choreographed by Kerry Lambert, and music directed by Scott Williams.[19]
Musical numbers
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Notes
"One Man", "Love Never Goes Away", "The Townsfolk's Lament", " A Woman Ought To Know Her Place", "We Gotta Make It Through The Winter", "Spring Dance", and "Glad That You Were Born" were written by Al Kasha and Joel Hirschhorn for the musical.
"Bless Your Beautiful Hide", "Wonderful Wonderful Day", "Goin' Courtin'", and "Sobbin' Women" are from the 1954 film and written by Gene de Paul and Johnny Mercer.
NEW REVISED VERSION
Act I
- Opening Act I (Adam's Introduction) – Adam
- Gallant and Correct – Mr. & Mrs. Sander, Mr. Hoallum, Preacher, Brides, Suitors, Town Elders
- Bless Your Beautiful Hide – Adam
- Wonderful, Wonderful Day – Milly, Mrs. Sander, Mrs. Hoallum, Brides
- I Married Seven Brothers – Milly, Townspeople
- Goin' Courtin' – Milly, Brothers
- Challenge Dance – Orchestra
- Love Never Goes Away – Adam, Gideon, Milly
- Sobbin' Women – Adam, Brothers
Act II
- The Suitor's Lament – Suitors, Townspeople
- Where Were You? – Adam
- We Gotta Make It Through the Winter – Brothers
- We Gotta Make It (reprise)/Lonesome Polecat – Milly, Brothers
- Spring Dance – Orchestra
- Glad That You Were Born – Milly, Brothers, Brides
- Love Never Goes Away (reprise) – Adam, Milly
- Wonderful Day (reprise) – Milly, Adam
- Wedding Dance/Finale Act II – Company
Awards and nominations
Original Broadway production
Year | Award ceremony | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1983 | Tony Award
|
Best Original Score | Al Kasha, Joel Hirschhorn, Johnny Mercer, and Gene de Paul | Nominated |
Sources
References
- ^ Pittsburgh Post Gazette 17 January 1978 "Songwriters See Musical Revival" by George Andersen p.8
- ^ The Shreveport Times 9 June 1978 "Weekend Events" p.6-D
- ^ Victoria TexasAdvocate 8 October 1978 "Marilyn Beck's Hollywood" by Marilyn Beck p.10
- ^ Los Angeles Times 27 August 1978 "Stage News" by Lawrence Christon p.58
- ^ Philadelphia Inquirer 6 September 1978 "Other Inquirer Columnists Say" by Liz Smith p.2-F
- ^ Fort Lauderdale News 23 February 1979 "Untitled" by Jack Zink p.63S
- ^ Akron Beacon Journal 17 June 1981 "Debby Boone Carries 'Seven Brides' in Kenley Opener" by Bill O'Connor p.B1
- ^ "St. Petersburg Times - Google News Archive Search". Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ Haberman, Clyde; Johnston, Laurie (13 July 1982). "New York Day by Day". The New York Times.
- ^ "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers' listing, 1985 guidetomusicaltheatre.com, retrieved September 2, 2010
- ^ Calgary Herald 19 September 1985 "Romping Musical Fails to Capture Film's Feeling" by Rod Currie p.C6
- ^ Gates, Anita. "Before There Was Online Dating" The New York Times, May 15, 2005
- ^ Jones, Kenneth. "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers Bounds Onto Goodspeed Stage Beginning April 15" Playbill, April 15, 2005
- ^ "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers" thisistheatre.com
- ^ Pincus-Roth, Zachary. "Revised Seven Brides to Play TUTS, Paper Mill and North Shore" Playbill, February 16, 2007
- ^ Gans, Andrew. "Seven Brides Will Go On at Paper Mill Playhouse April 11" Playbill, April 11, 2007
- ^ Potton, Ed. "Reality bites for Susan McFadden in Seven Brides for Seven Brothers" The Times, August 23, 2008
- TheGuardian.com.
- ^ Tour 2015 sevenbridestour2015.com, accessed March 4, 2015
External links
- Seven Brides for Seven Brothers at the Internet Broadway Database
- Seven Brides for Seven Brothers at the Music Theatre International website
- New York Times review, July 9, 1982