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Musical
0001 - Curse of the Werewolf ()
Musique: Carl Zeller • Ian Armit
Paroles:
Livret: Ken Hill
Production originale:
1 version mentionnée
Dispo: Résumé  Synopsis  Liste chansons  

Genèse:

Résumé: Dr and Mrs Bancroft, with daughter Kitty, are visiting an old friend from medical school, who now lives and works with mental patients in a crumbling castle in a part of Germany swarming with wolves. Daughter Kitty is much taken with the dishy Baron - but she ought to have known. .. it’s always the dishy ones you have to look out for…

Création: // - *** Inconnu (***) - représ.



Musical
0002 - Phantom of the Opera (The) (Vers. Hill) (1984)
Musique: Ken Hill
Paroles: Ken Hill
Livret: Ken Hill
Production originale:
3 versions mentionnées
Dispo: Synopsis  Génèse  Liste chansons  

Genèse: Hill’s Phantom of the Opera was the first musical version of the story by Gaston Leroux and has enjoyed financial success. Hill's musical inspired the award-winning Andrew Lloyd Webber musical version of the story, although he never received any formal royalty for it. As Ken Hill rummaged through a used bookstore, he picked up a copy of Gaston Leroux's Phantom of the Opera novel and eventually produced it as a stage musical. The show started off as a production at Morecambe Pier as the first staged musical version, but was also first staged when Hill was working as Director of Productions for the Newcastle Playhouse.[citation needed] This first production was produced at The Duke’s Playhouse in Lancaster on July 26, 1976, where it proved to be a hit. It was directed by John Blackmore, designed by Clare Lyth, with musical direction by Gary Yershon.[citation needed] It differed from the later version of Ken Hill’s musical, in having a modern musical score by Ian Armit (who also worked with Hill on his production of The Curse of the Werewolf) in addition to excerpts from the opera Faust by Charles Gounod. In 1984, Hill revived his musical version of The Phantom of the Opera. This time though, he wanted to add the kind of music that would have been heard at the Opéra Garnier in the late 19th century. Consequently he discarded the modern score by Ian Armit and wrote original English lyrics that told Gaston Leroux’s tale. By placing them to opera arias by Gounod, Offenbach, Verdi, Weber, Mozart, Donizetti, and Boito, he created a musical that reflected the era in which the original novel was written. This updated version of The Phantom of the Opera was produced in a joint production by the Newcastle Playhouse and the Theatre Royal Stratford East, and premiered at the Newcastle Playhouse on April 3, 1984, before shortly moving to the Theatre Royal Stratford East.[citation needed] In between, the show had two very brief runs at the New Tyne Theatre in Newcastle and the Grand Theatre in Wolverhampton - neither of those productions did very well.[citation needed] When the show got the Theatre Royal Stratford East, Sarah Brightman, who created the role of Christine in the Lloyd Webber version, was famously asked to perform the role of Christine in the 1984 cast but she turned it down, leaving the role for the opera singer Christina Collier. Andrew Lloyd Webber, who at the time was married to Brightman, and Cameron Mackintosh attended a performance of Ken Hill’s Phantom of the Opera at the Theatre Royal Stratford East. Prompted by the good reviews, they approached Hill about the possibility of their collaborating on developing a grand scale version of his Phantom in the West End, and offered to produce it. In fact, Hill and Lloyd Webber had worked together earlier on a revival of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at the Winchester Theatre. Lloyd Webber and his producer, Cameron Mackintosh, had been highly enthusiastic when they broached Hill about his Phantom of the Opera. But in the end, Lloyd Webber chose to pursue the musical without Hill. Phantom of the Opera then emerged on the other side of the Atlantic in 1987 for its American premiere in St. Louis at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis. This production starred Sal Mistretta as The Phantom - his performance won him the St. Louis Theatre Critics Award. A second US production was mounted in 1988 in San Francisco at the Theatre in the Square, produced by Jonathan Reinis. The productions of Phantom of the Opera in St. Louis and San Francisco were so successful that Hill was asked to mount a national tour of the United States. Jonathan Reinis (who later produced Ken Hill’s The Invisible Man in London) formed Phantom Touring Company Inc. who acted as the producers for the tour, along with Electric Factory Concerts. The tour began in 1989, with musical arrangements and designs by the original Newcastle Playhouse team. It performed for a few years to packed houses all over America, travelling to approximately 110 cities, and grossing a total of $72 million. In 1991, Phantom of the Opera returned to the United Kingdom where it embarked on a national tour and then transferred to London’s West End. It opened at The Shaftsbury Theatre on December 18, 1991, with a similar cast to the 1984 production - Peter Straker was The Phantom and Christina Collier as Christine. But despite positive reviews, the West End production did poorly at the box office and was forced to close earlier than expected, on April 11, 1992. However, the production was nominated for two Olivier Awards for Best New Musical and Best Director of a Musical, the latter of which placed Ken Hill against Simon Callow and Judi Dench.

Résumé:

Création: 3/4/1984 - Northern Stage (Newcastle) - représ.



Musical
0003 - Zorro, the Musical (K. Hill) (1995)
Musique: Master of the Zarzuela
Paroles: Ken Hill
Livret: Ken Hill
Production originale:
1 version mentionnée
Dispo: Résumé  Commentaire  

Genèse:

Résumé: Don José has been exiled from his native Spain for no good reason, and ends up in Southern California in 19th Century Spanish colonial times. His enemies are the villainous Governor Maté, who dreams of becoming America’s first Emperor, with his randy wife, Maria as Empress, and the pirate Lafitte, who eats the odd budgerigar alive. Pretending to be a bewigged fop, accompanied by his mute servant, Bernardo, Don José is able to lead a double life - for his real role is as the masked Zorro, defying the villains, assisting the poor, and pitting his gipsy wits against the villains, and his romantic ardour towards Isabella, the love of his life.

Création: 13/2/1995 - Theatre Royal Stratford East (Londres) - représ.


Version 1

Curse of the Werewolf (1994-02-Theatre Royal Stratford East-London)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: Theatre Royal Stratford East (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 1 mois 1 semaine
Nombre :
Première Preview : Thursday 10 February 1994
Première : Thursday 10 February 1994
Dernière : Saturday 19 March 1994
Mise en scène : Ken Hill
Chorégraphie : Lindsay Dolan
Producteur :
Avec : Steven Pacey (Old Baron), Robin Nedwell (D’Arcy), Judith Bruce (Mrs Bancroft), Reginald Marsh (Dr Bancroft), Diana Morrison (Kitty), Toni Palmer (Ingeborg), Terence Hardinam (Professor Steiner) Bogdan Kominowski (Inspector Kruger)
Commentaires : With yodelling lederhosen-clad chorus boys, and fluffy rabbits and squirrels swaying in the trees, singing along to the music of 19th Century opera composer Carl Zeller and new lyrics by Ken Hill, this was a pantomime-type romp (similar in style to Ken Hill’s “Phantom of the Opera” - the pre-Lloyd Webber version.)

Version 2

Joseph … (1979-11-Westminster Theatre-London)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: The Other Palace (Londres - Angleterre)
Salle : Main Theatre
Durée :
Nombre : 142 représentations
Première Preview : Inconnu
Première : Thursday 01 November 1979
Dernière : Inconnu
Mise en scène : Ken Hill
Chorégraphie : Francesca Lucy
Producteur :
Avec : Paul Jones (Joseph), Philip Summerscales (Jacob), Clive Griffin (Benjamin), Frank Coda (Potiphar), Lisa Westcott (Potiphar’s Wife), Maynard Williams (Pharaoh), Clifton Todd (Narrator),

Version 3

Phantom of the Opera (The) (Vers. Hill) (1991-12-Newcastle Playhouse-London)

Type de série: Original
Théâtre: Northern Stage (Newcastle - Angleterre)
Durée : 2 semaines
Nombre :
Première Preview : Tuesday 29 March 1994
Première : Sunday 03 April 1994
Dernière : Thursday 21 April 1994
Mise en scène : Ken Hill
Chorégraphie :
Producteur :
Commentaires longs: This production also toured to Tyne Theatre and Grand Theatre Wolverhampton, before transferring to Stratford East.

Version 4

Phantom of the Opera (The) (Vers. Hill) (1991-12-Shaftesbury Theatre-London)

Type de série: Original London
Théâtre: Shaftesbury Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 3 mois 3 semaines
Nombre : 131 représentations
Première Preview : Wednesday 18 December 1991
Première : Wednesday 18 December 1991
Dernière : Saturday 11 April 1992
Mise en scène : Ken Hill
Chorégraphie :
Producteur :
Avec : Peter Straker (The Phantom of the Opera) / Christina Collier (Christine Daae) / Steven Pacey (Raoul) / Reginald Marsh (Richard) / Toni Palmer (Madam Giry) / Tracy Gillman (La Carlotta – Dominique - Chorus Girl) / Michael McLean (Faust) / Gary Lyons (Rémy) / Haluk Bilginer (Mephistopheles - The Persian) / Kate Harbour (Jammes) / Richard Tate (Debienne – Groom – Gravedigger - Old Man – Mauclair - Priest) / Jacqueline Barron (Lisette - Lady In Box) / Quentin Maclaine (First Stage Hand) / Richard Shilling (Second Stage Hand)
Commentaires : This production was nominated for two of the most prestigious Olivier Awards (equivalent of the Broadway Tony Awards) for Best New Musical (it was one of only two shows nominated!) and Best Director of a Musical, the latter of which placed Ken Hill against Simon Callow and Judi Dench.
Ken Hill’s comedy musical predated Andrew Lloyd Webber’s version by two years. In fact, it was said that the 1984 production at the Theatre Royal, Stratford East was the inspiration for Lloyd Webber’s later world-wide success. In this version the music is provided by Verdi, Offenbach, Gounod and the like, with irreverent lyrics by Ken Hill. From the opening when the ballet mistress misses her step and shouts “Shit”, to the finale where the dying Phantom gasps enough breath for an overlong swansong, this is clearly a very different show to the Lloyd Webber one. This is a camp journey via an enormous codpiece on Faust’s tights, and a chandelier that collapses on top of the soprano (“Well that’s cured her nodules”). Comparing the two versions of the story was said to be choosing between cod and chips and smoked salmon - both very tasty dishes. It had a four month run.

Version 5

Phantom of the Opera (The) (Vers. Hill) (1994-05-Stratford East-London)

Type de série: Original London
Théâtre: Theatre Royal Stratford East (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 1 mois
Nombre :
Première Preview : Monday 09 May 1994
Première : Monday 09 May 1994
Dernière : Thursday 09 June 1994
Mise en scène : Ken Hill
Chorégraphie :
Producteur :

Version 6

Zorro, the Musical (K. Hill) (1995-02-Theatre Royal Stratford East-London)

Type de série: Original
Théâtre: Theatre Royal Stratford East (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 1 mois 1 semaine
Nombre :
Première Preview : Monday 13 February 1995
Première : Monday 13 February 1995
Dernière : Saturday 25 March 1995
Mise en scène : Ken Hill • Peter Rankin
Chorégraphie : Imogen Clare
Producteur :
Avec : Bogdan Kominowski (Don José/Zorro), Andrew Secombe (Governor Maté), Toni Palmer (Maria), Michael N. Hamour (Pirate Lafitte), Sylvester McCoy (Bernardo), Gary Lyons, Siobhan McCarthy
Commentaires : This was a mixture of folk-opera and political pantomime, making heavy use of zarzuela music (a kind of traditional comic Spanish operetta) by 19th century Spanish composers. Ken Hill had been fighting cancer for several years and sadly died during rehearsals for this show.