Musical (1950)


Musique: Frank Loesser
Paroles: Frank Loesser
Livret: Abe Burrows • Jo Swerling
Production à la création:

Desperate to find money to pay for his floating crap game, Nathan Detroit bets Sky Masterson a thousand dollars that Sky will not be able to take a local Salvation Army girl, Sarah Brown, to Cuba. While Sky eventually is able to convince Sarah to join him, Nathan battles with his fiancé of fourteen years, Adelaide. Meanwhile in Cuba, Sky ends up falling in love with Sarah and tries to reform his gambling ways. When he returns back to New York, he bets all the members of the floating crap game that if he wins his roll of the dice, they will all have to go to church and repent. If he loses, he will give them each a thousand dollars. He ends up winning and all the gamblers end up visiting the mission and repenting their sins. Dancing in this show requires jazz and showdance.

Read more: http://www.stageagent.com/Shows/View/711#ixzz2UKNtjUZ2

Act I
A pantomime of never-ceasing activities depicts the hustle and bustle of New York City ("Runyonland"). Three small-time gamblers, Nicely-Nicely Johnson, Benny Southstreet, and Rusty Charlie, argue over which horse will win a big race ("Fugue for Tinhorns"). The band members of the Save-a-Soul Mission, led by the pious and beautiful Sergeant Sarah Brown, call for sinners to "Follow the Fold" and repent. Nicely and Benny's employer, Nathan Detroit, runs an illegal floating crap game. Due to local policeman Lt. Brannigan's strong-armed police activity, he has found only one likely spot to hold the game: the Biltmore Hotel garage. However, the owner requires a $1,000 security deposit, and Nathan is broke ("The Oldest Established"). Nathan hopes to get $1,000 by winning a bet against Sky Masterson, a gambler willing to bet on virtually anything. Nathan proposes a bet which he believes he cannot lose: Sky must take a doll (a woman) of Nathan's choice to dinner in Havana, Cuba. Sky agrees, and Nathan chooses Sarah Brown. At the mission, Sky claims he wants to be saved, impressing Sarah with his knowledge of the Bible. He offers Sarah a deal: He will bring the mission "one dozen genuine sinners" if she will accompany him to Havana the next night. Sarah rebuffs him, telling him that she plans to fall in love with an upright, moral man. Sky replies that he plans on being surprised when he falls in love ("I'll Know"). Sky kisses Sarah, and she slaps him. Nathan goes to watch his fiancé of 14 years, Miss Adelaide, perform her nightclub act ("A Bushel and a Peck"). After her show, she asks him, as she has many times before, to go down to city hall and get a marriage license. She is distraught to find out that Nathan is still running the crap game. She consults a medical book, which tells her that her chronic cold is a psychosomatic reaction to her frustration with Nathan's failure to marry her ("Adelaide's Lament").

The next day, Nicely and Benny watch as Sky pursues Sarah, and Nathan tries to win back Adelaide's favor. They declare that guys will do anything for the dolls they love ("Guys and Dolls"). General Cartwright, the leader of the Save-a-Soul organization, visits the mission and explains that she will be forced to close the branch unless they succeed in bringing some sinners to the upcoming revival meeting. Sarah, desperate to save the mission, promises the General "one dozen genuine sinners", implicitly accepting Sky's deal. The gamblers, including a notorious gangster from Chicago named Big Jule, are waiting for Nathan to secure the spot for the game and Lt. Brannigan becomes suspicious. To convince him of their innocence, they tell Brannigan their gathering is Nathan's "surprise bachelor party". This satisfies Brannigan, and Nathan resigns himself to eloping with Adelaide. Adelaide goes home to pack, promising to meet him after her show the next afternoon. The Save-A-Soul Mission band passes by, and Nathan sees that Sarah is not in it; he realizes that he lost the bet and faints.

In a Havana nightclub, Sky buys a drink for himself and a "Cuban milkshake" for Sarah. She doesn't realize that the drink contains Bacardi rum, and she innocently drinks multiple glasses, becoming progressively tipsier. Outside the club, Sarah kisses Sky and proclaims that she is truly enjoying herself for the first time in her life ("If I Were A Bell"). She wants to stay in Havana with Sky. Sky is surprised to find, though, that he truly cares about Sarah's welfare, and he insists that they go back to the airport and return to New York. Back in New York, it is 4:00 AM, and as Sky and Sarah (now sober) stand in the street outside the mission, Sky explains that this is his favorite time of day, and Sarah is the only woman he's ever wanted to share it with him ("My Time of Day"). They both spontaneously admit that they're in love ("I've Never Been in Love Before"). A siren rings out and gamblers run out of the mission, where Nathan has been holding the crap game. Sarah assumes that Sky took her to Havana and pretended to be in love with her just so Nathan could use the mission for the game, rejecting his protests of innocence.

Act II
The next evening, Adelaide performs her act at the Hot Box ("Take Back Your Mink"). Nathan doesn't show up for the elopement because he's still running the crap game. She soon realizes that Nathan has stood her up again and turns to her book for comfort ("Adelaide's Second Lament").

Sarah admits to Arvide Abernathy, her uncle and fellow mission worker, that she loves Sky but will never see him again because she believes he is responsible for the previous night's crap game. Abernathy expresses his faith in Sky's inherent goodness and urges Sarah to follow her heart ("More I Cannot Wish You"). Sky tells Sarah he intends to deliver the dozen genuine sinners for the revival. She doesn't believe him and walks off, but Arvide subtly encourages him.

Nicely shows Sky where the game is being held: the sewer ("Crapshooters Dance"). Big Jule has lost a large amount of cash and insists on playing on credit. To change his luck he uses his own dice which are blank and proceeds to cheat Nathan out of all of his money. Sky then arrives with Nicely. Big Jule isn't impressed in the slightest but Sky responds by punching him out. He then gives Nathan $1,000, saying that Nathan won the bet and implying that Sarah refused to go to Havana with him. Sky, determined to get the dozen sinners he promised Sarah, bets every man at the game a thousand dollars against their souls. If he loses, everyone gets a thousand dollars each, but if he wins, they must all attend the revival at the mission ("Luck, Be a Lady"). He tosses the dice. The gamblers head towards the mission, and it is clear that Sky has won his bet. On his way there, Nathan runs into Adelaide and tells her that he has to attend the prayer meeting. Adelaide does not believe him. She asks herself why she keeps putting up with Nathan's lies, and he tells her that he loves her ("Sue Me").

Sky and the gamblers arrive at the mission, much to Sarah's surprise. General Cartwright asks if anyone wishes to give testimony to their sins. Benny and Big Jule testify but another gambler named Harry The Horse lets slip that Sky only got them to the meeting because he won their souls in a dice game. The General is very pleased by this as it shows that good can come out of evil. Attempting to appear contrite, Nicely invents a dream which encouraged him to repent, and the gamblers join in with revivalist fervor ("Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat"). Brannigan arrives and threatens to arrest everyone for the crap game in the Mission, but Sarah clears them, saying that none of the gamblers were at the mission the previous night. After Brannigan leaves, Nathan gives testimony and confesses that they held the crap game in the mission. He also confesses the bet he made with Sky about taking Sarah to Havana. He adds that he won the bet, to Sarah's shock, and she realizes that Sky wanted to protect her reputation and must genuinely care about her.

Sarah and Adelaide run into each other, and they commiserate and then resolve to marry their men anyway and reform them later ("Marry the Man Today"). Several weeks later, Nathan has opened a newsstand and is going to marry Adelaide at the mission. Sky and Sarah have just been married, and Sky is playing in the mission band ("Guys and Dolls" (Finale/Reprise)).


It is based on "The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown" and "Blood Pressure" – two short stories by Damon Runyon, – and also borrows characters and plot elements from other Runyon stories – most notably "Pick the Winner"

Background
Guys and Dolls was conceived by producers Cy Feuer and Ernest Martin as an adaptation of Damon Runyon's short stories. These stories, written in the 1920s and 1930s, concerned gangsters, gamblers, and other characters of the New York underworld. Runyon was known for the unique dialect he employed in his stories, mixing highly formal language and slang. Frank Loesser, who had spent most of his career as a lyricist for movie musicals, was hired as composer and lyricist. George S. Kaufman was hired as director. When the first version of the show's book, written by Jo Swerling, was deemed unusable, Feuer and Martin asked radio comedy writer Abe Burrows to write a new version of the book.

Loesser had already written much of the score to correspond with the first version of the book. Burrows later recalled, "Frank Loesser's fourteen songs were all great, and the [new book] had to be written so that the story would lead into each of them. Later on, the critics spoke of the show as 'integrated'. The word integration usually means that the composer has written songs that follow the story line gracefully, Well, we accomplished that but we did it in reverse". The character of Miss Adelaide was created specifically to fit Vivian Blaine into the musical, after Loesser decided she was ill-suited to play the conservative Sarah.[8] When Loesser suggested reprising some songs in the second act, Kaufman warned: "If you reprise the songs, we’ll reprise the jokes."

Original productions
The musical premiered on Broadway at the 46th Street Theatre on November 24, 1950. It was directed by George S. Kaufman, with dances and musical numbers by Michael Kidd, scenic and lighting design by Jo Mielziner, costumes by Alvin Colt, and orchestrations by George Bassman and Ted Royal, with vocal arrangements by Herbert Greene. It starred Robert Alda, Sam Levene, Isabel Bigley, and Vivian Blaine. Iva Withers was a replacement as Adelaide. The musical ran for 1.200 performances, winning five 1951 Tony Awards, including the award for Best Musical. Decca Records issued the original cast recording on 78 rpm records, which was later expanded and re-issued on LP, and then transferred to CD in the 1980s.
The West End premiere opened at the London Coliseum on May 28, 1953 and ran for 555 performances. The cast starred Vivian Blaine, Sam Levene, Lizbeth Webb and Jerry Wayne. Lizbeth Webb was the only major principal who was British and was chosen to play the part of Sarah Brown by Frank Loesser. The show has had numerous revivals and tours and has become a popular choice for school and community theatre productions.

New York City Center 1955, 1965 and 1966 revivals
New York City Center mounted short runs of the musical in 1955, 1965 and 1966. A production starring Walter Matthau as Nathan Detroit, Helen Gallagher as Adelaide, Ray Shaw as Sky and Leila Martin as Sarah had 31 performances, running from April 20 to May 1, and May 31 to June 12, 1955.
Another presentation at City Center, with Alan King as Nathan Detroit, Sheila MacRae as Adelaide, Jerry Orbach as Sky and Anita Gillette as Sarah, ran for 15 performances from April 28 to May 9, 1965. A 1966 production, starring Jan Murray as Nathan Detroit, Vivian Blaine reprising her role as Adelaide, Hugh O'Brian as Sky, and Barbara Meister as Sarah, ran for 23 performances, from June 8 to June 26, 1966.

1976 Broadway revival
Libretto and vocal book, Music Theatre International (1978), rented out to actors.An all-black cast staged the first Broadway revival of the show, which opened on July 11, 1976 in previews, officially on July 21, at The Broadway Theatre. It starred Robert Guillaume as Nathan Detroit, Norma Donaldson as Miss Adelaide, James Randolph as Sky and Ernestine Jackson as Sarah Brown. Guillaume and Jackson were nominated for Tony and Drama Desk Awards, and Ken Page as Nicely-Nicely won a Theatre World Award.
This production featured Motown-style musical arrangements by Danny Holgate and Horace Ott, and it was directed and choreographed by Billy Wilson. The entire production was under the supervision of Abe Burrows, and musical direction and choral arrangements were by Howard Roberts.
The show closed on February 13, 1977 after 239 performances and 12 previews. A cast recording was released subsequent to the show's opening.

1982 London revival
Laurence Olivier had wanted to play Nathan Detroit, and began rehearsals for a planned 1971 London revival of Guys and Dolls at his National Theatre Company's Old Vic theatre. However, due to poor health he had to stop, and his revival never saw the light of day.
In 1982, Richard Eyre directed a major revival at London's National Theatre. Eyre called it a "re-thinking" of the musical, and his production featured an award-winning neon-lit set design inspired by Rudi Stern's 1979 book Let There Be Neon, and brassier orchestrations with vintage yet innovative harmonies. The show's choreography by David Toguri included a large-scale tap dance number of the "Guys and Dolls" finale, performed by the principals and entire cast. The revival opened March 9, 1982, and was an overnight sensation, running for nearly four years and breaking all box office records. The original cast featured Bob Hoskins as Nathan Detroit, Julia McKenzie as Adelaide, Ian Charleson as Sky and Julie Covington as Sarah. The production won five Olivier Awards, including for McKenzie and Eyre and for Best Musical. Eyre also won the Evening Standard Award, and Hoskins won the Critics' Circle Theatre Award.
In October 1982, Hoskins was replaced by Trevor Peacock, Charleson by Paul Jones, and Covington by Belinda Sinclair; in the spring of 1983 McKenzie was replaced by Imelda Staunton and Fiona Hendley replaced Sinclair. This production closed in late 1983 to make way for a Broadway try-out of the ill-fated musical Jean Seberg, which following critical failure closed after four months. Eyre's Guys and Dolls returned to the National from April through September 1984, this time starring Lulu, Norman Rossington, Clarke Peters and Betsy Brantley. After a nationwide tour, this production transferred to the West End at the Prince of Wales Theatre, where it ran from June 1985 to April 1986.
Following Ian Charleson's untimely death from AIDS at the age of 40, in November 1990 two reunion performances of Guys and Dolls, with almost all of the original 1982 cast and musicians, were given at the National Theatre as a tribute to Charleson. The tickets sold out immediately, and the dress rehearsal was also packed. The proceeds from the performances were donated to the new Ian Charleson Day Centre HIV clinic at the Royal Free Hospital, and to scholarships in Charleson's name at LAMDA.

1992 Broadway revival
DVD cover of the 1992 cast-album recording documentary, Guys and Dolls: Off the Record, starring Peter Gallagher, Josie de Guzman, Nathan Lane, and Faith PrinceThe 1992 Broadway revival was the most successful American remounting of the show since its original opening. Directed by Jerry Zaks, it starred Nathan Lane as Nathan Detroit, Peter Gallagher as Sky, Faith Prince as Adelaide and Josie de Guzman as Sarah. This production played at the Martin Beck Theatre from April 14, 1992 to January 8, 1995, with 1,143 performances.
The production received a rave review from Frank Rich in The New York Times, stating "It's hard to know which genius, and I do mean genius, to celebrate first while cheering the entertainment at the Martin Beck." It received eight Tony Award nominations, and won four, including Best Revival of a Musical, and the show also won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival. This revival featured various revisions to the show's score, including brand new music for the "Runyonland", "A Bushel and a Peck," "Take Back Your Mink" and "Havana". The orchestrations were redesigned by Michael Starobin, and there were new dance arrangements added to "A Bushel and a Peck" and "Take Back Your Mink".
A one-hour documentary film captured the recording sessions of the production's original cast album. Titled Guys and Dolls: Off the Record, the film aired on PBS's Great Performances series in December 1992, and was released on DVD in 2007. Complete takes of most of the show's songs are featured, as well as coaching from director Zaks, and commentary sessions by stars Gallagher, de Guzman, Lane, and Prince on the production and their characters.

1996 London revival
Richard Eyre repeated his 1982 success with another National Theatre revival of the show, this time in a limited run. It starred Henry Goodman as Nathan Detroit, Imelda Staunton returning as Adelaide, Clarke Peters returning as Sky and Joanna Riding as Sarah. Clive Rowe played Nicely-Nicely Johnson, and David Toguri returned as choreographer. The production ran from December 17, 1996 through March 29, 1997 and from July 2, 1997 to 22 November 22, 1997.[33][34] It received three Olivier Award nominations, winning one: Best Supporting Performance in a Musical went to Clive Rowe. Richard Eyre won the Critics' Circle Theatre Award for Best Director, and the production won Best Musical.

2005 West End revival
The 2005 West End revival opened at London's Piccadilly Theatre in June 2005 and closed in April 2007. This revival, directed by Michael Grandage, starred Ewan McGregor as Sky, Jenna Russell as Sarah, Jane Krakowski as Adelaide, and Douglas Hodge as Nathan Detroit. During the run, Nigel Harman, Adam Cooper, Norman Bowman and Ben Freeman took over as Sky; Kelly Price, Amy Nuttall and Lisa Stokke took over as Sarah; Sarah Lancashire, Sally Ann Triplett, Claire Sweeney and Samantha Janus took over as Adelaide; and Nigel Lindsay, Neil Morrissey, Patrick Swayze, Alex Ferns and Don Johnson took over as Nathan Detroit. This production added the song "Adelaide" that Frank Loesser had written for the 1955 film adaptation. According to a September 2007 article in Playbill.com, this West End production had been scheduled to begin previews for a transfer to Broadway in February 2008, but this plan was dropped.

2009 Broadway revival
A 2009 Broadway revival of the show opened on March 1, 2009 at the Nederlander Theatre. The cast starred Oliver Platt as Nathan Detroit, Lauren Graham, in her Broadway debut, as Adelaide, Craig Bierko as Sky and Kate Jennings Grant as Sarah. Des McAnuff was the director, and the choreographer was Sergio Trujillo. The show opened to generally negative reviews. The New York Times called it "static" and "uninspired", the New York Post said, "How can something so zippy be so tedious?" and Time Out New York wrote, "Few things are more enervating than watching good material deflate." However, the show received a highly favorable review from The New Yorker, and the producers decided to keep the show open in hopes of positive audience response. The New York Post reported on March 4 that producer Howard Panter "[said] he'll give Guys and Dolls at least seven weeks to find an audience." The revival closed on June 14, 2009 after 28 previews and 113 performances.


Act I
"Overture" – Orchestra
"Runyonland" – Orchestra
"Fugue for Tinhorns" – Nicely, Benny, Rusty
"Follow the Fold" – Sarah, Mission Band
"The Oldest Established" – Nathan, Nicely, Benny, Guys
"I'll Know" – Sarah, Sky
"A Bushel and a Peck" – Miss Adelaide, Hot Box Girls
"Adelaide's Lament" – Miss Adelaide
"Guys and Dolls" – Nicely, Benny
"Havana" – Orchestra
"If I Were a Bell" – Sarah
"My Time of Day/I've Never Been in Love Before" – Sky, Sarah

Act II
"Take Back Your Mink" – Miss Adelaide, Hot Box Girls
"Adelaide's Second Lament" – Miss Adelaide
"More I Cannot Wish You" – Arvide
"Crapshooters Ballet" – Orchestra
"Luck Be a Lady" – Sky, Guys
"Sue Me" – Miss Adelaide, Nathan
"Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat" – Nicely, Company
"Marry the Man Today" – Miss Adelaide, Sarah
"Guys and Dolls (Reprise)" – Company

Aucun dossier informatif complémentaire concernant Guys and Dolls

Aucun dossier informatif complémentaire concernant Guys and Dolls


Version 1

Type de série:
Théâtre: Bridge Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 11 mois 3 semaines
Nombre :
Première Preview : 03 March 2023
Première: 09 March 2023
Dernière: 24 February 2024
Mise en scène : Nicholas Hytner
Chorégraphie : Arlene Phillips
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Daniel Mays (Nathan Detroit - not Jul 17-Oct 15), Andrew Richardson (Sky Masterson), Celinde Schoenmaker (Sarah Brown), Marisha Wallace (Miss Adelaide), Cedric Neal (Nicely-Nicely Johnson), Cornelius Clarke (Lieutenant Brannigan), Cameron Johnson (Big Jule), Anthony O'Donnell (Arvide Abernathy), Mark Oxtoby (Benny Southstreet), Adam Pearce (Harry the Horse), Ryan Pidgen (Rusty Charlie), Katy Secombe (General Cartwright), Simon Anthony (Ensemble), Lydia Bannister (Ensemble), Kathryn Barnes (Ensemble), Callum Bell (Ensemble), Cindy Belliot (Ensemble), Petrelle Dias (Ensemble), Ike Fallon (Ensemble), Leslie Garcia Bowman (Ensemble), George Ioannides (Ensemble), Robbie McMillan (Ensemble), Perry O'Dea (Ensemble), Charlotte Scott (Ensemble), Tinovimbanashe Sibanda (Ensemble), Isabel Snaas (Ensemble), Sasha Wareham (Ensemble), Dale White (Ensemble), Owain Arthur (Nathan Detroit from Jul 17), Jack Butterworth (Ensemble), Saffi Needham (Swing)

Version 2

Guys and dolls (1950-11-Richard Rodeger's Theatre-Broadway)

Type de série: Original
Théâtre: Richard Rodgers Theatre (Broadway - Etats-Unis)
Durée : 3 ans
Nombre : 1200 représentations
Première Preview : 24 November 1950
Première: 24 November 1950
Dernière: 28 November 1953
Mise en scène :
Chorégraphie :
Producteur :
Star(s) :

Version 3

Guys and dolls (1953-05-London Coliseum Theatre-London)

Type de série: Original London
Théâtre: Coliseum Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée :
Nombre : 555 représentations
Première Preview : 28 May 1953
Première: 28 May 1953
Dernière: Inconnu
Mise en scène :
Chorégraphie :
Producteur :
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Version 4

Guys and dolls (1955-04-City Center-Broadway)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: City Center (New-York - Etats-Unis)
Durée : 1 mois 1 semaine
Nombre : 16 représentations
Première Preview : 20 April 1955
Première: 20 April 1955
Dernière: 31 May 1955
Mise en scène :
Chorégraphie :
Producteur :
Star(s) :

Version 5

Guys and dolls (1965-04-City Center-Broadway)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: City Center (New-York - Etats-Unis)
Durée : 1 semaine
Nombre : 15 représentations
Première Preview : 28 April 1965
Première: 28 April 1965
Dernière: 09 May 1965
Mise en scène :
Chorégraphie :
Producteur :
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Version 6

Guys and dolls (1976-07-Broadway Theatre-Broadway)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: Broadway Theatre (Broadway - Etats-Unis)
Durée : 6 mois 3 semaines
Nombre : 12 previews - 239 représentations
Première Preview : 11 July 1976
Première: 21 July 1976
Dernière: 13 February 1977
Mise en scène : Billy Wilson
Chorégraphie : Billy Wilson
Producteur :
Star(s) :

Version 7

Guys and dolls (1982-03-Olivier Theatre-NT-London)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: National Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Salle : Olivier Theatre

Durée : 2 ans 6 mois 1 semaine
Nombre : 289 représentations
Première Preview : 26 February 1982
Première: 09 March 1982
Dernière: 15 September 1984
Mise en scène : Richard Eyre
Chorégraphie : David Toguri
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Ian Charleson (Sky Masterton), Julia McKenzie (Miss Adelaide), Bob Hoskins (Nathan Detroit), Julie Covington (Sarah Browne), David Healy (Nicely-Nicely)
Commentaires : This was a National Theatre Production. It received rave notices, and has become one of the legendary successes of the 1980s. It was scheduled for a limited number of performances, and was later brought back into the repertoire, followed by a tour. It then was re-created for the West End in 1985.

Version 8

Guys and dolls (1984-04-Olivier Theatre-NT London)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: National Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Salle : Olivier Theatre
Durée : 5 mois
Nombre :
Première Preview : Inconnu
Première: 12 April 1984
Dernière: 15 September 1984
Mise en scène : Richard Eyre
Chorégraphie : David Toguri
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Andrew C. Wadsworth (Sky Masterton), Lulu (Miss Adelaide), Norman Rossington (Nathan Detroit), Janet Dibley (Sarah Browne), Thick Wilson (Nicely-Nicely), Kevin Walsh (Benny), Gareth Snook, Andrew Robertson, Lucy Fenwick
Commentaires : Transferd to Prince of Wales

Version 9

Guys and dolls (1985-06-Prince of Wales Theatre-London)

Type de série: West End Transfer
Théâtre: Prince of Wales Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 10 mois 1 semaine
Nombre :
Première Preview : Inconnu
Première: 19 June 1985
Dernière: 26 April 1986
Mise en scène : Richard Eyre
Chorégraphie : David Toguri
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Andrew C. Wadsworth (Sky Masterton), Lulu (Miss Adelaide), Norman Rossington (Nathan Detroit), Janet Dibley (Sarah Browne), Thick Wilson (Nicely-Nicely), Kevin Walsh (Benny), Gareth Snook, Andrew Robertson, Lucy Fenwick
Commentaires : Transfer from NT Olivier Theatre 12 April 1984 to 15 September 1984

Version 10

Guys and dolls (1992-04-Martin Beck Theatre-Broadway)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: Al Hirschfeld Theatre (Broadway - Etats-Unis)
Durée : 2 ans 8 mois 4 semaines
Nombre : 33 previews - 1143 représentations
Première Preview : 16 March 1992
Première: 14 April 1992
Dernière: 08 January 1995
Mise en scène : Jerry Zaks
Chorégraphie : Christopher Chadman
Producteur :
Star(s) :

Version 11

Guys and dolls (1996-12-Olivier Theatre-NT-London)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: National Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Salle : Olivier Theatre
Durée : 11 mois 1 semaine
Nombre : 244 représentations
Première Preview : 09 December 1996
Première: 17 December 1996
Dernière: 22 November 1997
Mise en scène : Richard Eyre
Chorégraphie : David Toguri
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Clarke Peters (Sky Masterton), Imelda Straunton (Miss Adelaide), Henry Goodman (Nathan Detroit), Joanna Riding (Sarah Browne), Clive Rowe (Nicely-Nicely), Wayne Cater (Benny), Kieran Creggan, Sharon D. Clarke
Commentaires : This revival of the hugely successful 1982 production proved that lightning can strike twice. It was hugely enjoyable, and every bit as good as its earlier, definitive incarnation.

Version 12

Guys and dolls (2005-06-Piccadilly Theatre-London)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: Piccadilly Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 1 an 10 mois 2 semaines
Nombre : 773 représentations
Première Preview : 19 May 2005
Première: 01 June 2005
Dernière: 14 April 2007
Mise en scène : Michael Grandage
Chorégraphie : Rob Ashford
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Ewan McGregor (Sky Masterton), Jane Krakowski (Miss Adelaide), Douglas Hodge (Nathan Detroit), Jenna Russell (Sarah Browne), Martyn Ellis (Nicely-Nicely), Cory English (Benny), Niall Buggy, Norman Bowman, Matthew Cole, Sevan Stephan
Commentaires : Il s'agit de la version co-produite par le Donmar Warehouse. This revival was very different in approach from the hugely successful National Theatre version, but it was generally regarded as equally as exciting and enjoyable. Ewan MacGregor came in for some mixed reviews, and most of the plaudits were for the American choreographer, Rob Ashford, for creating some of the most exciting dancing to be seen in the West End. Cast changes during the run saw Nigel Harman replace Ewan McGregor, and Nigel Lindsay and Neil Morrissey take over as Nathan Detroit. At the end of its first year further cast changes included Patrick Swayze as Nathan Detroit, Adam Cooper as Sky Masterton, Claire Sweeney as Miss Adelaide, and Kelly Price promoted from the chorus to take over as Sarah Brown. The production ran for almost
two years, and closed on April 14th 2007.

Version 13

Guys and dolls (2009-03-Nerderlander Theatre-Broadway)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: Nederlander Theatre (Broadway - Etats-Unis)
Durée : 3 mois 2 semaines
Nombre : 28 previews - 121 représentations
Première Preview : 05 February 2009
Première: 01 March 2009
Dernière: 14 June 2009
Mise en scène : Des McAnuff
Chorégraphie : Sergio Trujillo
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Commentaires longs: A 2009 Broadway revival of the show opened on March 1, 2009 at the Nederlander Theatre. The cast starred Oliver Platt as Nathan Detroit, Lauren Graham, in her Broadway debut, as Adelaide, Craig Bierko as Sky and Kate Jennings Grant as Sarah. Des McAnuff was the director, and the choreographer was Sergio Trujillo.
Presse : The show opened to generally negative reviews. The New York Times called it "static" and "uninspired", the New York Post said, "How can something so zippy be so tedious?" and Time Out New York wrote, "Few things are more enervating than watching good material deflate." However, the show received a highly favorable review from The New Yorker, and the producers decided to keep the show open in hopes of positive audience response. The New York Post reported on March 4 that producer Howard Panter "[said] he'll give Guys and Dolls at least seven weeks to find an audience."

Version 14

Guys and dolls (2011-12-Upstairs at the Gatehouse-London)

Type de série: Revival
Théâtre: Upstairs at the Gatehouse (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 1 mois 2 semaines
Nombre :
Première Preview : 16 December 2011
Première: 20 December 2011
Dernière: 03 February 2012
Mise en scène : Racky Plews
Chorégraphie : Lee Proud
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Jamie Sampson (Sky Masterton), Rebecca Sutherland (Miss Adelaide), James Kermack (Nathan Detroit), Amy Bailey (Sarah Browne), Patrick Rufey (Nicely-Nicely), Jos Slovick (Benny), Paul Bullion, Connor Dowling, Matthew John Gregory, Anthony McGill, David Muscat, Leanne Tain Marshall, Ellie Rutherford.
Commentaires : Possibly the first time this large scale show had been presented in a fringe theatre, and with a cast of just 13 – this was extremely well received by audiences and critics alike.

Version 15

Guys and Dolls (2016-01-Savoy Theatre-London)

Type de série: West End Transfer
Théâtre: Savoy Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 2 mois
Nombre :
Première Preview : 10 December 2015
Première: 06 January 2016
Dernière: 12 March 2016
Mise en scène : Gordon Greenberg
Chorégraphie : Andrew Wright • Carlos Acosta
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Sophie Thompson (Miss Adelaide), Jamie Parker (Sky Masterson), David Haig (Nathan Detroit), Siubhan Harrison (Sarah Brown), Lucy Jane Adcock, Abigail Brodie, Cornelius Clarke, Momar Diagne, Lavinia Fitzpatrick, Lorna Gale, Nic Greenshields, Selina Hamilton, Ian Hughes, Frankie Jenna, Jacob Maynard, Neil McCaul, Genevieve Nicole, William Oxborrow, Max Parker, Carl Patrick, James Revell, Giovanni Spano, Gavin Spokes, Jonathan Stewart, Lucie Mae Sumner and Liam Wrate.
Commentaires : Transfert du Chichester Festival et sera ensuite transféré au Phooenix Theatre.
Presse : "With outstanding leads and fizzing choreography from Carlos Acosta, the classic gambling musical is staged with elan." Michael Billington for The Guardian

"A joyous revival." Paul Taylor for The Independent

"From the start, the 26-strong ensemble throw everything they’ve got at this – energy, gusto, devotion; they sweat enough to shame a battalion of gym-bunnies.." Dominic Cavendish for The Telegraph

"This production proves the irresistible charm of this great American musical." Henry Hitchings for The Evening Standard

Version 16

Guys and Dolls (2016-03-Phoenix theatre-London)

Type de série: West End Transfer
Théâtre: Phoenix Theatre (Londres - Angleterre)
Durée : 5 mois
Nombre :
Première Preview : 19 March 2016
Première: 19 March 2016
Dernière: 21 August 2016
Mise en scène : Gordon Greenberg
Chorégraphie : Andrew Wright • Carlos Acosta
Producteur :
Star(s) :
Avec: Samantha Spiro (Miss Adelaide), Richard Kind (Nathan Detroit), Oliver Tompsett (Sky Masterson), Siubhan Harrison (Sarah Brown), Gavin Spokes (Nicely Nicely Johnson), Billy Boyle (Arvide), Jason Pennycooke (Benny), Lucy Jane Adcock, Abigail Brodie, Cornelius Clarke, Momar Diagne, Lavinia Fitzpatrick, Lorna Gale, Nic Greenshields, Selina Hamilton, Frankie Jenna, Alec Mann, Jacob Maynard, Genevieve Nicole, William Oxborrow, Max Parker, Carl Patrick, James Revell, Giovanni Spano, Jonathan Stewart, Lucie Mae Sumner and Liam Wrate
Commentaires : Version du Chichester Festival. Transférée dans le West End au Savoy Theatre puis prolongé, ici, au Phoenix Theatre. Mais il a été écourté au Phoenix…

Press Night Trailer

Guys and Dolls (2016-01-Savoy Theatre-London)

Qualité: ***** Intérêt: ****
Langue:
Anglais Durée:


Trailer

Guys and Dolls (2016-03-Phoenix theatre-London)

Qualité: ***** Intérêt: ****
Langue:
Anglais Durée: 0:01:21