Showing posts with label Stephen Sondheim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen Sondheim. Show all posts

Monday, June 20, 2011

Company


“There is a time to live in New York &
a time to leave it.”



I have not yet formed an opinion about this new-ish idea of filming Theatre pieces, opera & concerts & then being charged a hefty ticket price to watch a filmed version of the live event on a movie theatre screen. But I had an ache to see last April’s 4 performances only version of Stephen Sondheim’s Company with the NY Philharmonic & starring my boo- Neil Patrick Harris.

I shelled out $18 a piece for tickets for the Husband & Lil’Jake & your host to attend one of the screenings at noon yesterday. I have a history with Company, this production boasted a tasty cast from TV, Film & Broadway, & it was Portland Gay Pride Day & I gathered gay glorification would need to include the gay creators of this landmark musical: Stephen Sondheim, George Furth, Bob Avian, & Michael Bennett.

Getting to the theatre early & finding perfect seats, our trio settled in. Lil’ Jake & I had a nice session of our favorite game- Casting. We decided on a new film version of Guys & Dolls, since the original film is so very uneven & didn’t catch the magic of this classic, & what I find to be one of the very best NYC musicals. We decided on Vin Diesel & Ann Hathaway as Sky Masterson & Sarah Brown, with Amy Adams & Jason Segel as Adelaide & Nathan Detroit, & featuring me as Nicely-Nicely. Inspired?

I noticed that the Husband had opted out of playing & was trying to tune out the 3 minute Special Events advertisement/ promo that kept looping over & overt with evil clown music as the background. It became apparent to the full house; the operator of the program didn’t know how to perform the task.  We saw on the screen, a cursor pointing to the Dish Network Menu, choosing Special Event- Company, but she/he/it was not able to get the thing started. The clown music & narration about how lucky we were to be at the theatre continued as the audience began to get surly & the Husband began to go mad.

The event got off to a jerky start, with the sound not working properly for the first 5 minutes. I felt this was portentous & we were in for a terrible afternoon. I suspected that rabid Christian Right Wing warriors tricked us with the promise of Sondheim, & with the musical theatre queers & liberals held captive in the theatre, they might gas us all or simply play that endless loop until we might kill each other.

Company turned out to actually be a dream of an experience.  What might be lost in the experience of actual live theatre was made up for in seeing the nuance of the actors’ work, & being able to understand each & every syllable of the shockingly stunning Sondheim lyrics.

I held back my consternation at the casting of TV actors: Stephen Colbert, Jon Cryer & Christina Hendricks, & had considered  the consummation of the Broadway vets: Neil Patrick Harris, who made a career for himself on Broadway between the time TV turned him out & the time it took him back;  2 time Tony nominee- Martha Plimpton, Katie Finneran, who won a Tony last year for a 7 minute role in Promises, Promises, & hunky Craig Bierko, who's done revivals of The Music Man & Guys & Dolls, & Anika Noni Rose, who nailed the very big number- Another Hundred People. & of course there was Patti LuPone who is, of course, Patti LuPone.

I would do it again if they were smart enough to offer Daniel Radcliff in How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying, Sutton Foster in Anything Goes, or Bernadette Peters in Follies (now playing at The Kennedy Center with a possible Broadway transfer).

I received the Original Broadway cast album of Company for Christmas 1970. My parents were smart that way. Company was considered a revolutionary musical, with no conventional plot, & instead is a series of vignettes with no chronological order & songs that comment on the action, instead of moving it forward. I was revolutionized by it, for certain.

I had my first important adult affair that summer. I had spent the summer in my first professional engagement as an actor doing Summer Stock in Coeur d’ Alene, Idaho. We performed 4 musicals in repertory & when all 4 shows were up & running, the rest of the summer was sunning, swimming, smoking & sexing. Ron was an older man, at 24years old, he was actually finished with university. He spent the summer teaching me, at 17 years old, how to give & receive love & pleasure from another man. The Broadway Cast Recording of Company was often our soundtrack.
Here I am being introduced to singer/actor Jack Wrangler circa 1971.

After the theatre season was over in September, I actually convinced my parents to let me fly from Spokane to San Francisco. I stayed with Ron at his perfect Russian Hill apartment. He showed me his city & introduced me to his friends, gay men in the late 20s-50s. I liked being looked up & down. I had never been with a group of gay people before. Ron treated me to a night at the theatre. We saw Company with the original cast, minus Larry Kert, who was replaced by George Chakiris. When we got back to his place, I found a way to thank him for the summer romance & the 3 day weekend in my new favorite city.

That is what I thought about on Portland’s Gay Pride Day. I remember those first carefully chosen moments when I realized I could be open & out for the first time. I discovered that there was a city full of gay people. I decided that summer that I would not be tragic. I would make a happy life. I would meet a man who loved me. I would perform in Sondheim musicals. I might figure out a way to make this gay thing work for me.


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

I Can Do A Few Tricks, Some Old & Then Some New Tricks, I'm Very Versatile

I don't presume to speak for him, but I believe The Husband's favorite Sondheim show is A Little Night Music, which he saw in London in 1974, with Jean Simmons. He saw me in this show, before we had been introduced. I still hope he was impressed.

My favorite changes with my considerable moodiness, but because I am a misanthrope & a pessimist, I go for Follies.

This evening, as I consider a lifetime of being moved by his music... I choose this as my favorite Sondheim Song:

The Arrangment Of The Screens... A Consideration Of Stephen Sondheim On His Birthday

The Husband: “I can’t believe you have not cracked that Sondheim Book (Finishing The Hat: Collected Lyrics 1954-1981 with Attendant Comments, Principles, Heresies, Grudges, Whines & Anecdotes), that you couldn’t wait to own & you purchased back in November!” Stephen: "I am treasuring it, waiting for the perfect afternoon to spend with it. I will know when that moment is right." As Sondheim said in Into The Woods: “I was raised to be charming, not sincere.”




The greatest composer/lyricist for the theatre & I have some history together.

In the spring of 1973, I saw A Little Night Music in the pre-Broadway tryout in Boston. I was my late teens, 2500 miles from home, & sporting a huge red afro; I sat in the darkened, half-filled theatre & let the magic & enchantment wash over me. This was not my 1st Sondheim. I had, of course, seen West Side Story & Gypsy!. When 17 years old, I had talked my parents into letting me go to San Francisco all by myself to see the original cast (minus Dean Jones) of Company (I had more than just a little fun freely footloose & 17 in San Francisco in 1971). I had worn out the Original Cast Album of Follies the same year.

5 years later, I would play Henrik in A Little Night Music, a fabulous role & the closest I ever came to playing an ingénue. The character plays the cello. Traditionally the orchestra’s cello plays the music while the actor mimes the playing. Because I actually can play the cello, & I was able to do my own cello work. I thought this gave my performance a bit more authenticity, although I had to practice for hours & hours to be able to the play cello & sing at the same time… in character. I found this rather daunting & I worked hard to make it work. I understand that I was rather convincing in this role.

Your Host in A Little Night Music, circa 1977

I would go on to play Hysterium in A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum on 2 occasions, including a long run at Seattle Civic Light Opera.

I did another long run in a sold out, & extended production of Side By Side By Sondheim, a musical revue of collected songs from several produced & un-produced Sondheim musicals. Among the songs I was so very lucky to perform in that show, was my favorite Sondheim tune- Anyone Can Whistle. Via the wonders of Facebook, the director of Side by Side & I reconnected & he sent me a DVD of the show. I am not all that keen for watching myself on screen, but I was pleasantly surprised at how good the show was, how young I looked, how much hair I had, & what a captivating, compelling, curious, & clever vocalist I was 26 years ago. I was also sort of hot, with single digit body fat, curly red hair, & discreet risqué deportment. I totally would have done me.

I sang Not A Day Goes By from Merrily We Roll Along for auditions for a few years in the 1980s, until I decided that singing Sondheim for auditions was cliché & too gay… even for me.



I was aware early on, that Stephen Sondheim was a homosexual, & it did give some solace when I was grappling with coming out. Sondheim came out as gay only when he was 40, & he did not live with a partner until he was 61. He shared his life with writer- Peter Jones, until 1999, living at the Turtle Bay house that has been Sondheim’s home & writing place since the early 1960s. Katharine Hepburn used to live next door. Sondheim: “up one night at about 3, pounding on the piano, writing The Ladies Who Lunch for Company, when I heard this banging on the door. There was Hepburn, in a babushka & no shoes, saying, ‘Young man, I cannot sleep with the noise you’re making’.”

Sondheim: “If I had to live my life over again, I would have children. That’s the great mistake I made. It’s too late now. The idea of being a homosexual & raising children was one that was just not acceptable until, my goodness, I’d say the 1970s or 1980s. You want to live long enough to see your children grow up, they’re not puppies. The joy is not just to have them, but to watch them change & grow. So, yes, that is a great regret. But as Bach proved to a great degree, you can have both. It would be nice to have both. But to have any outlet for creative energy is indeed a very good emotional substitute for not being able to put that energy into the raising of a family.”

There is common thought on Sondheim, that although he can do LOVE in a theatre piece, he struggles when it enters his own life. Even people who follow him closely have assumed that he was single. It came as a surprise in 2006 when he announced: “I have someone else now, his name is Jeff. We celebrated our 7th anniversary. Jeff is a great joy in my life & once I had tasted the joys of living with someone, I wanted to live with someone else when it broke up.”

There is the work though; about 20 major stage shows, music & lyrics: A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum (1962), Anyone Can Whistle (1964), Company (1970), Follies (1971), A Little Night Music (1973), The Frogs (1974), Pacific Overtures (1976), Sweeney Todd (1979), Merrily We Roll Along (1981), Sunday In The Park With George (1984), Into The Woods (1987), Assassins (1991), Passion (1994), Bounce (2003) which later became Road Show (2008), as well as lyrics for West Side Story (1957), Gypsy (1959), Do I Hear A Waltz? (1965), Candide (1973). Plus the revues: Side By Side By Sondheim (1976), Marry Me A Little (1981), You're Gonna Love Tomorrow (1983), Putting It Together (1993/99) Moving On (2001) & Sondheim on Sondheim (2010) that are anthologies of his work as composer & lyricist. For films, he composed the scores of Stavisky (1974) & Reds (1981) & songs for The Seven Percent Solution (1976) & Dick Tracy (1990). He also wrote the songs for the television production Evening Primrose (1966), co-authored the film The Last of Sheila (1973) & the play Getting Away With Murder (1996). In total, his works have accumulated more than 65 individual & collaborative Tony Awards & an Oscar.


Sondheim created cryptic crosswords for New York Magazine in the late 1960s. He was screenwriter for the television series Topper (1953) & The Last Of Sheila (1973, with his friend Anthony Perkins). He appeared as himself in the film Camp (2003).


In March 2008, Sondheim & Frank Rich of the NY Times appeared in an interview/conversation in Portland, titled A Little Night Conversation with Stephen Sondheim. WCK3 & I were fortunate enough to attend. One of my revered revelations from that evening was that Sondheim & I share a favorite non-Sondheim musical in She Loves Me. He was very funny & charming that evening. I am crazy for Frank Rich & I have loved Sondheim’s music & lyrics for 50+ years. I was thrilled.


I feel so damn old. During the Company/Follies era, Sondheim appeared on the cover of Time with the caption- The Boy Wonder of the Theatre. The boy went on to an Academy Award, 8 Tony Awards (more than any other composer) including the Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre, multiple Grammy Awards including Song Of The Year for Send In The Clowns in 1974, & a Pulitzer Prize.



He turns 81 today. We both got old & we both got lucky. Oddly enough, he shares this birthday with the British composer of that weird musical with the singing & dancing CATS. Go figure.

"I chose & my world was shaken. So what? The choice may have been mistaken; the choosing was not. You have to move on."
Sunday In The Park With George

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

On This Day In Gay History... You Could Drive A Person Crazy

37 years ago today, The American Psychiatric Association votes 13–0 to remove homosexuality from its official list of psychiatric disorders- the Diagnostic & Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders .



You could drive a person crazy,
You could drive a person mad.
First you make a person hazy
So a person could be had,
Then you leave a person dangling sadly
Outside your door,
Which could only make a person gladly
Want you even more.

I could understand a person
If it's not a person's bag.
I could understand a person
If a person was a fag.
But worse 'n that,
A person that
Titillates a person & then leaves her flat
Is crazy,
He's a troubled person,
He's a truly crazy person himself

When a person's personality is personable,
He should not sit like a lump.
It's harder than a matador coercin' a bull
To try to get you off of your rump.
So single & attentive & attractive a man
Is everything a person could wish,
But turning off a person is the act of a man
Who likes to pull the hooks out of fish.

Knock-knock! Is anybody there?
Knock-knock! It really isn't fair.
Knock-knock! I'm workin' all my charms.
Knock-knock! A zombie's in my arms.
All that sweet affection!
What is wrong?
Where's the loose connection?
How long, O Lord, how long?
Bobby-baby-Bobby-bubbi-Bobby...

You could drive a person buggy,
You could blow a person's cool.
Like you make a person feel all huggy
While you make her feel a fool.
When a person says that you upset her,
That's when you're good.
You impersonate a person better
Than a zombie should.

I could understand a person
If he wasn't good in bed.
I could understand a person
If he actually was dead.

Exclusive you!
Elusive you!
Will any person ever get the juice of you?
You're crazy,
You're a lovely person,
You're a moving,
Deeply maladjusted,
Never to be trusted,
Crazy person yourself.
Bobby is my hobby & I'm givin' it up!

Stephen Sondheim
1970

* Note... this song has one of the very best rhymes in songwriting, matching "personable" with "coercin' a bull". The brilliance of Sondheim!