Gerald Kaufman is enthralled by the first Sondheim premiere in 14 years. A minor work Road Show may be, but it is still worth much more than anyone else’s musicals
A Sondheim premiere in New York! Besotted fans of one of the four greatest-ever Broadway composer-lyricists (the others being Irving Berlin, Frank Loesser and Cole Porter, all, regrettably, dead) were resigned never to seeing another. I feared that we were going to have to make do, perpetually, with repeated, indeed incessant, revivals of Sweeney Todd, and those anthologies, such as Side by Side by Sondheim and Putting It Together, which started out as such fun but became funerary lamentations for the lack of something novel, exciting and, most of all, unknown.
Yet now, 14 years after Passion, Sondheim’s adaptation of an Italian film about an embarrassingly neurotic love affair, comes Road Show. I saw it a few days ago, shortly after its opening.
True, Road Show is not entirely new. Predecessor incarnations, variously named Bounce, Wise Guys and Gold, have been wandering around the United States for ten years. During this prolonged period of gestation its composer and the librettist John Weidman, who worked with Sondheim on his extraordinary Pacific Overtures and the mini-masterpiece Assassins, have been re-modelling it, changing its mood, its storyline and its songs.
Unlike such revered predecessors as Follies and A Little Night Music, Road Show did not have a traditional Broadway opening filled with glitter and razzmatazz. It almost crept into town, in one of the several auditoria, holding a capacity audience of only 300, at the Public Theater, a revered but remote institution in the East Village. I knew that it was a short work, only a hundred minutes, with no interval: but then, so was the unforgettable Assassins.
More articles from: Gerald Kaufman | this section
Post this entry to: del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit
Advertisement
1 Terry shouldn’t be captain, but that should be Capello’s decision to make - Rod Liddle
2 Snow? What snow? - Rod Liddle
3 JFK: The Nastiest President of the Twentieth Century? - Alex Massie
4 Do we really need to know more about Gary Speed’s death? - Rod Liddle
5 Scottish Labour Embrace the Logic of Independence - Alex Massie
1,700 Unusual Christmas Presents Request Catalogue 01935 815 195 Quote SPEC10 for 10% discount www.presentfinder.co.uk
Pimilco based Florist with online ordering Web: www.olivebranch.net Tel: 020 7630 1868 Fax: 020 7233 8844
62 Shore Road, Warsash, Southampton, SO31 9FT Telephone: 01489 578867 Web site: www.ruffs.co.uk
Apollo Magazine | Corporate | Advertising | Privacy | Terms
Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP
All Articles and Content Copyright ©2012 by The Spectator | All Rights Reserved
Rush-is-Right
December 9th, 2008 1:13pm Report this commentMight I suggest that, after Mr Kaufman's quite disgusting contribution to yesterday's debate about Damien Green's arrest, any further contributions from him should be spiked?
Back to top