In Memoriam: Arthur Kopit

Three-time Tony nominee Arthur Kopit died April 2 at his home in Manhattan. Born Arthur Koenig on May 10, 1937, in New York, his parents divorced when he was 2, and he later adopted his stepfather’s surname. He studied engineering at Harvard, but fell in love with theater during an elective modern drama workshop. While in Europe on a graduate fellowship, he entered a playwriting contest at Harvard and won.

The show, Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma’s Hung You in the Closet and I’m Feelin’ So Sad (1962), ran for more than year Off-Broadway and earned Kopit the Drama Desk and Outer Circle awards, before transferring to Broadway. He returned Off-Broadway with Asylum (1963) and to Broadway with Indians (1969), which was named a Pulitzer finalist and earned Kopit his first Tony nomination. Kopit’s next play, Wings (1978), was also named a Pulitzer finalist and earned him Tony and Drama Desk nominations. 

Kopit made his musical debut with the Tony-winning Nine (1982), which he wrote with composer Maury Yeston, earning his third Tony nomination. Below is Kathi Moss and the original cast in “Be Italian” at the 1982 Tony Awards.

The following year, Kopit and Yeston began working on a musical adaptation of The Phantom of the Opera, but Andrew Lloyd Webber’s version beat theirs to Broadway. The collaborators persisted, and the show premiered as a two-part TV miniseries in 1990, which you can watch below.

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Kopit’s last Broadway premiere was the musical adaptation of Cole Porter’s High Society (1998), from which you can watch highlights below. That year, Kopit was also inducted as one of the inaugural class of the Off-Broadway Playwrights’ Sidewalk in front of the Lucille Lortel Theatre.

Kopit’s last film work was the 2009 adaptation of Nine, from which you can watch Fergie sing “Be Italian” below. Kopit was also a long-time member of the Dramatists Guild Council, head of The Lark Playwrights’ Workshop, and a 2017 inductee into the American Theatre Hall of Fame. Kopit is survived by his wife, Leslie Garis, and his children Alex, Ben, and Kat.

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NY PopsUp Festival

Savion Glover

On April 3, Broadway welcomed back its first audience since March 12, 2020, with a 40-minute matinee at the St. James Theatre as part of the NY PopsUp festival, which launched February 20 at the Javits Center and will continue with more spontaneous offerings over the next 10 weeks. This past weekend’s event, directed by Jerry Zaks, featured Tony winners Savion Glover and Nathan Lane, and the socially distanced audience of some 150 primarily consisted of staff members from the Actors Fund and BC/EFA.

Saturday’s show was also used as part of a pilot program to explore effective health protocols in preparation for a fuller Broadway reopening this fall. The 1,700 seat venue had its HVAC system recently updated with MERV13 filters. Other safety protocols included contact tracing, mask enforcement, and staggered entry and exit times. Audience members were also required to show proof of full vaccination, a negative PCR test within the past three days, or a negative rapid antigen test within the past six hours, while the crew and staff had to test negative on the day of the performance.

Glover performed a tap number and a medley of the Broadway showtunes “Memory” and “I Hope I Get It,” which you can watch below, while Lane performed “Playbills,” a new monologue by Paul Rudnick about a theater fan’s connection with Hugh Jackman, Patti LuPone, and Audra McDonald.

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Broadway’s Masked Singer Preview

Broadway-Talk Live Network has announced the launch of Broadway’s Masked Singer, a new fundraising show for BC/EFA, which will be broadcast in three installments later this month. The miniseries premieres April 26 at 8 p.m. ET and continues April 28 and April 30 at the same time on BC/EFA’s YouTube channel. Inspired by the Fox-TV reality competition show, Broadway’s Masked Singer features eight leading ladies (four each in the first two episodes) who compete while disguised in unique costumes.

Viewers will determine each episode’s outcome by voting with donations to Broadway Cares in the name of their favorite masked singer. After each performer has sung, the contestant with the lowest donation will be unmasked and eliminated. The remaining performers will sing again, with another contestant unmasked and eliminated in the following episode. Four singers will compete in the finale during the third episode.

The series is hosted by Michael Hull and Dylan Bustamante, co-founders of Broadway-Talk Live Network, with guest panels that include theater industry Natalie Weiss, Ben Cameron, Jackie Cox, Hayley Podschun, Marty Thomas, Marissa Rosen, Nick Cearley, Abby DePhillips, Patrick Goodwin, Felicia Fitzpatrick, Christopher Metzger-Timson, Kevin Metzger-Timson, and Drew Wutke.

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R&H Goes Pop! Preview

This week, the Rodgers & Hammerstein Organization released R&H Goes Pop!, a compilation that features contemporary twists on popular songs from the R&H catalog reinterpreted by today’s Broadway stars. Hosted by Laura Osnes (Tony nominee for R&H’s Cinderella), the YouTube series launched in January 2019 to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the writing team’s first collaboration, Oklahoma! Now, the full series of audio tracks and music videos are available for streaming and download here.

Lending their voices to the project are Tony winners Gavin Creel, Santino Fontana, Katrina Link, and Ali Stroker as well as Tony nominees Lilli Cooper, Ariana DeBose,  Ashley Park, and more. Below is Osnes and her Bonnie & Clyde costar, Tony nominee Jeremy Jordan, in “The Next Ten Minutes Ago,” a mashup of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “Ten Minutes Ago” from Cinderella and Jason Robert Brown’s “The Next Ten Minutes” from The Last Five Years.

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2021 Drama League Nominees

The Drama League has announced the nominees of its 87th annual awards, which include five new categories: Outstanding Digital Theater, Individual Production; Outstanding Digital Theater, Collection or Festival; Outstanding Interactive or Socially Distanced Theater; Outstanding Audio Theater Production; and Outstanding Digital Concert. There were 33 productions nominated from over 400 submissions that premiered between March 12, 2020, and March 15, 2021. The winners will be announced May 21 at 7 p.m. ET in a livestream presentation.

The Drama League also announced five Special Recognition honorees: Iris Smith for the inaugural Gratitude Award; Liesl Tommy for the Founders Award for Excellence in Directing; Richard and Demi Weitz, creators of the Quarantunes series, for the Distinguished Achievement in Musical Theater Award; and The Actors Fund for the Unique Contribution to Theater Award.

The Outstanding Digital Theater, Individual Production, nominees include the musicals Don’t Stay Safe (book and lyrics by Cheryl L. Davis, music by Douglas J. Cohen) from Prospect Theater Company and The Last Five Years (by Jason Robert Brown) from Out of the Box Theatricals.

The Outstanding Digital Concert Production nominees include Breathing Free: A Visual Album from Heartbeat Opera, Myths and Hymns (by Adam Guettel) from Mastervoices, Ratatouille: The TikTok Musical (by the #RatatouilleMusical community) from Seaview, and Take Me To The World: A Sondheim 90th Birthday Celebration from Broadway.com.

Other musical nominees include Prime: A Practical Breviary (by Heather Christian) for Best Audio Theater Production. For a full list of nominees, click here.

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Broadway Backwards 2021

Broadway Backwards is back. What began as a small, grassroots benefit concert in 2006 has grown into an annual event presented on Broadway’s stages. The 2020 edition was scheduled for March 16 but was canceled on March 12 when Broadway shut down because of the coronavirus pandemic. This year’s inaugural virtual edition will stream at 8 p.m. ET tonight for free on the Broadway Cares YouTube channel and will be available on demand through 11:59 p.m. on April 3.

Broadway Backwards 2021 will include a special opening number with Stephanie J. Block, Deborah Cox, and Lea Salonga and a star-studded finale as well as special guest appearances by Chasten Buttigieg, Anderson Cooper, and more. Below is an early look at tonight’s “Waving Through a Window” from Dear Evan Hansen, performed by Stephanie J. Block, Deborah Cox, Lea Salonga, and Jay Armstrong Johnson.

In total, Broadway Backwards has raised more than $5.3 million since 2006. Below, you can watch highlights from Broadway Backwards 2019, the last in-person edition, taped March 11, 2019.

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SNL Choreographers Sketch

Former Saturday Night Live repertory cast member (and current recurring Kamala Harris impersonator) Maya Rudolph returned for the second time as host on the March 27 episode of the long-running variety series. The evening included a nod to the reopening of Broadway with a sketch set in a dance rehearsal at the fictional Emory Studios. The producers of a new musical announce that the current choreographer has tested positive for COVID, so they have hired a new one. However, there’s a mixup that results in two new dance directors being hired: former lovers Richard PaQuest (Kenan Thompson) and Tanya KaTanque (Rudolph). You can watch the sketch below.

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Broadway Birthday: Jonathan Groff

Happy Birthday to two-time Tony nominee Jonathan Groff, born March 26, 1985, in Lancaster, Pa. Groff was active in his school drama clubs as well as the local Fulton Opera House and Ephrata Performing Arts Center. After graduating from Conestoga Valley H.S. in 2003, he planned to attend Carnegie Mellon University, but he deferred his admission after being cast as Rolf in a non-Equity tour of The Sound of Music, after which Groff decided to move to New York and begin his career.

Two years later, Groff earned his Equity card with Fame at North Shore Music Theatre, then made his Broadway debut in the short-lived musical In My Life. His breakout role came in 2006, when he originated Melchior Gabor in Spring Awakening, first in the show’s workshop, then its Off-Broadway and Broadway premieres, earning Drama Desk and Tony nominations for his performance, as well as a Theatre World Award. Below is Groff with Lea Michele and John Gallagher Jr. in a medley at the 2007 Tonys.

Groff returned Off-Broadway in the Public Theater revival of Hair (2008), the Craig Lucas dramas Prayer for My Enemy and The Singing Forest (for which Groff won a 2009 Obie), and the Public Theater’s revival of The Bacchae (2009). Then in 2010, he joined the TV series Glee as Jesse St. James, lead singer of Vocal Adrenaline and love interest of Rachel Berry. He scored four Top 40 hits from the show’s soundtracks, including the #16 single “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” which you can watch below.

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In 2013, Groff played Frederic in the Public Theater gala production of the Gilbert & Sullivan operetta The Pirates of Penzance, then voiced iceman Kristoff and his reindeer Sven in the Disney animated musical blockbuster Frozen. Below is Groff singing “Reindeer(s) Are Better Than People” from the film.

Groff had another busy year in 2015, when he joined the Off-Broadway cast of Hamilton as King George, earning his second Tony nomination and first Grammy. In between that show’s Off-Broadway and Broadway runs, Groff starred in concert stagings of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying at London’s Royal Festival Hall and A New Brain in New York’s City Center Encores! series. Below is Groff singing “What Comes Next?” in Hamilton.

Recently, Groff starred in the 2017 musical podcast 36 Questions, the Netflix crime drama Mindhunter (2017), the 2018 Off-Broadway musical The Bobby Darin Story, the 2019 animated sequel Frozen II, and the 2019 Off-Broadway revival of Little Shop of Horrors, for which he received the Outer Critic Circle Award as well as Grammy and Lortel nominations. Below is Groff with Stephen Colbert in The Late Show spoof Mindhunter: The Musical (starting about 6:20 into the interview).

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Broadway Birthday: Elton John

Happy Birthday to award-winning composer Elton John, born Reginald Dwight on March 25, 1947, in London. He began playing piano at age 4. At age 11, he won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music but quit before graduating to join a local band. When that combo separated, John and bandmate Stu Brown formed Bluesology. After releasing two singles,“Come Back Baby” (which you can listen to below) and “Mr. Frantic,” the group became the backup band for Long John Baldry, but within a year they disbanded.

John then answered an ad for songwriters and met lyricist Bernie Taupin, with whom he has written ever since. In 1968, the duo joined DJM Records as staff writers. A year later, John released his debut solo album, Empty Sky, followed by Elton John (1970), which included the Top 10 hit “Your Song” (which you can watch below) and brought him Grammy nominations for album of the year and best new artist. The next year, John earned another Grammy nod for the score to the 1971 film Friends.

John followed with a string of commercial and critical successes, including Honky Château (1972), Don’t Shoot Me I’m Only the Piano Player (1973), and Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (1973). In 1975, he made his acting debut as the Pinball Wizard in the film Tommy (which you can watch below) and his Broadway debut with Bette Midler’s rendition of “The Bitch Is Back” in Clams on the Half-Shell. He then earned Grammy nominations for Caribou and “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me” as album and record of the year (1975) and for Captain Fantastic … as album of the year (1976).

John won his first Grammy for his performance on “That’s What Friends Are For” (1985)  (which you can watch below) and his second for his composition of the 1991 instrumental “Basque.” In 1992, he formed the Elton John AIDS Foundation, for which he was awarded the Commander of the Order of the British Empire (1996) and Knighthood of the British Empire (1998). Other honors in the decade include induction into the American Songwriters Hall of Fame (1992) and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (1994).

John worked with lyricist Tim Rice on The Lion King (1994), earning Oscar nominations for “Hakuna Matata,” “Circle of Life,” and “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” (which you can watch below) and Grammy nominations for the latter two, with the song “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” bringing John his first Oscar, first Golden Globe, and third Grammy. He then received his first Tony nomination for the show’s 1997 Broadway premiere and his first Olivier nomination for the show’s 1999 West End premiere.

John asked Taupin to revise “Candle in the Wind” for Princess Diana’s 1997 funeral. It became the best-selling single of all time and brought John his fourth Grammy. He next worked with Taupin on the film The Muse (1999) and Grammy-nominated album Songs from the West Coast (2002) and with Rice on the film The Road to El Dorado (2000) and  Broadway musical Aida (2000), for which he won both Tony and Grammy awards. Below are Heather Headley and Adam Pascal singing “Written in the Stars” from Aida.

In 2004, John received the Kennedy Center Honors. Two years later, he returned to Broadway with Lestat (lyrics by Taupin), which closed after 39 performances. He fared better on Billy Elliot (lyrics by Lee Hall), earning an Olivier for its 2005 West End premiere and his second Tony nod for its 2008 Broadway premiere. His third Tony nomination came for producing the play Next Fall (2010) and his second Oscar and Golden Globe wins for writing “I’m Gonna Love Me Again” (lyrics by Taupin) in Rocketman (2019), which you can watch him and Taron Egerton perform below.

John’s other recent work includes the Golden Globe nominated songs “The Heart of Every Girl” for Mona Lisa Smile (2003) and “Hello, Hello” (lyrics by Taupin) for Gnomeo and Juliet (2011). His musical adaption of The Devil Wears Prada (lyrics by Shaina Taub, book by Paul Rudnick) is scheduled to premiere next year in Chicago.

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Broadway Birthday: Bob Mackie

Happy Birthday to Tony-winning costume designer Bob Mackie, born March 24, 1939, in Monterey Park, Calif. He graduated from Rosemead H.S. in 1957 and attended Pasadena City College, then Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles, but he left his studies before earning a degree to begin his career in 1961 as a sketch artist for Hollywood costume designers Edith Head, Jean Louis, and Ray Aghayan, who became his life partner.

Mackie met with early success in TV, earning his first Emmy nomination for the 1965 Danny Thomas special The Wonderful World of Burlesque and his first Emmy win the following year for Alice Through the Looking Glass, which you can watch below. 

In 1966, Mitzi Gaynor hired him to design her Las Vegas show, and he did her costumes for the next 50 years, winning Emmys for her TV specials Mitzi … Roarin’ in the 20’s (1976) and Mitzi … Zings into Spring (1977). Below is a clip from the first.

After seeing Gaynor’s Las Vegas show, Carol Burnett hired him for her TV series. He not only stayed for the show’s entire run but also designed for Burnett’s other shows, winning Emmys for Mama’s Family (1983), Carol & Company (1990), and Men, Movies & Carol (1994). Among his most famous creations for Burnett is the “curtain dress” in the 1976 “Went with the Wind!” sketch, which you can see below.

In 1969, Mackie earned an Emmy nod for the costumes of the TV special G.I.T. on Broadway, which you can watch below. It marked the beginning of his relationship with Diana Ross, which continued from his Oscar-nominated work on Lady Sings the Blues (1972), through his Emmy-nominated work on An Evening with Diana Ross (1976), to her greatest hits tour, More Today Than Yesterday (2010).

Mackie’s most celebrated costumes may be those for Cher, which have brought him Emmy nods for The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour (1971), The Sonny & Cher Show (1976), Cher (1975), Cher … and Other Fantasies (1979), and Cher … at the Mirage (1990) as well as Emmy wins for Cher: Live in Concert from Las Vegas (1997) and Cher: The Farewell Tour (2003). He also designed her ensemble for the 1986 Academy Awards, which you can see below, and costumes of her Broadway musical The Cher Show (2018), which brought him Tony and Drama Desk awards.

Mackie’s other notable work includes Oscar nominations for Funny Lady (1975) and Pennies from Heaven (1981), Emmy nominations for Ann-Margret: Hollywood Movie Girls (1980), Neil Diamond … Hello Again (1986), The 60th Annual Academy Awards (1988), Gypsy (1994), Mrs. Santa Claus (1996), and Blue Suede Shoes: Ballet Rocks! (1997) as well as Drama Desk nominations for The Best Little Whorehouse Goes Public (1994) and Pete ’n’ Keely (2000) and induction into the Television Hall of Fame (2002). Below is a highlight reel of Mackie creations, featuring Mitzi Gaynor, Ann-Margret, Carol Burnett, Cher, Elton John, and Bette Midler.

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