Jump to content

An American Tragedy (musical)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 192.104.181.247 (talk) at 15:09, 20 September 2012. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

An American Tragedy
MusicCharles Strouse
LyricsLee Adams
Mark St. Germain
BookDavid Shaber
Mark St. Germain
BasisTheodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy
Productions1995 Backer's Audition
2010 Muhlenberg

An American Tragedy is a 1995 musical with music by Charles Strouse, lyrics by Lee Adams and Mark St. Germain , and a libretto by David Shaber and Mark St. Germain.

Background

The show was first seen at a backer's audition in 1995. The show was being worked on and was headed to Broadway,[1] but Strouse gave up after his original collaborator, David Shaber, died.[2]

Charles Richter, who is the theatre director at Muhlenberg College, saw the backer's audition and remembered the score being very haunting. in 2010, Richter contacted Strouse and suggested it be staged at the college. Students went to Strouse's New York apartment, read though the script, and staged some of the numbers. Strouse's wife, Barbara Siman, became co-director and choreographer while Mark St. Germain was brought on to rework the book and lyrics.[3]

The show was co-directed by Charles Richter and Barbara Siman, choreography by Siman, costumes by Liz Covey, lighting by John McKernon, set by Tim Averill, and musical direction by Vincent Trovato.[4]

Reception

Strouse said of the experience, "does not have the intensity of a big commercial theater production. I have done a lot of rewriting, and adding and subtracting songs, but since there is only a six-week rehearsal period, I don't add a lot unless it is really important. In the theater there is always the desire to rewrite. I remember when I first saw 'Put on a Happy Face' in rehearsal for 'Bye Bye Birdie.' I wanted to throw it out. But Marge Champion urged me to let it stay and the result was a hit. This is all part of the process."[5]

References