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*Outstanding New Musical (Nomination)
*Outstanding New Musical (Nomination)
*Outstanding Actor in a Musical (Nomination) - James Barbour
*Outstanding Actor in a Musical (Nomination) - James Barbour

;BroadwayWorld Fan-Choice Awards (2009)
(Only Applicable when in Top 5 Nominated)
*Best New Musical (Nomination)
*Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Nomination) - Natalie Toro (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Leading Actor in a Musical (Nomination) - James Barbour (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Leading Actress in a Musical (Nomination) - Brandi Burkhardt
*Best Lighting Design (Nomination) - Richard Pilbrow
*Best Costume Design (Nomination) - David Zinn (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Orchestrations (Nomination) - Edward B. Kessel
*Best Original Score (Nomination) - Jill Santoriello
*Best Scenic Design (Nomination) - Tony Walton (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Sound Design (Nomination)


;Sarasota Magazine Theatre Awards (2008)
;Sarasota Magazine Theatre Awards (2008)
Line 187: Line 174:
*Best Actress (Nomination) - Jessica Rush
*Best Actress (Nomination) - Jessica Rush
*Best Supporting Actor (Nomination) - Joe Cassidy
*Best Supporting Actor (Nomination) - Joe Cassidy

;Florida's Curtain Call Awards (2008)
*Best Musical ('''WIN''')
*Best Featured Actor in a Musical - Nick Wyman ('''WIN''')


;BroadwayWorld Fan-Choice Awards (2009)
(Only Applicable when in Top 5 Nominated)
*Best New Musical (Nomination)
*Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Nomination) - Natalie Toro (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Leading Actor in a Musical (Nomination) - James Barbour (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Leading Actress in a Musical (Nomination) - Brandi Burkhardt
*Best Lighting Design (Nomination) - Richard Pilbrow
*Best Costume Design (Nomination) - David Zinn (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Orchestrations (Nomination) - Edward B. Kessel
*Best Original Score (Nomination) - Jill Santoriello
*Best Scenic Design (Nomination) - Tony Walton (''Runner-Up'')
*Best Sound Design (Nomination)


==Trivia==
==Trivia==

Revision as of 06:57, 5 May 2010

A Tale of Two Cities
Logo for A Tale of Two Cities
MusicJill Santoriello
LyricsJill Santoriello
BookJill Santoriello
BasisA Tale of Two Cities, novel by Charles Dickens
Productions2007 Sarasota
2008 Broadway
2009 Brighton Concert/PBS Airing

A Tale of Two Cities is a musical with book, music and lyrics by Jill Santoriello based on the novel of the same name by Charles Dickens.

After tryouts at the Asolo Repertory Theatre in Sarasota, Florida, in October and November 2007, the show opened on Broadway on September 18, 2008, following previews from August 19 at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre. The musical closed on November 9, 2008, after a run of 60 performances and 33 previews. The show received the 2009 Outer Critics Circle Award nomination for Outstanding New Musical for its Broadway run.

The International Studio Cast Recording starring James Barbour, Brandi Burkhardt, Natalie Toro, Kevin Earley, and more from the Broadway Cast, as well as a DVD of this cast In Concert in London, is now available for purchase on the show's Official Website.[1]

Production history

Tale creator Santoriello worked on the music beginning in the late 1980s. In 1994, her brother, actor Alex Santoriello, produced and starred in an invitation-only concert styling of the early beginnings of many of the songs in Indianapolis. Some of the numbers showcased in this styling were eventually cut from the show. It wasn't until 1999 that producers Barbara Russell and Ron Sharpe (both of whom had worked with Alex Santoriello in the original Broadway company of Les Miserables) that the musical officially began readings and workshops to attract producers. In 2002, Russell and Sharpe produced a concept album of the show that featured Alex Santoriello as Dr. Manette / Sydney Carton, Christiane Noll as Lucie Manette, Nick Wyman as John Barsad, Craig Bennett as Jerry Cruncher and Natalie Toro as Madame DeFarge.

On August 19 and 20, 2004, for two performances, Tale was again produced for an invitation-only workshop reading in hopes of finding more backers. The production ran at the Little Shubert Theatre in New York City. It starred James Stacy Barbour as Sydney Carton, Jenny Powers as Lucie Manette, Gary Morris as Dr. Manette, Gavin Creel as Darnay, Alex Santoriello as Ernest DeFarge and Michelle Dawson as Mme. DeFarge.[2]

In late 2005, Santoriello and producers announced that the show planned an early winter try-out in Chicago, with Broadway plans for spring 2006. However, directing changes and insufficient funds, with one producer leaving, postponed the production.[3]

The following year the show opened at the Asolo Repertory Theatre in Sarasota, Florida, for pre-Broadway tryouts in October and November 2007. The show sold out its entire run and won 10 Sarasota Magazine Awards out of 12 nominations, including for some performances and as "Best Musical". The show starred Barbour as Carton, Derek Keeling as Charles Darnay and Jessica Rush as Lucie, with Natalie Toro as Madame DeFarge.[4] It received mixed to positive notices. Michael Donald Edwards directed, Warren Carlyle choreographed and the creative team included Tony Walton (scenery), David Zinn (costumes), and Richard Pilbrow (lighting).

The musical premiered on Broadway at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, with previews beginning August 19, 2008 and official opening on September 18. The show received mostly negative notices but some positive reviews, most notably from the Huffington Post, Connecticut Post and radio stations WGCH and WMNR. Three days before the musical opened on Broadway, the U.S. stock market fell sharply. In spite of the reviews and while box office receipts for other Broadway shows were tumbling along with the world financial markets, Tale initially posted good box office receipts.[5] But as the economy worsened, the show lost money and closed November 9, 2008, although a previous announcement of closing was posted for November 16.[6]

Plot / Synopsis

Prologue

The musical opens with Lucie Manette as a child, en route from France to England. She is delivered by Mr. Jarvis Lorry, an employee of Tellson's Bank to the home of Miss Pross, who had been nanny to Lucie's now-deceased mother. Later, Mr. Lorry returns to the Pross household to tell the now-adult Lucie that her father, Dr. Alex Manette, has been found alive in the Bastille after 17 years (Prologue: The Shadows of the Night).

Act 1

As Lucie and Lorry arrive in France, they find the people oppressed and starving. Madame DeFarge sits on a peak in a rocking chair knitting and seeking revenge along with everyone else it seems except her husband, Ernest (The Way It Ought to Be). Lucie is escorted to see her father by Ernest, who has been caring for him. At first Dr. Manette mistakes Lucie for his deceased wife. However, he soon recognizes her and the two realize they have found home in each other (You'll Never Be Alone).

Dr. Manette, Lucie and Lorry set sail for England and meet Charles Darnay. Upon arriving, Darnay is arrested as a spy as he is discovered in possession of papers showing British troop placements. It is later found that the papers were dropped by John Barsad, henchman of Darnay's uncle, the Marquis St. Evermonde's (Dover). Lucie requests that Mr. Lorry arrange for a lawyer to defend Darnay in exchange for the kindness he has shown her and her father during their journey and Lorry agrees.

We are then taken to the law office of Mr. Stryver and Sydney Carton - who arrives clearly intoxicated (The Way It Ought to Be [Reprise]). Carton decides with his friend, grave-robber Jerry Cruncher, to attempt to blackmail Barsad by visiting several local taverns (No Honest Way). The next day, the trial commences. Darnay is acquitted after the blackmail attempt succeeds and prompts the key witness to assert that Darnay and Sydney look similar after Sydney removes his barrister's wig and robe. The witness then admits it could have been either man-or anyone else-with those papers (The Trial).

Darnay takes Sydney and Stryver out to celebrate at a tavern that Sydney calls "home" (Round & Round). After Darnay is insulted by Sydney and leaves, Sydney reflects on why he acted this way (Reflection).

Several months have passed and Darnay now desires Lucie's hand but asks her father's permission first (The Promise). On Christmas Eve, Lucie attempts to convince Sydney to go to mass with her and Dr. Manette, but he declines; out of kindness, she invites him to dinner the following evening, which he must accept. Awakened by her kindness, Sydney realizes what he has been missing in his life (I Can't Recall).

The next day, Darnay asks Lucie to marry him and she accepts (Now At Last). Sydney arrives and Lucie gives him his gift - a scarf. Unaware that he would be receiving one, Sydney tells Lucie to close her eyes and kisses her. Shocked, she informs him that Mr. Darnay has asked her hand in marriage. Upset—and embarrassed—Sydney leaves and reflects on the life he now cannot attain, and on the marriage and life of Darnay and Lucie together (If Dreams Came True).

The action then switches over to France, where the king is expected to drive his carriage past DeFarge's wine shop. Many children are very excited hover near the road. One, the son of a man named Gaspard, is killed when the Marquis St. Evremonde's carriage passes. Madame DeFarge, who was unaware of what the children were waiting for, expresses disgust for the death the Marquis has caused and urges Gaspard to murder him (Out of Sight, Out of Mind). Gaspard later follows the Marquis to his chateau and does so.

Darnay receives a letter from Gabelle, a former house servant in France, and agrees to defend him in the courts and leaves. Stryver and Sydney visit the Manet household one evening and Stryver tells of the killings and other developments there. During their visit, Sydney agrees to help put Little Lucie to bed. Meanwhile, a funeral is being held for Gaspard's son (Little One). At the funeral, officers come to arrest Gaspard for murder, but Ernest DeFarge tells him to remain and the revolution begins (Until Tomorrow). Darnay is arrested when it is revealed that he is the Marquis' nephew. Lucie is devastated and turns to Sydney for guidance as Darnay left without explanation or revealing his true identity.

Act 2

Act 2 opens with the storming of the Bastille. The DeFarges have found the notes left by Dr. Manette in his cell so many years before, but the people of Paris are still unsatisfied after the prison's fall (Everything Stays the Same).

Darnay is sent to trial because he is a member of the aristocracy. Madame DeFarge vows to denounce the Evremonde family using Dr. Manette's writings and exterminate them all (The Tale). Lucie is depressed that Darney has left without telling her why. Sydney at first is tempted to steal her from her husband, but realizes rather that the right thing would be to help Darnay (If Dreams Came True [Reprise]).

Word of Darnay's arrest and trial reaches Lucie and although she wants to save her husband, she realizes this may put her daughter in the same position she was in as a child. She vows to save both her husband and family yet still questions why Darnay left for France without telling her(Without a Word).

At Charles Darnay's trial, Madame DeFarge reads Dr. Manette's charges against the Marquis St. Evremonde and his brother, who is Charles' father. At the end of his journal, Manette condemns them and all their descendents. Manette himself makes an impassioned plea to recant this and say that Darnay is nothing like his father and uncle. He adds that Darnay's execution would inflict a further burden on him and Lucie who suffered so greatly during his imprisonment.

Manette's plea is denied and Darnay is sentenced to death. Sydney makes arrangements with his old acquaintance Barsad to allow him entrance into the prison where Darnay is held (The Bluff). Realizing that he cannot simply escape with Darnay, Sydney concocts a plan to save him, and to allow Little Lucie to have her father and a brilliant life ahead (Let Her Be a Child).

After a night of drinking in Darnay's prison, Sydney switches clothes with him to the surprise of Barsad. Barsad delivers the unconscious Charles to Telson's Bank, where his family is waiting. Lucie believes it is Sydney who has returned and reads a letter from him which is delivered by Barsad. In the letter, he explains he had to do this and that she has meant more to him than anything else in his entire life (The Letter).

With both sadness for Sydney and joy for the opportunity for her life with Charles, the family quickly leaves France. Madame DeFarge arrives armed and vows to not let any of the Evremonde family escape. She and Miss Pross struggle over the pistol and Madame is killed. Ernest learns of Madame's death and calls-off the massive hunt for the Evermondes to have the opportunity to mourn his wife (Lament for Madame).

On the way to the gallows, a friendly and innocent seamstress realizes that Sydney is not Darnay, with whom she was imprisoned. However instead of betraying him, she calls him an angel and the two console each other. When she is called to the guillotine, Sydney bids her a final goodbye. He is next and as he climbs the stairs, he realizes the good that he has done for the woman who opened his eyes to so much love (Finale - I Can't Recall [Reprise]).

Casts

Original principals in the Sarasota and Broadway productions were as follows:

Character Indianapolis Concerts Sarasota Broadway Brighton Cast
Sydney Carton Alex Santoriello James Barbour James Barbour James Barbour
Charles Darnay Andrew Verala Derek Keeling Aaron Lazar Simon Thomas
Lucie Manette Christiane Noll Jessica Rush Brandi Burkhardt Brandi Burkhardt
Dr. Alexandre Manette Timothy Shew Alex Santoriello Gregg Edelman J. Mark McVey
Jerry Cruncher Craig Bennett Craig Bennett Craig Bennett Howard Samuels
Ernest Defarge J. Mark McVey Joe Cassidy Kevin Earley Kevin Earley
Jarvis Lorry (Not Applicable) Michael Hayward-Jones Michael Hayward-Jones (Not Applicable)
The Seamstress Bryce Dallas Howard Alexandria Howley Mackenzie Mauzy Kelley Dorney
Miss Pross (Not Applicable) Katherine McGrath Katherine McGrath Rosemary Leach
Marquis St. Evremonde (Not Applicable) Les Minski Les Minski Paul Baker
Madame Therese Defarge Mary Gutzi Natalie Toro Natalie Toro Natalie Toro
John Barsad Nick Wyman Nick Wyman Nick Wyman Ed Dixon
Little Lucie Samantha Sharpe Catherine Missal Catherine Missal Catherine Missal
Gabelle (Not Applicable) Kevin Greene Kevin Greene Lincoln Stone

Musical numbers

The songs below were those that appeared during the opening preview performance and press preview. Changes have been noted below.

    • - Replaced with the Frank Wildhorn song "Never Say Goodbye" for the Brighton Concert.

Song Changes

  • "Prologue: The Shadows of the Night" changed throughout previews. What originally began by Dr. Manette singing about his letter ended with just him being shown being pulled off the stage by two guards. The opening night version featured only Lucie.
  • "Resurrection Man" was cut after several previews, and was not featured for the opening night performance.
  • "Let Her Be a Child" was edited to its original form during previews, no longer featuring Charles Darnay.

Awards and nominations

Drama Desk Award (2009)
  • Outstanding Actor in a Musical (Nomination) - James Barbour
  • Outstanding Orchestrations (Nomination) - Edward B. Kessel
  • Outstanding Lighting Design in a Musical (Nomination) - Richard Pilbrow
Outer Critics Circle Award (2009)
  • Outstanding New Musical (Nomination)
  • Outstanding Actor in a Musical (Nomination) - James Barbour
Sarasota Magazine Theatre Awards (2008)
  • Best Musical (WIN)
  • Best Costume Design (WIN) - David Zinn
  • Best Set Design (WIN) - Tony Walton
  • Best Lighting Design (WIN) - Richard Pilbrow
  • Best Music Direction (WIN) - Jerry Steichen
  • Best Choreography (WIN) - Warren Carlyle
  • Best Direction (WIN) - Michael Donald Edwards
  • Best Supporting Actress (WIN) - Natalie Toro
  • Best Supporting Actor (WIN) - Nick Wyman
  • Best Actor (WIN-Tie) - James Barbour
  • Best Actress (Nomination) - Jessica Rush
  • Best Supporting Actor (Nomination) - Joe Cassidy
Florida's Curtain Call Awards (2008)
  • Best Musical (WIN)
  • Best Featured Actor in a Musical - Nick Wyman (WIN)


BroadwayWorld Fan-Choice Awards (2009)

(Only Applicable when in Top 5 Nominated)

  • Best New Musical (Nomination)
  • Best Featured Actress in a Musical (Nomination) - Natalie Toro (Runner-Up)
  • Best Leading Actor in a Musical (Nomination) - James Barbour (Runner-Up)
  • Best Leading Actress in a Musical (Nomination) - Brandi Burkhardt
  • Best Lighting Design (Nomination) - Richard Pilbrow
  • Best Costume Design (Nomination) - David Zinn (Runner-Up)
  • Best Orchestrations (Nomination) - Edward B. Kessel
  • Best Original Score (Nomination) - Jill Santoriello
  • Best Scenic Design (Nomination) - Tony Walton (Runner-Up)
  • Best Sound Design (Nomination)

Trivia

  • Jill Santoriello has said that the earliest song she wrote that was still in the show was "Everything Stays the Same," which despite not being on the concept album, has stayed with the show since its incarnation.
  • The hardest role to cast for the Broadway production was Lucie Mannette. Brandi Burkhardt was persuaded by Barbour at a dinner outing to audition, which had not been cast. With many hopeful Lucie's, Barbour had to arrange for Burkhardt to be seen in between auditions.
  • Many of the shows stars stayed with the show for several years. Natalie Toro (Madame DeFarge), Nick Wyman (Barsad), Craig Bennett (Cruncher), Rob Richardson (performed Sydney Carton), Les Minski (Marquis / the Narrator in the Little Shubert Production), Rebecca Robbins and several others had stayed with the show as early as the first major NYC workshop in 1999. James Barbour joined along in 2004.
  • James Barbour helped secure that Tale could receive its world premiere at the distinguished Asolo Repertory Theatre in Sarasota.
  • The song "Ressurection Man" had made it from earlier readings & workshops until Broadway previews, when it was cut. Critics listed the song as stopping the plot, but was a nice fun-filling moment. It returned for the Brighton concert.
  • Producers for the Broadway production included David Bryant, Alex Santoriello, Ron Sharpe & Barbra Russell and performer Natalie Toro, all of whom performed in the Broadway production of Les Misérables in its opening years together, at the Broadway Theatre.
  • Producer Ron Sharpe and performers William Thomas Evans, Michael Halling, and Jennifer Smith all appeared on Broadway in the musical The Scarlet Pimpernel. Furthermore, Tim Shew, who appeared as Dr. Manette in several of the tracks on the concept recording was also in The Scarlet Pimpernel on Broadway, and Aaron Lazar as well, with SP 4.0: The National Tour.

Recordings

In 2002, executive producers Sharpe & Russell released a concept recording, featuring Alex Santoriello as Sydney (and Dr Mannette), with Christiane Noll as Lucie, J. Mark McVey as Ernest DeFarge and Natalie Toro as Madame DeFarge.

"A Tale of Two Cities: In Concert starring James Barbour, Brandi Burkhardt, Natalie Toro and Kevin Earley of the Broadway company, with several other Americans and British ensemble and featured roles aired on PBS in December 2009, and is now available on DVD on the show's official website. There is also a studio cast recording, hailed as an "International Studio Cast of A Tale of Two Cities" starring this cast, available. [7]

References