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Ragtime (musical)

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Ragtime
Cover of cast recording
MusicStephen Flaherty
LyricsLynn Ahrens
BookTerrence McNally
BasisE.L. Doctorow's novel Ragtime
Productions1996 Toronto
1998 Broadway
1998- 1999 U.S. Tour
2003 West End
International productions
2009 Kennedy Center
2009 Broadway revival
2012 London Revival
AwardsTony Award for Best Book
Tony Award for Best Score
Drama Desk for Best Musical
Drama Desk Award for Best Book

Ragtime is a musical with a book by Terrence McNally, lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, and music by Stephen Flaherty. The music includes marches, cakewalks, gospel and ragtime.

Based on the 1975 novel by E. L. Doctorow, Ragtime tells the story of three groups in the United States in the early 20th century: African Americans, represented by Coalhouse Walker Jr., a Harlem musician; upper-class suburbanites, represented by Mother, the matriarch of a white upper-class family in New Rochelle, New York; and Eastern European immigrants, represented by Tateh, a Jewish immigrant from Latvia.

Historical figures including Harry Houdini, Evelyn Nesbit, Booker T. Washington, J. P. Morgan, Henry Ford, Stanford White, Harry Kendall Thaw, Admiral Peary, Matthew Henson, and Emma Goldman are represented in the stories.

Productions

Original Broadway production

The musical had its world premiere in Toronto, where it opened at the Ford Centre for the Performing Arts (later renamed the Toronto Centre for the Arts) on December 8, 1996, the brainchild of Canadian impresario Garth Drabinsky and his Livent Inc., the Toronto-production company he headed.[1] The US Premier was in Los Angeles in 1997 and ran one year before opening on Broadway on January 18, 1998 as the first production in the newly opened Ford Center for the Performing Arts. Directed by Frank Galati and choreographed by Graciela Daniele, Ragtime ran for two years, closing on January 16, 2000, after 834 performances and 27 previews. The original cast included Brian Stokes Mitchell, Marin Mazzie, Peter Friedman and Audra McDonald, who were all nominated for Tony Awards, and also included Judy Kaye, Mark Jacoby and Lea Michele. The production was conducted by David Loud.

The production received mixed reviews, many critics noting that the dazzling physical production (with an $11 million budget, including fireworks and a working Model T automobile) overshadowed problems in the script. Ben Brantley's review in the New York Times was headlined "A diorama with nostalgia rampant."[2] It led the 1998 Tony Awards with thirteen Tony Award nominations, but Disney's The Lion King won as Best Musical. The musical won awards for Best Featured Actress (McDonald), Original Score, Book, and Orchestrations. According to The New York Times, "The chief competition for The Lion King was Ragtime, a lavish musical."[3] The New York Times also noted that "The season was an artistic success as well, creating one of the most competitive Tony contests in years, with a battle in almost every category capped by the titanic struggle for the best musical award between Ragtime with 13 nominations and The Lion King with 11."[4] The Broadway production was not financially successful, and some Broadway insiders consider its lavish production to have been the financial "undoing" of Livent.[5][6]

2003 West End production

Following its European premiere in a concert performance at the Cardiff International Festival of Musical Theatre in 2002 (which was later telecast on BBC Four), the musical was produced in the West End, London, by Sonia Friedman at the Piccadilly Theatre for a Limited Run from 19 March 2003 - 14 June 2003. This production starred Maria Friedman in the role of Mother, for which she won the 2004 Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical.[7]

2009 Broadway Revival

A new production opened at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC, on April 18, 2009, and ran through May 17, 2009, with direction and choreography by Marcia Milgrom Dodge.[8][9] The production then moved to Broadway at the Neil Simon Theatre, with previews beginning on October 23, 2009 and the show officially opened on November 15, 2009. The cast featured Stephanie Umoh (Sarah), Quentin Earl Darrington (Coalhouse Walker, Jr.), Christiane Noll (Mother), Robert Petkoff (Tateh), Bobby Steggert (Younger Brother), Donna Migliaccio (Emma Goldman) and Ron Bohmer (Father). This was the first Broadway revival of the musical and the first Broadway revival of any 1990s musical. The production opened to critical acclaim but closed on January 10, 2010 after 28 previews and 65 performances. This production had a large cast and orchestra, resulting in a significant weekly running cost that demanded the show be a popular success in order to prove financially worthwhile. "There had been rumors in recent weeks that the show would not be able to survive into early 2010; there was apparently not enough of an advance sale to encourage the producers." [10] Despite the closing, the production received seven Tony Award nominations, including Best Revival of Musical, Best Direction, Best Actress in Musical, and Best Featured Actor in a Musical. One nomination, for Costume Design, was withdrawn on the basis that the designs were substantially similar to those of a prior production.[11][12]

2012 Shaw Festival Revival

The Shaw Festival, Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, revived Ragtime in 2012 in its Festival Theatre as part of its 51st season, with performances scheduled from April 10 through October 14, 2012. The production was directed by Shaw Festival Artistic Director Jackie Maxwell. The role of Coalhouse Walker was played by Thom Allison, with Alana Hibbert as Sarah, Jay Turvey as Tateh, and Patty Jamieson as Mother.[13]

Regent's Park Open Air Theatre Revival

The Regent's Park Open Air Theatre in London played a revival of the musical from 18 May - 8 September 2012. This production was directed by Artistic Director Timothy Sheader.

2014 Westchester Broadway Revival

Standing Ovation Studios presented Ragtime the Musical at the Westchester Broadway Theater February 27 to May 4, 2014.[14]

Synopsis

Act One

American experience at the turn of the 20th century begins with the introductions of three families from three different worlds, all contained within New York City. The first is an upper class Protestant family from New Rochelle - Mother, Father, Mother's Younger Brother, Grandfather, and the Little Boy, Edgar. Theirs is a genteel, sheltered atmosphere, far from the bustle of Harlem, where the African American community, including a beautiful young woman named Sarah, explores a new kind of music pioneered by a pianist named Coalhouse Walker Jr. Meanwhile, immigrants from all parts of the globe set out to seek better lives in the tenements of the lower east side, among them Tateh, a Jewish artist from Latvia, and his young daughter. These three disparate worlds are connected only by celebrities: tycoons such as JP Morgan and Henry Ford, activists such as Booker T. Washington and Emma Goldman and entertainers Harry Houdini and Evelyn Nesbitt, who has been catapulted into fame by the murder of her wealthy lover Stanford White by her millionaire husband Harry K. Thaw. As the century dawns, the separate worlds of New York City begin to blur together. (“Ragtime”)

Mother and her Family say goodbye to Father as he embarks on Robert Peary's expedition to the North Pole. He asks Mother to oversee his affairs, her first experience with any kind of independence. He assures her that nothing will change in his absence but Mother, feeling adrift without dreams of her own, hopes differently. (“Goodbye, My Love”) On board Admiral Peary's ship, Father encounters the ship's First Officer, Matthew Henson, and is shocked to find he is a black man. He catches a glimpse of the rag ship carrying Tateh and his Little Girl to America and sends them a hail across the water to the immigrants, who he cynically imagines "don't have a chance" in America. Tateh, incredulous anyone would want to leave such a wonderful country as America, returns the hail as Mother, back on shore, also bids Father a safe passage. (“Journey On”)

Mother's Younger Brother, an intense, awkward young man, is consistently in search of something fulfilling in life, and his latest obsession is Evelyn Nesbitt. He takes his regular seat in the balcony of the vaudeville theatre where Evelyn performs her act, which risquély parodies her husband's murder trial. (“Crime of the Century”) After the show ends, Younger Brother confesses his love to Evelyn. She kisses him, but only for the benefit of a press photographer, cheerfully rejecting him once he has served his purpose.

Back at the Family's home in New Rochelle, Mother unearths a newborn black baby in her garden. The police arrive with Sarah, the baby's mother, and on an impulse Mother takes responsibility for both Sarah and her child. She marvels both at her newfound compassion and at the realization that her husband would never have allowed her to make such a decision were he present. (“What Kind of Woman”)

At Ellis Island, the Immigrants arrive at their new home (“A Shtetl Iz Amereke”). Tateh eagerly begins his new life, selling silhouettes from a street corner cart, but he quickly finds the American Dream not so readily accessible. Emma Goldman attempts to get him to join the Socialist movement, but he is determined to leave politics alone. The little girl grows ill and Tateh rapidly becomes destitute. A low point comes when a wealthy stranger offers to buy the Little Girl from him, and he snaps, cursing his new country. Inspired by the success of immigrant magician Harry Houdini, Tateh resolves to sell his cart and begin again somewhere else. (“Success”)

The people of Harlem dance to Coalhouse's music (“His Name Was Coalhouse”) and he sings of his lost love, Sarah. Having discovered where she is, Coalhouse embarks on a plan to win back her affections (“Gettin' Ready Rag”), culminating in a visit to Henry Ford's factory for a brand new Model T, and the inventor himself proudly explains his system of automated production (“Henry Ford”).

Back in New Rochelle, Mother and Edgar wait for the trolley to New York City and meet Tateh and the Little Girl, who are heading to Boston. To set an example for her son, who is staring rudely at them, Mother surprises Tateh by engaging him in polite conversation (“Nothing Like the City”). On his way to find Sarah in New Rochelle, Coalhouse encounters a volunteer fire squad, led by chief Will Conklin, who react with hostility to the sight of a black man driving his own car. Meanwhile, Sarah sings to her son in the attic of their new home (“Your Daddy's Son”), attempting to explain how her heartbreak, fear and despair lead her to make such a terrible decision.

Coalhouse arrives at the Family's door on his quest to find and win back Sarah. He is stunned to learn of her child's existence and when she refuses to see him, he resolves to return the following Sunday. This continues for some time (“The Courtship”), and eventually Mother invites him inside for a refreshment. He tells her of his career as a musician and his plans to support his family. Father returns home from the north pole to find Coalhouse playing Ragtime in the Family's parlor. He is stunned by the unexpected and unorthodox changes to his household, and he finds Mother unsympathetic to his complaints. He reflects on how much he has missed and how unsure he is of the world, but Mother and Younger Brother have embraced the changes. Hearing Coalhouse's music, Sarah finally descends to forgive him, and the lovers are joyfully reunited (“New Music”).

Coalhouse takes Sarah on an idyllic picnic, where he tells her of his hopes for the future, inspired by the words of Booker T. Washington. With their son in their arms, the pair sing about the promise this country offers their baby boy. (“Wheels of a Dream”)

Emma Goldman speaks passionately in a Worker's Hall, promoting of the textile mills strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts, where mill workers, including Tateh and his daughter, are suffering at the hands of the national Militia called in to settle the strike. Younger Brother takes respite from the cold inside the rally and finds inspiration, imagining Goldman is speaking directly to him. (“The Night That Goldman Spoke at Union Square”) The rally descends into a riot as Goldman is arrested, which mirrors the chaos in Lawrence. Tateh, participating in the strike, is attempting to evacuate his daughter to safety, but he is struck by a policeman and they are separated. At the last moment he leaps on the train to accompany her out of Lawrence. As she sobs, terrified at the violence, Tateh calms her by showing her his newest invention: a book of moving silhouettes. The conductor of the train they are on offers to buy the book and Tateh, hurriedly dubbing it a "moviebook", sells it to him for a dollar. Recognizing that he has a product people will buy, Tateh celebrates his first chance at real success and resolves never to look back. (“Gliding”)

Returning home from their picnic, Coalhouse and Sarah are stopped by Will Conklin and his volunteer fire squad. Conklin demands a toll be paid in exchange for passage but Coalhouse will not yield to the injustice. As Booker T. Washington gives a lecture advocating patience and dignity in the black community, the firemen destroy the Model T and roll it into a lake. (“The Trashing of the Car”) Incensed, Coalhouse seeks justice but the system has none to offer. (“Justice”) Furious and determined to keep his dignity, Coalhouse postpones his marriage to Sarah until his car is restored, which prompts her to seek justice on his behalf. She hears of a campaign rally in New Rochelle and goes in the hopes that the vice-presidential candidate will be able to help. (“President”) However, she is mistaken for a would-be assassin by JP Morgan and beaten to death by the Secret Service. At her funeral, grief and anger overtake her mourners, who alternatively demand an end to such injustice and pray for the day when all people will have justice and equality. As Mother, Father, Tateh and Emma Goldman look on, Coalhouse collapses by Sarah's grave. (“Till We Reach That Day”)

Act Two

In a dream sequence, The Little Boy watches Harry Houdini perform a daring escape act in which he is locked in a dynamite-laden box by Will Conklin. The box explodes, and although Houdini emerges smiling from the audience, the little boy wakes up screaming from his nightmare. ("Harry Houdini, Master Escapist") He yells for his mother, proclaiming that something bad is going to happen. He is proved correct when a volunteer firehouse is bombed and several firemen are killed.

Sarah's death has destroyed the man that Coalhouse once was and he vows to get justice on his own terms. (“Coalhouse's Soliloquy”) He terrorizes New Rochelle, posting demands that his car be restored and returned to him and that Will Conklin be delivered into his hands. Booker T. Washington condemns Coalhouse's actions but many angry young men are drawn to his cause. (“Coalhouse Demands”) The Family stands at the center of the scandal as Mother retains custody of Sarah and Coalhouse's baby. Father blames her for bringing this turmoil into their lives, but Younger Brother furiously lambasts him for his blindness. He storms out of the house. Mother is becoming increasingly irritated by Father's actions, and encourages him to explain what is happening to their son. Instead, Father invites Edgar to a baseball game, an act that earns him his wife's open scorn. He expects it to be the genteel, respectful game he played in in college, and is horrified to find himself in a middle of a rowdy crowd of immigrants and drunks. (“What a Game”)

Father's attempt at distraction is not enough to keep at bay the effects of Coalhouse's demands and acts of violence. (“Fire in the City”). As the outside world bears down on the Family, Father decides to move them all to Atlantic City where there is the promise of an escape from the worries of New York (“Atlantic City”). Upon their arrival, the Family encounter a film crew taking shots of the boardwalk, directed by none other than Tateh, who has re-invented himself as "the Baron Ashkenazy", a pioneering director and producer of moving pictures. (“Buffalo Nickel Photoplay, Inc.”) Also present in Atlantic City are Evelyn Nesbit, whose career is now in a downward spiral, and Harry Houdini, who is recovering from the loss of his beloved mother by delving into the supernatural. When he encounters Edgar on the street, the young boy urges Houdini to "warn the Duke" before running off. Edgar and the Little Girl soon become fast friends, prompting the growth of a friendship between Mother and Tateh. Together they marvel in how simple and profound children's lives are, and he confesses to her his humble origins, an act of trust that touches her greatly. (“Our Children”)

Back in Harlem, Younger Brother seeks out Coalhouse but is repeatedly turned away until Coalhouse is convinced that he can be trusted. As one of Coalhouse's men leads Younger Brother to the Gang's hideout, Coalhouse, who has banished music from his life, watches a carefree young couple ("Harlem Pas de Deux") and remembers his first encounter with Sarah. (“Sarah Brown Eyes”). Once Younger Brother arrives, he is unable to articulate why he wants to join the fight. The men's profound thoughts are narrated by Emma Goldman, but instead he merely tells Coalhouse "I know how to blow things up." (“He Wanted to Say”)

Coalhouse and his men have taken over J.P. Morgan's magnificent library in the heart of New York city and are threatening to blow it up. Father informs Mother that he's been summoned to New York to help reason with Coalhouse. Before he goes, he assures her that everything will soon return to the way it was, but Mother has changed too much to allow that to happen. (“Back to Before”) Upon his arrival at the tense police encampment around the library, Father suggests that Coalhouse may listen to Booker T. Washington. Coalhouse allows Washington to enter the library but remains unreachable until he mentions the legacy Coalhouse is leaving his son. Coalhouse and Washington work out a deal for peaceful surrender but Younger Brother is enraged by Coalhouse's abandonment of their cause. (“Look What You've Done”)

Washington leaves and Father enters the Library as a hostage. The change in his life that he has been so forcefully trying to ignore finally manages to squeeze into his heart as Coalhouse convinces Younger Brother and his men that violence will not solve injustice. Coalhouse charges them all to change society through the power of their words and by telling their children their story. (“Make Them Hear You”) Profoundly affected by their leader's sacrifice, Younger Brother and the Gang leave the Morgan Library peacefully while Father tells Coalhouse about his son. Coalhouse thanks Father for his kindness and, as he leaves the Library, is shot and killed by the police.

Edgar takes on the task of fulfilling Coalhouse's wishes that their story be told. The Company returns to tell us the conclusion of each of their own stories: Younger Brother departs for Mexico to fight alongside Emiliano Zapata, Emma Goldman is arrested and deported. Evelyn Nesbitt fades into obscurity, while Harry Houdini realizes upon the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand that Edgar's warning was the one truly mystical experience of his life. Father is killed when the RMS Lusitania is sunk, and after a year of mourning, Mother marries Tateh. They adopt Coalhouse and Sarah's son, naming him Coalhouse Walker III, and move to California. Watching his children play, Tateh is struck by an idea for a film series centering on a group of interracial, interclass children banding together. The Era of Ragtime may be over, but as the united family is watched by the spirits of Coalhouse and Sarah, America continues to assimilate and flourish. (“Wheels of a Dream: Reprise”)

Songs

Instrumentation

The Tony Award-winning orchestration of Ragtime, by William David Brohn is for twenty-six musicians:[15]

In the original West End production, the fourth reed, bass trombone and harp parts were removed and the banjo player does not double on guitar or mandolin.[16] The 2009 revival switched the doublings for the second and fourth woodwind parts. The fourth woodwind part in the original Broadway production had doublings for flute, bass clarinet, soprano sax, and alto sax.

Characters and original Broadway cast

Character Original Broadway performer
The Little Boy (Edgar) Alex Strange
Mother Marin Mazzie
Father Mark Jacoby
Mother's Younger Brother Steven Sutcliffe
Grandfather Conrad McLaren
Tateh Peter Friedman
The Little Girl Lea Michele
Coalhouse Walker, Jr Brian Stokes Mitchell
Sarah Audra McDonald
Coalhouse Walker, III Michael Redd
Shane Rogers
Sarah's Friend Vanessa Townsell
Willie Conklin David Mucci
Evelyn Nesbit Lynnette Perry
Harry Houdini Jim Corti
Emma Goldman Judy Kaye
Henry Ford Larry Daggett
J.P. Morgan Mike O'Carroll
Booker T. Washington Tommy Hollis
Stanford White Kevin Bogue
Harry K. Thaw Colton Green
Admiral Robert Peary Rod Campbell
Charles S. Whitman Gordon Stanley

Awards and nominations

Original Broadway production

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result
1998 Tony Award Best Musical Nominated
Best Book of a Musical Terrence McNally Won
Best Original Score Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens Won
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical Peter Friedman Nominated
Brian Stokes Mitchell Nominated
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Marin Mazzie Nominated
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical Audra McDonald Won
Best Direction of a Musical Frank Galati Nominated
Best Choreography Graciela Daniele Nominated
Best Orchestrations William David Brohn Won
Best Scenic Design Eugene Lee Nominated
Best Costume Design Santo Loquasto Nominated
Best Lighting Design Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer Nominated
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Musical Won
Outstanding Book of a Musical Terrence McNally Won
Outstanding Actor in a Musical Peter Friedman Nominated
Brian Stokes Mitchell Nominated
Outstanding Actress in a Musical Marin Mazzie Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Steven Sutcliffe Nominated
Outstanding Director of a Musical Frank Galati Nominated
Outstanding Choreography Graciela Daniele Nominated
Outstanding Orchestrations William David Brohn Won
Outstanding Lyrics Lynn Ahrens Won
Outstanding Music Stephen Flaherty Won
Outstanding Set Design Eugene Lee and Wendall K. Harrington Nominated
Outstanding Costume Design Santo Loquasto Nominated
Outstanding Lighting Design Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer Nominated

Original London production

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result
2004 Laurence Olivier Award Best New Musical Nominated
Best Actor in a Musical Graham Bickley Nominated
Kevyn Morrow Nominated
Best Actress in a Musical Maria Friedman Won
Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical Matthew White Nominated
Best Director Stafford Arima Nominated
Best Lighting Design Howard Harrison Nominated
Best Sound Design Peter Kylenski Nominated

2009 Broadway revival

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result
2010 Tony Award Best Revival of a Musical Nominated
Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Christiane Noll Nominated
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical Bobby Steggert Nominated
Best Direction of a Musical Marcia Milgrom Dodge Nominated
Best Scenic Design Derek McLane Nominated
Best Lighting Design Donald Holder Nominated
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Musical Nominated
Outstanding Actress in a Musical Christiane Noll Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical Bobby Steggert Nominated
Outstanding Director of a Musical Marcia Milgrom Dodge Nominated
Outstanding Choreography Nominated
Outstanding Set Design Derek McLane Nominated
Outstanding Sound Design Acme Sound Partners Won

References

  1. ^ Within a year of Ragtime 's Broadway opening, Livent would go bankrupt, and Drabinsky would later be convicted of fraud for activities related to his operation of the company.
  2. ^ Brantley, Ben."Theater Review; 'Ragtime': A Diorama With Nostalgia Rampant" The New York Times, January 19, 1998
  3. ^ Lyman, Rick. "'Art' Wins Best Play in Tonys; 'Lion King' Gets Best Musical", The New York Times, June 8, 1998, p. A1
  4. ^ Lyman, Rick. "The Broadway Season's Last Hurrah, Live From Radio City Music Hall", The New York Times, June 5, 1998, p. E1
  5. ^ Mandelbaum, Ken. "The Insider." Broadway.com. Retrieved 8 January 2006.
  6. ^ Windeler, Robert."SFX Shutters 'Ragtime,' Ex-Livent Crown Jewel" allbusiness.com (publication:BackStage), November 5, 1999
  7. ^ "2004 Oliver Award Winners and Nominations (for 2003 season)", albemarle.com
  8. ^ "Ragtime", kennedy-center.org
  9. ^ 3F "Kennedy Center Ragtime Is Aiming for Broadway" playbill.com
  10. ^ Jones, Kenneth."Say Goodbye to Music: The Era of Ragtime Ends Jan. 10" playbill.com, January 10, 2010
  11. ^ Healy, Patrick.Tony Nomination for Costume Design Withdrawn From 'Ragtime' "The New York Times, May 13, 2010
  12. ^ Gans, Andrew and Jones, Kenneth."2010 Tony Nominations Announced; Fela! and La Cage Top List" playbill.com, May 4, 2010
  13. ^ "'Ragtime' Festival Theatre" shawfest.com, accessed April 28, 2012
  14. ^ http://www.ragtimemusical.com
  15. ^ "Ragtime version 1 materials". Music Theatre International. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  16. ^ "Ragtime version 2 materials". Music Theatre INternational. Retrieved 1 August 2015.